In 1933's The Barbarian,
Myrna Loy is NOT playing the exotic. Ramon Novarro is. He is The
Barbarian of the title - Jamil El Shehab, an Arabian prince, who has
been working in the city as an erstwhile tourguide and ladies' man.
Diana Standing (Myrna) arrives in town with her fiance Gerald Hume
(Reginald Denny) and her companion Powers (Louise Closser Hale). Jamil
takes an immediate interest in Diana - she is somewhat less engaged by
him. There is some verbal dueling, some tricks played by Jamil on
Gerald, and finally, Jamil kidnaps Diana.
Today,
we would probably say that Diana had Stockholm Syndrome, because,
quite frankly, as physically attractive as Jamil is, he is really quite
an unattractive individual. He is a bully, he is a male chauvanist, and
finally, he is physically abusive. Why Diana would want him in the end
is beyond me. Then again, Gerald is no prince among men either. He's
just a wimp who can't even stand up to his mother!
Loy
is just lovely, as always and one is sympathetic to her Diana. The
problem is, one can't understand why she doesn't just leave town with
Powers (the always irrepressible Louise Closser Hale) and find a better
man. Certainly the two she's managed to dig up in Egypt should just be
left in a pyramid somewhere with a mummy! This is not really a film that
translates well in the 21st Century. We really wanted Diana to get a
better break.
And of course, it is ever so racy. By today's standards, the hint of nudity in one of the scenes is bothing, but in 1933, it would be just enough to upset the would-be censors.
A quick scene from early in the film:
And of course, it is ever so racy. By today's standards, the hint of nudity in one of the scenes is bothing, but in 1933, it would be just enough to upset the would-be censors.
A quick scene from early in the film:
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