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The Valiant

  • 1929
  • Approved
  • 1h 6m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
584
YOUR RATING
Marguerite Churchill, Paul Muni, and Edith Yorke in The Valiant (1929)
Drama

After killing an unknown man for an unknown reason, a mysterious drifter turns himself to the law under a false name, intending to protect his own family's honor. But when the news of his co... Read allAfter killing an unknown man for an unknown reason, a mysterious drifter turns himself to the law under a false name, intending to protect his own family's honor. But when the news of his conviction breaks, the drifter's sister considers the possibility that the man is her long-l... Read allAfter killing an unknown man for an unknown reason, a mysterious drifter turns himself to the law under a false name, intending to protect his own family's honor. But when the news of his conviction breaks, the drifter's sister considers the possibility that the man is her long-lost brother.

  • Director
    • William K. Howard
  • Writers
    • Tom Barry
    • John Hunter Booth
    • Holworthy Hall
  • Stars
    • Paul Muni
    • Marguerite Churchill
    • Johnny Mack Brown
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    584
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William K. Howard
    • Writers
      • Tom Barry
      • John Hunter Booth
      • Holworthy Hall
    • Stars
      • Paul Muni
      • Marguerite Churchill
      • Johnny Mack Brown
    • 20User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Photos20

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    Top cast26

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    Paul Muni
    Paul Muni
    • James Dyke
    Marguerite Churchill
    Marguerite Churchill
    • Mary Douglas
    Johnny Mack Brown
    Johnny Mack Brown
    • Robert Ward
    • (as John Mack Brown)
    DeWitt Jennings
    DeWitt Jennings
    • Warden Holt
    Edith Yorke
    Edith Yorke
    • Mrs. Douglas
    Clifford Dempsey
    Clifford Dempsey
    • Police Lieutenant
    Richard Carlyle
    • Father Daly
    Henry Kolker
    Henry Kolker
    • Judge
    Robert Elliott
    Robert Elliott
    • Undetermined Secondary Role
    • (scenes deleted)
    Sherwood Bailey
    • Little Boy
    • (uncredited)
    George Chesebro
    George Chesebro
    • Liberty Bondsman
    • (uncredited)
    Sidney D'Albrook
    Sidney D'Albrook
    • Prison Guard
    • (uncredited)
    Dannie Mac Grant
    Dannie Mac Grant
    • Little Boy
    • (uncredited)
    Henry Hall
    Henry Hall
    • Harold Everett Porter
    • (uncredited)
    Barton Hepburn
    • Joe Douglas as a Youth
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Homans
    Robert Homans
    • Newspaper Printer
    • (uncredited)
    Lillian Lawrence
    • Spinster on Train
    • (uncredited)
    Ralph L. Novarro
    • Unidentified secondary role
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • William K. Howard
    • Writers
      • Tom Barry
      • John Hunter Booth
      • Holworthy Hall
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.0584
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    Featured reviews

    drednm

    Two Oscar Nominations

    This 60-minute film earned two Oscar noms: best actor for Paul Muni (in his film debut), and and writing nom.

    A rather intriguing narrative setup has Muni turning himself in for murder, giving a false name, and refusing to give any information about the murder or offer an defense. Back in Ohio, a family reads the story and wonders if the killer is the long-lost brother. The younger sister heads to New York to see if she can discover his identity.

    After a few implausible turns of events, the two meet, but the young woman (Marguerite Churchill) goes back home, convinced the killer is not her brother and that he may still be alive and well somewhere in the world.

    Johnny Mack Brown plays the boy friend, Edith Yorke is the old mother, Henry Kolker is the judge, and DeWitt Jennings is the warden. This film was released right after Brown's talkie debut in Coquette with Mary Pickford. He has little to do here. As for Muni (never a favorite of mine) he gives a very subtle and subdued performance. He lost the Oscar to Warner Baxter for In Old Arizona.
    7johnphilipklein

    An excellent showcase for Paul Muni

    I saw this film originally in 2005 after making a special appointment at the George Eastman House in Rochester, New York. (It has shown a few times on TCM, I believe.) THE VALIANT is an excellent showcase for Paul Muni's performance as an anonymous man sentenced to death for a murder he refuses to discuss. His scenes become exemplars of powerful understatement, particularly in his penultimate scene with Mauguerite Churchill's character, who comes to Muni's prison (probably New York's Sing Sing) to find out if he is her long-lost brother. The resulting emotional scene moved my partner to tears, and she is not an easily moved person! I first became attracted to Muni's acting when I watched his powerful performance in I AM A FUGITIVE FROM A CHAIN GANG (1932) as a child. His performance in THE VALIANT earned Muni his first Academy Award nomination. I've seen the other extant nominations, and they are substandard at best (Chester Morris in ALIBI, George Bancroft in THUNDERBOLT, and especially the winner, Warner Baxter in IN OLD ARIZONA.) The film suffers a bit from the limitations associated with the early sound era, particularly from the somewhat wooden supporting performances by Churchill and the future cowboy star John Mack Brown. But the writing and direction by William Howard are still powerful enough to help support Muni's outstanding performance.
    5alonzoiii-1

    A Valiant Effort With An Offbeat Plot That Keeps Its Secrets

    The organ music announcing the credits fades, the sound tracks buzzes and hums, and the camera focuses on a door at the end of a bleak hallway. A shot rings out, and Paul Muni stumbles out holding a gun. He says not a word, as he stumbles down a noisy street, tries to get the attention of a cop. While everyone around him chatters on (in the aimless way sometimes one finds in the early talkie), and life goes on, Muni is a man apart, in his own silent world, his motives a mystery, his identity a mystery, but his guilt written all over him. Muni, through the operation of the rather simple and simplistic plot, will prove himself one of THE VALIANT, but will remain almost a total mystery as he goes willingly to the electric chair.

