The Social Lion (1930) Poster

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6/10
Oakie dopey, Olive oily.
F Gwynplaine MacIntyre1 October 2005
I once had dinner with film actress Victoria Horne at the Players Club in Gramercy Park, years after the death of her husband Jack Oakie. Although she had a long and impressive career in her own right, Horne was much more interested in talking about her husband's life and career. She was deeply gratified that I had so much interest in his films. My cultural references are mostly British and Australian; very few of Jack Oakie's movies have been widely shown in those countries -- 'The Great Dictator' being an exception -- and he is largely unknown in the Commonwealth.

In his film roles, Oakie tended to rely on a blowhard personality and dialogue rather than a physical performance. Here, in 'The Social Lion', his role is far more physical than usual, and he takes advantage of the opportunity. Oakie plays Marco Perkins, who aspires to be a pro athlete. The tubby Oakie is manifestly unfit for that career, but that's nothing unusual for this actor: Oakie generally played characters with unrealistic aspirations. In the boxing ring, Marco tells each opponent in turn that their bootlaces are untied. Amazingly, this trick always works ... until Marco squares off against a pug wearing boots with zip fasteners.

Eventually, Marco falls for Gloria Staunton, a posh society girl whom Marco meets at the polo club. (I kept expecting a joke about Marco Polo.) What is it about Jack Oakie and songwriting? In several of his films -- 'Sitting Pretty', 'June Moon', 'Tin Pan Alley' -- Oakie was cast as an aspiring songwriter, always with more confidence in his own talent than any actual talent. In 'The Social Lion', it turns out that Marco the would-be athlete is also a would-be songwriter. Telling Gloria that she inspires him to write a love song, he proceeds to sing it to her. Naturally, it's not very good, but Gloria seems to like it. Gloria is very well-played by the very sexy Olive Borden, who almost convinced me that she was genuinely attracted to Oakie's schlub character. The blonde Virginia Bruce is also very sexy in a brief appearance as one of Gloria's snobby friends.

SPOILERS COMING. It turns out that Gloria was only pretending to like Marco so that she and her high-society friends could take the mickey out of him. But good-girl Cynthia Brown (played by dull Mary Brian) was in love with him all along. Skeets Gallagher, whom I usually find deeply annoying, is in his usual mode here as Oakie's brash manager. I'll rate 'The Social Lion' 6 out of 10, purely on the strength of Oakie's energetic performance and Olive Borden's sex appeal.
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2/10
The mouth that constantly roared, and I wish "The End" had come sooner.
mark.waltz11 April 2018
Warning: Spoilers
The print of "The Social Lion" that I saw ran approximately 15 minutes less than the 72 minutes listed, and even then, what remained was unfunny and rather obnoxious. We're supposed to believe that the gregarious mechanic turned boxer Jack Oakie can distract a boxing partner by telling him that his shoelace is untied, thereby distracting them and winning the match. All of a sudden, he's in society, joining a country club polo team and romancing debutante Olive Borden after dumping the down to earth Mary Brian. Suddenly, he's off to New York for a boxing match in Madison Square Garden. That's pretty much all that happens. I don't feel that I missed anything in the edited print because choppiness wasn't the issue. It was the loud unlikable quality of its hero, overplayed in a stagy manner by Oakie who fortunately toned it down for similar parts in the remainder of his career. Richard Gallagher doesn't add much by the way of comedy either. This didn't even benefit from some of the fun pre-code elements that made early sound comedies so glorious. I didn't find Oakie so much a social lion, more like an anti-social alley cat.
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