Wordiezett
So much average
Juana
what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.
Sarita Rafferty
There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.
Curt
Watching it is like watching the spectacle of a class clown at their best: you laugh at their jokes, instigate their defiance, and "ooooh" when they get in trouble.
JohnHowardReid
Copyright 1 December 1929 by Samuel Goldwyn. Released through United Artists. New York opening at the Selwyn: 3 November 1929. 10 reels. 93 minutes.1944 re-issue title: CONDEMNED TO DEVIL'S ISLAND.SYNOPSIS: A convict falls in love with the warden's wife.NOTES: Ronald Colman was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor, losing to George Arliss in "Disraeli".COMMENT: For his second talkie, Ronald Colman enjoys a considerable change of pace from "Bulldog Drummond". This time, he's not so romantic. He's dirty, disheveled, sweaty, sardonic, impulsive, self- deprecating, selfish, uncaring, even despairing. What a great performance! In fact he plays here with more animation than in many of his later roles, including Clive of India. Unfortunately, his realistic study of a brazen thief is slightly undermined by Ann Harding's overly theatrical posturing and Dudley Digges' overly theatrical delivery of his dialogue. Fortunately, Louis Wolheim is on hand to support Colman at crucial moments, though his part (after a splendid introduction) does turn out to be a bit disappointingly small.Despite its vintage (way back in 1929) and some unconvincing dramatics, as said, from Harding and Digges, "Condemned" seems not the least bit dated. Whilst other directors were moving over-cautiously into sound, or trying vainly to transplant outmoded silent techniques, Wesley Ruggles and two others, Tay Garnett and William K. Howard, managed to grasp all the essentials of sound cinema straight away. In fact, Condemned rates easily as Ruggles' best film. Look at the wonderful climax with Ann Harding moving diagonally out of the frame, or the tossing ship-board camera at the opening, or the fantastic pan into the silhouettes of the prisoners, or the fast tracking shot with Digges as he delivers his introductory speech to the new inmates. True, once the action settles down and the triangle romance rears its not unexpected head, the picture does become more static and dialogue-bound, but even these scenes are leavened by a marvelously realistic use of sound effects and other cinematic devices.The camera-work too is a constant delight. True, we are blinded by soft focus light every time the lens picks up Miss Harding, but some appealing, typical-Toland, atmospheric effects enliven the prison scenes.Also to be commended are the superlative sets designed by the masterful William Cameron Menzies.Present prints have been astutely shortened by nine or ten minutes, to make the thrills come faster. There are no lapses in continuity.
bkoganbing
Ronald Colman's second talkie feature film was Condemned and for that and Bulldog Drummond he received his first Oscar nomination. He lost in that second Oscar sweepstakes for Best Actor to Warner Baxter for In Old Arizona. Nevertheless Condemned holds up very well in this story set in the infamous French Devil's Island penal colony.In the story Colman's a convict and since it's Ronald Colman he's going to have a bit of polish more than the others there like fellow new inmate Louis Wolheim. The warden's wife Ann Harding is unhappily married to warden Dudley Digges who insists that she get herself a house servant from the group. Colman is a bit less threatening so he's chosen.The inevitable happens as Colman is better company than her lout of a husband. That's when they planned to escape.Dudley Digges who also doubled as dialogue director for this new fangled talking picture said that stage trained actors like both Colman and Ann Harding were a pleasure to work with. Both grasped that a bit more subtlety in technique had to be used. Both also emoted well when that was called for.According to Citadel Film series book on Ronald Colman, Colman said how grateful he was that sound came along and what a boon it was to him and other players like William Powell who was both staged trained and a good friend of Colman's. Powell also did well in his talkie debut in one of the Philo Vance films he made. The depiction of Devil's Island was outstanding. Condemned still holds up well for today's audience.
Leofwine_draca
CONDEMNED! is an early talkie prison film for screen star Ronald Colman, then riding high after the success of BULLDOG DRUMMOND. Colman would go on to cement his suave reputation with his turn as RAFFLES the subsequent year. This film is set on the notorious Devil's Island prison, a place where Colman's slightly smarmy thief is sent. It doesn't take long for him to begin an ill-fated romance with the governor's wife, and of course his sights are soon set on escape.For an early talkie, CONDEMNED! is acceptable enough fare. It has dated somewhere in the subsequent decades and fans of prison movies will be hard pressed to enjoy the slow-moving and over-obvious antics on display here. The romantic sub-plot really serves to drag things down considerably although things pick up towards the climax.
the_mysteriousx
This Ronald Colman film was his second talkie, following a rousing success in Bulldog Drummond earlier in 1929. For these two films, Colman received an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor and his work in this one is good. Samuel Goldwyn went through great pains to prepare Colman for talkies and for audiences' expectations of his voice to match his on-screen persona. In this film, Colman plays a suave thief who is sentenced to prison on Devil's Island. Once there, the warden employs him to aid his wife in household chores and there Colman falls in love with the beautiful Ann Harding.The plot is surprisingly not too ridiculous as both Colman's and Harding's characters really don't want to start an affair out of respect for each other and for the warden (a solid Dudley Digges). However, once the warden buys into local gossip that his wife is having an affair, he cannot help but constantly become angry. Each time the plot has a chance to become silly and over-melodramatic, it takes a step back and seems to have a conscience. For an early talkie, that is impressive. Further more impressive were the many dolly moves employed by the cameraman. This is not too static for such an early sound film and there is good use of sound effects being layed over the montage. All that being said, it is not a great film. It is never fully engrossing as Alibi and Applause were at times, but for a film from the class of 1929 this one is a winner and Colman, Harding, Digges and Louis Wolheim as Colman's convict friend are all excellent.