Is My Face Red?

1932 "You'll love and hate Mrs. Poster's little boy Will'yum...and walk out of the theater chirping"
6| 1h6m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 17 June 1932 Released
Producted By: RKO Radio Pictures
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

William Poster writes a gossip column for the Morning Gazette. He will write about anyone and everyone as long as he gets the credit. He gets most of his information from his showgirl gal-pal, Peggy. Eventually Bill's reckless tattling gets him in deep trouble with friends and enemies, putting his career and life in jeopardy.

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Reviews

Hellen I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much
Supelice Dreadfully Boring
Sameer Callahan It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.
Phillipa Strong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.
MartinHafer William Poster (Ricardo Cortez) is a tabloid news reporter. He's willing to go to practically any length to dig up the dirt on people and that would include dressing up in costumes or using his girlfriend, Peggy (Helen Twelvetrees). She's a chorus dancer and hears a lot of gossip on her job...and he uses this to help make a name for himself. While he's a real egotistical cad, just how much of one is evident when he meets a rich heiress, Mildred (Jill Esmond). He impulsively gives her the ring he intended to give Peggy and when both find out about this, he's sure in trouble with them. And what about the ring...was he seriously thinking of marrying Mildred or was this just a ruse in order to get her to open up and talk about her society friends...something Poster takes full advantage when he hears about them. While treating these two women like dirt is reprehensible, Poster also is an idiot. When he witnesses the evil bootlegger, Tony (Sidney Toler), murder someone he decides to publish this story AND take no apparent precautions to protect himself. So, by the end of the film, practically EVERYONE wants to see the guy dead!!The main problem with this film is that they took the unlikability of the main character too far. He's such an egotistical jerk that you want him to get killed...and that greatly harms the picture. Watchable but not much more.
ksf-2 In addition to HUGE stars Helen Twelvetrees and Ricardo Cortez, this one also has Sidney Toler (Mugatti) and Zasu Pitts! In this one, Twelvetrees is Peggy, the showgirl. Cortez is Poster, the gossip-column writer who keeps getting his paper in trouble by finding and exposing things that might be better left unsaid. He meets up with rich socialite Mildred Huntington, gets engaged, and things start getting spicy. Z. Pitts is the Gazette operator with some funny lines. When Poster witnesses a moidah, things go off the rails. Mobsters don't appreciate when Poster starts talking about them. Another fun character is Poster's secretary "Bee"... played by Arline Judge. Judge's personal life story is just as interesting as her character.. married eight times! and the first one was to her mentor and director Wesley Ruggles. The story takes a turn when the OTHER paper in town gets the scoop on Poster for once. It's pretty good. An early talkie. Moves right along. Early roles for Twelvetrees, Toler, Judge. Directed by William Seiter, the master.
JohnHowardReid With a title like Is My Face Red? I was expecting a comedy – a romantic comedy – but this is actually a newspaper yarn and the emphasis is on crime rather than comedy, thrills rather than romance. This is not to say that the feminine side of the equation is inadequately represented in Red. In fact, there are no less than three young women tied up with the movie's central character, William Poster (played by Ricardo Cortez), including the lovely Jill Esmond and Arline Judge as well as Helen Twelvetrees. (I always though "Twelvetrees" was a weird name to choose for a screen career, but it was in fact her real, married name). Ricardo Cortez is perfect as the stop-at-nothing newspaper columnist, although it's Sidney Toler whom most viewers will focus upon simply because both scriptwriters Casey Robinson and Ben Markson and most especially director William A. Seiter go out of their way to draw him to our attention. He even merits a very extended (and very effective) close-up – rare for an actor who doesn't even figure in the main credit titles. Incidentally, I always thought Seiter was a journeyman director at best, but in point of fact he seems to have gone out of his way to direct at least one really outstanding movie a year. Like John Ford, Seiter is one of the very few really top-of- the class silent movie directors who not only successfully made the transition to sound, but actually did better! Is My Face Red? with its actionful long take in Poster's office and a startlingly effective if brief use of a first-person camera on the steamer is obviously his 1932 choice. Available on an excellent Warner Archive DVD.
mark.waltz And he is mad when another reporter scoops him over the "almost" obituary! Ricardo Cortes is the aggressively friendly reporter who goes for scandal wherever he can get it. Like Warner Brothers' brilliant "Five Star Final", this is a gossip rag (movies with newspaper surroundings of this time usually were, with the possible exception of "The Front Page" were all National Inquirer type papers), and all of the reporters go for the jugular. Yes, Cortez can be sentimental (the pitch for support for a beloved elderly musical comedy star is quite touching), but for the most part, he's a betrayer, dropping his long-time mistress (Helen Twelvetrees) for a society girl (Jill Esmond) who simply uses him for her own amusement before dropping him. When Cortez gets wind of a mob-style hit, he risks his own life for the story. Future Charlie Chan Sidney Toler is the Italian mobster he goes after which leads into a dramatic conclusion.This is basically a plethora of little stories under one big tent, and the dialog is fast, furious and filled with wonderful pre-code conversation. There are some great exchanged between Cortez and his world-weary secretary, and a great punishment for the smug Cortez by socialite Esmond. Zasu Pitts gets some great moments as a switchboard operator, but she only talks to her machine rather than interacting with the other characters. The title is uses effectively throughout to describe the anger and embarrassment of Cortez's victims, showing how they feel when they are mentioned in his column, and in the wonderful denouncement, tables are turned.