Joan Crawford in Rain (1932) “Pre-Code” Hollywood Presentation
Sat. Sep. 16
Doors – 7:00 PM
Organ Overture – 7:30 PM
Film – 8:00 PM
Tickets - $6
1hr 34min | NR | Drama| USA
DRAMA! DRAMA! DRAMA!
The word alone doesn’t do justice to Rain. It is a film so overflowing with fervid emotion, so redolent of the deepest and darkest impulses of humanity that only caps-lock, exclamation points and repetition can come close to matching its passionate intensity.
So, in other words, Rain presents an excellent example of films released during the so-called “pre-code Hollywood” era. This brief period (1927-1934) before the enforcement of the Hays Code censorship guidelines was marked by shocking, salacious, suggestive, and even surprisingly sexually explicit plotlines that both scandalized and tantalized moviegoers.
Rain was one such film. Set on an island in the South Pacific against a backdrop of tropical disease and monsoon rains, it stars a young Joan Crawford and Walter Huston. Crawford plays Sadie Thompson, a prostitute fleeing the law while Huston portrays the self-righteous missionary determined to dominate her. Both are passengers from a ship, now stranded due to a cholera outbreak. Both are in danger of being consumed by sin, lust, and compulsion. Neither may make it out of Pago Pago with their soul intact.
Come see how this DRAMA! DRAMA! DRAMA! unfolds at the Senate.
The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts.
Parking is available in a gated parking lot on Gilbert St., behind the theater.