    This is a movie with a dynamite opening sequence -- which takes superb advantage of the primitive state of movie-making technology circa 1929 -- that, alas, does not live up to the opening. Paul Muni is good enough to deserve his Oscar nomination (and a heck of a lot better than the guy that got the Oscar that year -- Warner Baxter), but everyone else is wedded to the over-enunciated acting of 1929. And, as is the case with so much of the 1929 product, the pace is so verrrry slow, with the overlong scenes that suggest a filmed play. Any scene that does not feature Muni is downright terrible. He is the one that makes the movie work.

    So, this is a movie you might want to see, but you might want to give up on halfway through. It is exceptionally brave plotting though, that while we do sort of settle the mystery of who Paul Muni is, we never quite find out why he did what he did, or even if the story he tells at the end has some element of truth. It's a pity this play does not seem to have been remade, when talkie acting styles had improved.
    7Cineanalyst

    Opening Up

    Of what interest "The Valiant' may be of today is probably mostly due to its receiving a couple of nominations from the second Academy Awards (Paul Muni for Best Actor along with one for Writing) and for those interested in surveying Hollywood's transition to talkies or Muni's career, with this being his first picture in an oeuvre that would include six Oscar nominations and one win. Three years later, he would star in two of his best roles, "I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang" and "Scarface" (both 1932). Here, thankfully, he's relatively restrained, although the line readings for most of the cast tend to be very stilted, which isn't helped by the creaky and primitive sound-recording technology. Being based on a one-act play, however, "The Valiant" is an interesting adaptation that "opens up" the play to about-an-hour-long feature-length film, while commendably leaving much of its story unexplained, or open. Looking beyond its primitive deficiencies, it's even a subtly powerful picture in its treatment of war.

    Technically, "The Valiant" is superior to some other talkies from this period; although, silent cinema was at an artistic peak and remains better than these early sound pictures. The first scene makes good use of off-screen action as indicated by sound (a gun shot) and shadows. There are also a few crane and dolly shots throughout the picture. A hold-over from the silent era, the film is divided by five title cards that set-up the proceeding acts. The lack of a musical score is probably beneficial here, as it would surely be overly mawkish otherwise; what music there is consists of three diegetic musical scenes: a Jazz band in prison and a dance party and piano playing in the country house. I've seen quite a few films from 1929, and it seems that even the "silent" ones included such diegetic musical scenes. At least two other 1929 prison pictures, "Thunderbolt" and "Weary River," also include the playing of musical instruments. Evidently, it was a popular notion for exploiting the new synchronized film-sound recordings. Fortunately, the dialogue is clear, too, and the picture, overall, is relatively restrained. Even the hokey superimposed flashbacks and thoughts of the mother are forgivable compared to the over-the-top melodramatics of some other contemporary films, and they play well into the film's implications about war and the perceptions of it.

    The narrative has a John Doe (he uses the false name "James Dyke") sentenced to be executed for murder after he turns himself into the police. But, he refuses to admit his true identity and, eventually, invents a story of himself dying in WWI. He also writes articles for the newspaper "warning the youth on the folly of crime." From the press coverage he receives, his mother and sister suspect that he's their long-lost Joe, with his sister traveling to meet him setting up the scene from the one-act stage version. Although rather creepy, their past of quoting "Romeo and Juliet" to each other is central to his identification.

    There's the clichéd theme of the corrupting city contrasted with the idyllic country, with James/Joe killing a man in the city, while his mother oversees the wholesome coupling of her daughter, Mary, with an upstanding young man named Bob (who's so dull he spends the entire picture staring at Mary like one of her dogs waiting for attention). More interesting is the past of the Great War. The protagonist hasn't seen his family since it; at one point, he openly wishes he'd died a soldier. "The Valiant" doesn't answer every question raised in the plot. We never discover why he abandoned his family, the reason he murdered a man, or what his true involvement in the war was. It's as though the war did take away his life.
    6fntstcplnt

    The Valiant (1929)

    Directed by William K. Brown. Starring Paul Muni, Marguerite Churchill, DeWitt Jennings, John Mack Brown, Edith Yorke, Clifford Dempsey, Richard Carlyle.

    After killing a man who "deserved to die," Muni turns himself in to authorities under a false identity to protect his family; when Churchill sees his picture in the paper and believes it to be the brother she hasn't seen in years, she travels to the prison to meet him before his execution. Simple, unfussy drama, clocking in at just over an hour, has moments of quiet power emerging from the often stiff, static presentation. In his screen debut, Muni establishes an intuitive, naturalistic acting style, avoiding nearly all the industry-wide creaky performance tricks that severely date most early talkies (Brown, on the other hand, inspires giggles just about every time he opens his mouth). Even at its short length, signs of padding when Muni is offscreen are apparent, while other aspects would have benefited from deeper development; sentimentality during the final reel is earned.

    61/100

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Film debut of Paul Muni.
    • Goofs
      When the warden begins to head toward the door in order to let Dyke's sister enter his office, he is holding a cigar in his right hand. But on the next immediate cut, as he reaches the door and then opens it; there is no longer a cigar in his hand.
    • Quotes

      Mary Douglas: Every evening, when I'd be sent off to bed, Joe and I had a little Romeo and Juliet goodnight of our very own.

    • Connections
      Alternate-language version of El valiente (1930)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 19, 1929 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Je suis un assassin
    • Production company
      • Fox Film Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 6 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White

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