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Movie Poster

Rain

Due to a possible cholera outbreak aboard, passengers are forced to disembark at Pago Pago, a rain-soaked village on a Pacific island where the rain falls without ceasing. Among the stranded passengers are Sadie Thompson, a prostitute, and Alfred Davidson, a fanatic missionary whose zeal is to redeem her.

Director(s)

Lewis Milestone

Nate Watt

Where to watch

Artiflix

Artiflix

Free

Tubi TV

Tubi TV

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Cast & Crew

Matt Moore

Matt Moore

Dr. Robert MacPhail

Lewis Milestone

Lewis Milestone

-

Nate Watt

Nate Watt

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Guy Kibbee

Guy Kibbee

Joe Horn

Ben Hendricks Jr.

Ben Hendricks Jr.

Griggs

Walter Huston

Walter Huston

Alfred Davidson

Joan Crawford

Joan Crawford

Sadie Thompson

Mary Shaw

Mary Shaw

Ameena

Beulah Bondi

Beulah Bondi

Mrs. Davidson

Walter Catlett

Walter Catlett

Quartermaster Bates

William Gargan

William Gargan

Sergeant Tim O'Hara

Kendall Lee

Kendall Lee

Mrs. MacPhail

Fred Howard

Fred Howard

Hodgson

Details

GenresDrama
Runtime1h 34 mins
Released on12 Oct 1932
Languageen
Produced InUnited States of America
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Reviews

CinemaSerf

7/10

There are times in this film when I could quite cheerfully have hung Walter Huston's "Davidson" from the yardarm... Joan Crawford is "Sadie Thompson" - a prostitute merrily plying her trades on a South Pacific island with the visiting American troops. The arrival of the seriously puritanical "Davidson" couple - Huston and wife Beulah Bondi - soon puts a cramp in her style, though. Their shock and disgust at this slatternly behaviour leads them to try to get her deported back to America (where she has a bit of a wicked past), ostensibly in a bid to save her moral soul. Crawford is super as the working girl, but not quite so effective as the truly odious Huston, who features sparingly but oh so potently as he starts spouting scripture. Rarely can the Lord's Prayer ever have had such a menacing effect on film (or anywhere else). The rain, the interminable rain, adds heaps to the gradually smouldering angst between the two as their battle of wills ebbs one way, then the other - before a denouement that leaves us with a couple of imponderables. Lewis Milestone knew how to get the best from both his principals here, and with some wonderfully eerie cinematography he just lets them do their stuff. As usual, Alfred Newman uses his skill with the orchestra to heighten the tension too. It's hasn't quite the intensity of the silent Swanson in "Sadie Thompson" (1928) but it's still an enjoyable, if at times quite stressful, watch.

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