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7/10
Ever heard of Matheson Lang? Well, well worth the watch!!
mmipyle7 June 2013
Anybody here ever hear of Matheson Lang? Well, he was the Laurence Olivier/Lon Chaney, Sr. of his day. He was also one of the founders and first directors of The Old Vic in Britain. I bring this to the attention, because it's interesting that this great and famous actor of the beginning of the twentieth century is basically wholly forgotten today. I also bring it to the attention here because last night I watched one of his 32 films, "The Great Defender" (1934), a fine old-fashioned mystery/drama/romance made in Britain by British International Pictures (BIP), starring Matheson, Margaret Bannerman, Arthur Margetson, Richard Bird, Sam Livesey, Robert Horton, J. Fisher White, and others.

Matheson plays Sir Douglas Rolls, a great defense lawyer who is diagnosed as dying of several ailments and told to cut out his career and take it easy, travel, try to preserve himself a tad longer. Instead, he has his former love (played by Margaret Bannerman) come to him asking him to defend her husband against a murder charge. Her husband, an artist, we have watched have an affair with the murdered woman, an artist's model who has been modeling for a fine nude portrait. She also - something not known by all the different men - has been three-timing the artist, her fiancé, and another man. The artist's wife - Bannerman - still loved by Sir Douglas Rolls, gets his attention, and he agrees to defend her husband anyway - and she wishes him to defend her husband whether or not he has been faithful to her... The program then shifts to a Perry Mason like courtroom drama.

Well done, if a tad tedious by modern standards because it is rather too talky, but really interesting and fun to watch. The film harps back to a twenties stage tradition as much as anything. Still, with Matheson - slightly ripe, rather in the Richard Dix talkie tradition - the show plays remarkably well. I'm really glad I had the opportunity to watch a Matheson vehicle.

Matheson made the original "Mr. Wu" in 1919, several years before Lon Chaney, Sr. re-essayed the role. Matheson played Chinese characters several other times, too, for that matter, much like Chaney. His rather famous (in Britain) film, "Little Friend" (1934), made the same year as this one, has 15 year old Nova Pilbeam (in her first film) witnessing a nasty divorce of her parents, Matheson and Bannerman (the latter the same actress who plays his former love in this film). Matheson essayed many, many historical roles, too, from Drake the English privateer to Guy Fawkes, Dick Turpin, Henry, King of Navarre, Henry V of England, and Cardinal Medici. He began in movies in 1916 playing Shylock in Shakespeare's "Merchant of Venice" and played his last role in 1936. Born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada in 1879, he died in Barbadoes in 1948.

This is truly worth finding and watching!
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6/10
Artist in the Frame
wilvram5 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Star of stage and silent screen Matheson Lang plays a renowned and successful defending counsel, now in late middle age and not in the best of health. A relaxing holiday is prescribed, but instead he's approached by the love of his life, who persuades him to take on the case of her philandering husband, an artist arrested for the murder of his model and lover.

Lang is convincing as the experienced and formidable advocate, master of all the arts and manoeuvres of his profession, and the courtroom scenes are competently portrayed. There's also one of those celebrated theatrical "yes I admit it, I did it!" confessions from the witness box, that were so beloved by the script writers of the Perry Mason TV show. In common with many British films of the period, and indeed for many years later, this would struggle to be exhibited, at least uncut, under the Hays Code, not only for the few seconds of entirely contextual partial nudity, but also as the killer turns out to be a repressed Bible thumping zealot. Despite their well known aversion to screen violence, and, most famously, horror films, for a long time the much criticised officials of the BBFC generally displayed more tolerance and common sense than their U.S. counterparts.
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6/10
Courtroom Drama
malcolmgsw6 June 2016
This film is slightly reminiscent of Witness for the Prosecution where Charles Laughton played a incandescent barrister taking on a strenuous murder trial.Early on there is a scene with an almost nude model.This seems rather unusual bearing in mind that strict censorship maintained by the British Board of Film Censors.In fact the film is a bit frank given the mores of the time.Two familiar faces in this film are Sam Livesey ,father of To get,playing the prosecuting counsel and the ubiquitous Kathleen Harrison playing a maid.The film is a familiar courtroom drama,with a rather ridiculous and overestimating confession from the witness box.
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