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The Crowd
(1928)
In King Vidor's urban melodrama:
- the staircase scene in 1912 when a young 12 year-old
boy climbed claustrophobic, steep stairs and near the top learned
that his father had died; he was told (in a title card: "You
must be brave now, little man...like your father would want you
to be")
- the arrival of ambitious, wide-eyed 21 year-old John
Sims (James Murray) in NYC, with marvelous visuals capturing New
York City's teeming streets, and the enormous crowd shots
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John Sims at His Desk in a NYC Skyscraper
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- the sweeping camera sequence from curbside outside
a towering skyscraper, moving up the face of the building and through
a upper window and zeroing in (with a dissolve) on the view of
a low-level, dehumanized office worker John Sims lost in a sea
of desks lined up in rows - positioned at desk 137; in fact, he
was not working, but watching the clock in anticipation of a 5:00
pm quitting time (the sequence was paid homage to in Billy Wilder's The
Apartment (1960)), and pondering answers for a get-rich-quick
$100 prize contest by naming a "new motor fuel" (his
entries included Petrol-Pep and Jazz-o-Lene)
- the romantic/courtship scenes between the two young
lovers John and Mary (Eleanor Boardman) - especially in the sequences
on Coney Island (The Tunnel of Love, amusement park rides, etc.),
and he attempted to kiss her but she was reluctant at first: "Gee...I
oughtn't to let you kiss me" - but then freely allowed him to
romance her
Coney Island Sequence: John on Date with Mary
(Eleanor Boardman)
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- soon afterwards after a tiring day and ride back
on the train to the city, John impulsively proposed to Mary resting
in his arms ("Mary, let's you and me get married"); she
nodded in agreement, and soon they were married, spending their
honeymoon at Niagara Falls
- in the hospital, the scene of John's anxiety over
the birth of their first child - and his whispered words to his wife
when the baby boy was delivered to their bedside: ("This is
all I've needed to make me try harder, dear...I'll be somebody now,
I promise.")
Tragic Truck Accident, Killing Young Daughter
- Horrifed Reaction
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- the couple's reaction to the accidental death of
their young second child, a daughter, who was accidentally hit
by a truck as she raced across a busy NYC street - reflected on
the horrified faces of the parents who were watching from a nearby
window
- the poignant scene of suicidal John with his young
son on a railroad overpass when the boy restored John's faith in
himself by expressing his unconditional love
- and the final sequence of the reconciled couple enjoying
a comical vaudeville show as the camera pulled back and they became
anonymous in the audience
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Young John Climbing Stairs With News of Father's Death
John Sims
(James Murray)
Honeymooning at Niagara Falls
John's Anxiety in the Hospital Over The Birth of Their First
Child
Young Son's Unconditional Love For Suicidal Father
Ending - John and Mary Seated in a Vaudeville Show Audience
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