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Warren William Everywhere; Plus The Private Affairs of Bel Ami on Netflix Instant


By Cliff Aliperti 4 Comments

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Well this Film Forum Essential Pre-Code Series is certainly doing wonders for Warren William around the web! At the bottom of this post is a list of a several recent articles centered on Warren William and the Film Forum’s Series.

Warren William in The Private Affairs of Bel Ami

 

First though I wanted to mention to Netflix Instant subscribers that you can now see Warren William’s final movie, The Private Affairs of Bel Ami (1947) through Instant. Though Bel Ami had a VHS release I don’t believe it’s ever made it to DVD and a few years ago when I was tracking down every possible Warren William recording it turned out to be one of the last I found!

Warren William and George Sanders in The Private Affairs of Bel Ami

Warren William and George Sanders

 

Warren’s part isn’t big, he’s handed off the cad baton to George Sanders, but it’s a big kick to see him interact with both Sanders and Ann Dvorak who had played his wife 15 years earlier in Three on a Match (1932). Based on the Guy De Maupassant novel Bel-Ami, this film adaptation would be worth watching even if Warren William was nowhere to be found. It’s one of a handful of titles I’m very glad my WW-mania pointed me towards, even if I was initially disappointed due to William’s lack of time in it.

Ann Dvorak and Warren William in The Private Affairs of Bel Ami

Ann Dvorak and Warren William

 

Netflix is also currently streaming The Wolf Man (1941) and Strange Illusion (1945) can be found free of charge on Hulu.

Leading off the Film Forum related linking is this piece from Jaime N. Christley, whose tweet actually alerted me to the existence of Bel Ami on Netflix. See Christley’s article Essential Pre-Code on Slant Magazine.

Up next is the man who led me, and surely many others, to Warren William in the first place when his face adorned a couple of VHS cases back in the 90’s, Skyscraper Souls (1932) and Employees’ Entrance (1933)*. Leonard Maltin covers the Pre-Code Series in Revisting Pre-Code Hollywood on Leonard Maltin’s Movie Crazy.

*Three on a Match too, but I was more captivated by Ann Dvorak than straitlaced Warren in that one!

year credit suisse
Ann Dvorak and Warren William in Three on a Match

15 Years Younger: Ann Dvorak and Warren William in Three on a Match

 

Warren William, pre-code predator, at Film Forum is by Chris Vognar at The Dallas Morning News

Essential Pre-Code at Film Forum: Week One is by Brynn White at AltScreen.

Warren William: As Titan of Industry, King of Pre-Code is by J. Hoberman at The Village Voice

Finally, this one says it’s from eight months ago, but a link from somewhere led me to it tonight:

Warren William: Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf? by Imogen Smith on The Chiseler

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Filed Under: News Tagged With: Ann Dvorak, film forum, George Sanders, pre-code, Strange Illusion, The Private Affairs of Bel Ami, the wolf man, warren william

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My Pre-Code Kindle eBook

11 Pre-Code Hollywood Movie HistoriesAvailable on Amazon for just $2.99 - 11 Pre-Code Hollywood Movie Histories includes my most polished look to date at Warren William in Employees' Entrance, plus 10 additional reviews! The entire Introduction and additional front matter can be read for free in Amazon's preview. If you don't have a Kindle, Amazon offers some alternatives for reading eBooks here.

Comments

  1. Grand Old Movies says

    July 25, 2011 at 10:40 am

    I’ve seen the first Thurs installment (7/21) of the Warren William Thursdays at Film Forum’s Pre-Code Retrospective – a double feature of Employees’ Entrance & The Mind Reader. The theater was about 2/3 full (at my showings), the audience was responsive and seemed to be enjoying it, and I would say that everyone had a grand old time. I hadn’t seen The Mind Reader before and it was a delight – superb WW all the way (also got a kick out of Clarence Muse & Allen Jenkins as his sidekicks). On to the next thursday!

    Reply
    • The_Mouthpiece says

      July 25, 2011 at 2:01 pm

      Thanks for the report! Yes, The Mind Reader is a blast!

      Reply
  2. John Stangeland says

    July 26, 2011 at 4:17 pm

    Great links, Cliff – I saw “Who’s Afraid of the Big, Bad Wolf” earlier in the year and thought it was outstanding. Glad to hear that the Film Forum audience was solid for our man Warren. A month or so ago I sent some emails to the folks at FF asking if they’d be interested in doing a Q & A, signing, or other WW-centric programming, but nothing came back. I figure they must have those things timed pretty tightly, alas. I guess we disagree (again) on Bel Ami. I find it pretty slow and stagey. George Sanders is okay, but when Warren was younger he would have been an infinitely better Bel-Ami…

    Reply
    • The_Mouthpiece says

      August 5, 2011 at 12:21 am

      John, sorry, I missed this comment. That’s a shame Film Forum didn’t get back to you, man, that would have been a natural no-brainer fit! I think Bel Ami is strong in every aspect except as WW-vehicle. Jeeze, can you imagine if it were a 1932 WB romp starring Warren? Oh man, that would have been a movie!

      Reply

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Warren William with Helen Twelvetrees

Helen Twelvetrees and Warren William in a publicity shot from Columbia while both were on loan there.

Helen Twelvetrees and Warren William in a publicity shot taken while both were on loan to Columbia. Twelvetrees was appearing in My Woman, and Warren in Lady for a Day. My book, Helen Twelvetrees, Perfect Ingenue, is available at Amazon.

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