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Way for a Sailor

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Way for a Sailor
Directed bySam Wood
(uncredited)
Screenplay byLaurence Stallings
and W. L. River
(scenario and dialogue)
Charles MacArthur
Al Boasberg
(additional dialogue)
Based onWay for a Sailor!
1928 novel
by Albert Richard Wetjen
Produced byA Sam Wood Production
StarringJohn Gilbert
Wallace Beery
Jim Tully
Leila Hyams
Polly Moran
CinematographyPercy Hilburn
Edited byFrank Sullivan
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • November 1, 1930 (1930-11-01)
Running time
85 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Way for a Sailor is a 1930 American pre-Code film starring John Gilbert. The supporting cast includes Wallace Beery, Jim Tully, Leila Hyams, and Polly Moran. The film was directed by Sam Wood, who insisted on no screen credit. Louis B. Mayer's insistence that Gilbert had no future in talkies is attributed to two causes: Mayer's personal animosity[1] toward the man and/or the poor quality of his voice. Modern sources note that Gilbert's voice is no worse than other actors' who made the transition with a little coaching.[2]

MGM produced a Spanish language version of this film, Love in Every Port, starring Jose Crespo and Conchita Montenegro.[3]

Plot

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The film follows three merchant marine sailors—Jack, Tripod and Ginger—back and forth between their home port of London and the seaports of the world, drinking, brawling, gambling,  pursuing prostitutes (actually anything in a skirt) fighting a fire aboard ship and each other, and signing on a new vessel as soon as they have spent their pay.

Jack has dozens of girls in every port, but in London he meets his match in Joan, who works in the Shipping Office. He tries in vain to seduce her, for years. He returns from a 6 month trip to China and finds her gone. He tracks her to her home and she asks him in for a cup of tea with a little rum in it, but he ruins it by grabbing her and kissing her fiercely. She sends him away, with her extra teacup: She will not make another mistake. But he follows her to the shore and talks about his love of the sea. He offers to get a steady, well-paying job as a quartermaster, but that won't do either. At the end of the day, she tells him she is sailing home to Montreal on the Canadian Queen. He asks if he can kiss her, with his hands behind his back. He agrees—and she throws her arms around him. She wants to go. Tripod appears with a woman and grabs Joan by the arms to make her stay. She runs off, crying. The ship must leave. Aboard ship, Tripod teases Jack relentlessly.

Tripod covets a real Eureka concertina and Jack says he knows a man who has one. Jack offers to buy it and meet Tripod in the morning. He uses the money collected from Tripod and their crewmates to buy a somewhat old-fashioned suit from a pawnbroker.

Joan is still in London. He tells her he beat up Tripod and Ginger and that he now has a civilian job. He asks her to marry him. When they return to her room, he tells her he lied about the job. His ship, The Chinese Star, sails on the evening tide. She is very upset. He dismisses her feelings and goes out to get some rum. The crew are in the pub. He tells them he is married. They take him back to the pawnbroker and frighten the man into giving back the money for the suit. Tripod steals a concertina. Jack finds Joan gone. He misses the boat.

The Canadian Queen is steaming through rough seas. Joan is aboard. Jack is quartermaster. She tears up the marriage certificate, furious that he was willing to ruin her whole life for a few minutes of pleasure. The storm worsens, The Chinese Star is nearby and coming to pieces, all lifeboats gone. The Canadian Queen sends out a boat. A ship's officer explains to Joan that the plan is to rig lifelines so that the men aboard the Chinese Star can be rescued, one at a time. The boat founders, but some men in life jackets are rescued. Meanwhile a bosun's chair goes back and forth between the foundering vessel and the rescue ship. Most crew are rescued, but the Captain goes down with his ship.

In calm daylight, Jack and Ginger are picked up by a whaling vessel. Jack found the concertina, floating. He throws it back into the ocean, to honor his pal, just as Tripod comes out on deck. Tripod tosses Ginger overboard to retrieve it. Apparently they saw the whaler’s light and Tripod told them to swim to it.

After 6 months with the whaler, they return to London. Ginger has a gigantic fur hat for Mamie, but she is nowhere in sight. Tripod says he should have sent an expensive wire like the one Jack sent to Joan. Tripod's arms are full of his pet sea lion, Alfred, and Joan's arms are full of a baby. It turns out she is holding it for someone. Joan and Jack reconcile and he sweeps her up in his arms and rushes through the crowd crying “Way[4] for the sailor!”

Cast

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Reception

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In his December 13, 1930 review in The New York Times, Mordaunt Hall observed that in “John Gilbert's long-delayed second talking film, …he gives a better performance than he did in his previous audible production. The story is a strange mixture of low comedy and unconvincing romance, with Mr. Beery walking off with what honors are to be had. …glimpses of the work aboard freighters, the rescuing of men from a sinking vessel and other such views are infinitely more interesting than the actual domgs of the characters…”[5]

References

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  1. ^ For a detailed account of the rupture between Gilbert and the studio, see the Article under Way for a Sailor on TCM.com.
  2. ^ "Way for a Sailor". prod.tcm.com. Retrieved August 30, 2024.
  3. ^ "AFI|Catalog".
  4. ^ Make Way for the sailor
  5. ^ Hall, Mordaunt (December 13, 1930). "THE SCREEN; A Cunning Kleptomaniac. A Nautical John Gilbert". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved August 31, 2024.
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