{"id":4168,"date":"2011-03-15T15:34:22","date_gmt":"2011-03-15T15:34:22","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/etbscreenwriting.com\/\/?p=4168"},"modified":"2011-03-15T15:34:22","modified_gmt":"2011-03-15T15:34:22","slug":"baby-face-day-six-40movies40days","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/etbscreenwriting.com\/baby-face-day-six-40movies40days\/","title":{"rendered":"Baby Face – Day Six – #40movies40days"},"content":{"rendered":"
I learned the film is notorious for its unrelenting and \u00a0unsavory look at women’s lack of power in society and commerce (except for sexual power). \u00a0Baby Face<\/em> was the film that finally\u00a0compelled the movie studios to enforce the Hays Office production code that would, for decades, censor American movie morality. It was drastically recut for it’s original release to satisfy the censors.<\/p>\n The version I saw was the prerelease uncensored cut. \u00a0This original negative was discovered by Mike Mashon, curator of the Motion Picture Division at the Library of Congress. \u00a0He struck a print of the unsanitized version and it was a sensation at the London Film Festival in 2004.<\/p>\n The uncensored cut had its American premier at New York\u2019s Film Forum in 2005. \u00a0That same year it was deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” and selected for preservation in the United States Library of Congress National Film Registry. \u00a0Time.com named it one of the 100 best films in the last 80 years.<\/p>\n \u201cYeah, I’m a tramp and who’s to blame? My father! A swell start you gave me! Ever since I was 14! Nothing but men! Dirty, rotten men\u2013 and you’re lower than all of them!\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Only one person recognizes how whip smart she is, a German immigrant cobbler and book binder. \u00a0He urges her to leave before she is beaten into submission as a victim. \u00a0He advises her to use the only thing she has as her ticket out of the grimy dead-end factory town.<\/p>\n “A woman, young, beautiful like you, can get anything she wants in the world. Because you have power over men. But you must use men, not let them use you. You must be a master, not a slave. Look here\u2014 Nietzsche says, ‘All life, no matter how we idealize it, is nothing more nor less than exploitation.’ That’s what I’m telling you. Exploit yourself. Go to some big city where you will find opportunities! Use men! Be strong! Defiant! Use men to get the things you want!”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n When her father’s illegal liquor still explodes, killing him, Lilly doesn’t shed a tear. Instead, she heads out of town in a box car. \u00a0She has an unusually equal and frank relationship with the black girl who is the scullery maid in the speakeasy. \u00a0The two girls leave together.<\/p>\n<\/a>I chose Baby Face<\/em> because I thought it was a romantic comedy– it’s not. \u00a0I also love Barbara Stanwyck– and she is amazing in this.<\/p>\n
<\/a>In Baby Face<\/em>, Lilly Powers is a sardonic smart-mouthed bar maid in her father’s speakeasy. \u00a0It’s established from the outset that she’s been “rented out” to the men her father needs to impress, mollify or obtain favors from including a sleazy politician (who protects the place from a police raid). \u00a0Lilly is called the “Sweetheart of the Night Shift.”<\/p>\n