One Man's Journey

Summary

One Man's Journey is a 1933 American pre-Code drama film starring Lionel Barrymore as Dr. Eli Watt. The picture was based on the short story Failure written by Katharine Haviland-Taylor. It was remade by RKO as A Man to Remember (1938). The story tells of a small-town doctor working under difficult circumstances in a rural area somewhere in the United States.

One Man's Journey
lobby card
Directed byJohn S. Robertson
Charles Kerr (assistant)
Screenplay byLester Cohen
Sam Ornitz
Based onFailure
1932 story in American Magazine
by Katharine Havilland-Taylor
Produced byPandro S. Berman
Merian C. Cooper
StarringLionel Barrymore
May Robson
Dorothy Jordan
Joel McCrea
Frances Dee
David Landau
CinematographyJack MacKenzie
Edited byArthur Roberts
Music byMax Steiner
Distributed byRKO Radio Pictures
Release date
  • September 8, 1933 (1933-09-08)
Running time
72 minutes
LanguageEnglish

Plot edit

Cast edit

Reception edit

The film was popular at the box office.[1]

Preservation status edit

In April 2007, Turner Classic Movies (TCM) premiered six films produced by Merian C. Cooper at RKO which had been out of distribution for more than 50 years. (A retired RKO executive stated in an interview used as a promo on TCM for the premiere that Cooper did allow the films to be shown in 1955–1956 in a limited re-release and only in New York City.)

According to TCM host Robert Osborne, Cooper agreed to a legal settlement in 1946, after accusing RKO of not giving him all the money due him from his producer's contract in the 1930s. The settlement gave Cooper complete ownership of six titles:

Rafter Romance (1933), Double Harness (1933), The Right to Romance (1933), One Man's Journey (1933), Stingaree (1934), Living on Love (1937), and A Man to Remember (1938). When Turner Broadcasting bought the RKO film library in 1987, the six films were not included[4] and the rights had to be purchased separately. The film's remake, A Man To Remember, was unable to be found. The original copies of the film's negative were destroyed due to negligence and the film was thought to have been lost forever. However, a 35mm, original nitrate print with Dutch subtitles was discovered in the Netherlands. It is the only known surviving copy and was restored by TCM.

In 2000, A Man to Remember was preserved by the Netherlands Film Museum.

References edit

  1. ^ Churchill, Douglas W. "The Year in Hollywood: 1934 May Be Remembered as the Beginning of the Sweetness-and-Light Era, New York Times [New York, NY], December 30, 1934: p. X5; retrieved December 16, 2013.

External links edit