Rynox (1931) Poster

(1931)

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5/10
Good and Loud
boblipton24 July 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Well, good, anyway. RYNOX is the sort of picture that any young director might try his hand at, given a tiny budget and a producer that leaves him alone. As Michael Powell was just starting out in quota quickies at this stage, that was his situation.

RYNOX is about a company by that name, about which we are told nothing save that it needs to raise money for six months until some new contracts come in. At times it seems as if Powell wants to direct a George Bernard Shaw piece like MAJOR BARBARA or THE APPLE CART, but he lacks the ability to write wittily. That, alas, would not arise until he teamed up with Emeric Pressburger. We also get a lot of melodrama mixed in as managing director Stewart Rome occasionally puts on a big, bushy beard and slouch hat and goes around being loud and rude. That's all part of the plot.

There are a couple of technical points to this film that are actively obnoxious: one is the dialogue direction, which is clearly pitched for the stage rather than the screen. Everyone speaks loudly and in perfect diction, as if the actors are more concerned with being heard in the back row than the emotional content of their work. The other is the blocking and camera-work. People get up and stalk around, and the camera follows them in medium close up to maintain composition in a heavy-handed fashion. Very annoying.

In many ways, RYNOX is an ambitious piece for a young director anxious to make his mark, but he clearly lacks the ability to live up to his ambition. That would change.
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6/10
Rynox
CinemaSerf2 December 2023
With his eponymous company facing bankruptcy, owner "F. X. Benedik" is found slain and it falls to his son "Tony" (John Longden) to try to track down the curmudgeonly "Marsh" (Stewart Rome) who has an axe to grind with the business and might be implicated. This is probably only notable as being Michael Powell's directorial debut - and for a talkie only just out of nappies, there is quite a lot of movement and outdoor photography to help distinguish it from many of it's more drab, stage-bound, contemporaries. Otherwise, though, it's an unremarkable little whodunit with little jeopardy and way too much script. Rome does a decent enough job as the irritating "Marsh" and Dorothy Boyd ("Peter") brings a touch of glamour, though little of substance, as the mystery gradually unfolds - but don't expect much of a challenge for your own little grey cells, that's all a bit of a no-brainer.
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8/10
The First (Surviving) Film of Michael Powell.
morrison-dylan-fan4 September 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Shortly after watching Michael Powell's fun 1935 film The Phantom Light (also reviewed),I went on his IMDb page to see the films which he had made earlier.

As I looked at each of the films he had made before it,I was very sad to see that quite an important part of his early directing work looked to have been lost forever.

Whilst feeling a bit down about what me and so many other people will sadly never see,I decided to check on the BFI website,to see if their were any plot outlines for the "missing" films. To my amazement,I was shocked to discover a news item at the side of the BFI's Michael Powell page,which announced that his long lost fifth film had been found,and the it was getting put in am achieve.

Hoping that the BFI may have put a clip or two of the film online,I went round searching on YouTube for a whole weekend,which happily led to me discovering that clips had not been put on the website,but instead the whole 44 minute film!

Feeling that I had a fantastic chance to view the earliest Michael Powell film around,I decided that Rynox would be the first film that I have ever watched online!.

View on the film.:

Although he would become well known for giving his brilliant future films a dark,Brothers Grimm appearance,here,co-screenwriter/director Michael Powell goes for a very strong Film Noir look,with the scenes of F. X. in the Rynox building being shot with a very striking low-light,art-deco look,and the insane Boswell Marsh,looking like someone who has been trying to hide in an attic for his whole life!

While the editing of the film is pretty rough (which partly,might be due to the age of the film),it is still not able to ruin the fun screenplay by Powell,Jerome James and The List of Adrian Messenger writer Philip MacDonald,who do well at mixing an easy-going business drama,with the dark murder mystery of the Film Noir side.

The film is also given a great,fun character with Stewart Rome (who would late work with Powell and Pressburger on One of Our Aircraft is Missing-also reviewed) mostly striking a good balance between the mad cartoon character side,and the extremely menacing side of the unknown Boswell Marsh.

Final view on the film:

A very enjoyable,thankfully saved Film Noir,with a good screenplay and some eye-catching directing from a director with an amazing future ahead of him.
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8/10
Talent in Embryo
kidboots22 September 2019
Warning: Spoilers
It may have been only 40 minutes long but Michael Powell's talent was already there with a nicely built up plot and stylized camera angles (one scene is filmed with Stewart Rome through a mirror) reminded me of "Crime Without Passion" a bit but on a more basic budget!! From the start attention is riveted on the odious and over the top Boswell Marsh who has been making threats to businessman Benedik (Stewart Rome). Benedik is chairman of Rynox, a company which is going downhill fast!! With Marsh's absurd theatrical makeup and Benedik' clipped tones, it is almost as though Powell and his crew are setting up cinema patrons to be caught in the middle of a grand illusion. Marsh has brow beaten an elderly ticket seller into selling him several tickets for the next evening's show - they are for the servants at the Benedik residence and their absence will leave him alone and a few hours later the victim of a bizarre murder!!

With his death Tony takes over the business and gradually realises that because of a life insurance policy, his father's death has saved the company. He and his fiancee (Dorothy Boyd) are keen to track down Boswell Marsh who they observed making a huge hue and cry in a gun shop earlier that day (and a satirical dig at the stiff upper lip fortitude of the British citizen - after Marsh's outburst a salesman steps forward with a "can I now help you Sir?").

Even though both Boyd and Rome had reasonably long careers, John Longden as Tony is the only actor I was familiar with. Michael Powell began as a stagehand on a Rex Ingram movie which was then shooting in Nice and eventually got him his directing chance when quota quickies were introduced. Most of his were mysteries and were often written by J.J. Farjeon and Phillip MacDonald.
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