Born to Gamble (1935) Poster

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4/10
A disjoint but somewhat entertaining morality tale.
planktonrules18 September 2019
"Born to Gamble" is a very low budgeted B-movie from tiny Liberty Pictures, a 'Poverty Row' studio that filmed at the RKO lot at night. Many of the so-called 'Povery Row' studios filmed at night because they didn't actually own studio space but instead rented sound stages at the major studios--filming when the majors sent everyone home for the night. Not surprisingly, cheapness seems to be pretty obvious with this one...but there ARE bits and pieces which are pretty good.

H.B. Warner plays Carter Mathews, a rich industrialist whose family has been torn apart by gambling. How do we know this? Because Carter tells all his friends at the club all about his family nightmare--starting with his father-in-law and with the gambling bug somehow jumping onto Carter's three sons. Because of the type story it is, the film is quite episodic and all point to the evils of gambling and the virtues of hard work.

Is it any good? Mostly no because the message is obvious and heavyhanded. Plus, with a running time of only about an hour, the film is rushed and unconvincing. Too bad, as Warner and Onslow Stevens are both quite good and there are some very good moments in the film. Worth seeing as a flawed time-passer and not much more.
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5/10
A cavalcade of addiction.
mark.waltz19 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
It seems for the ancestors of Onslow Stevens' well-dressed wild west gambler that the curse will continue onto his decendents, which includes his look-alike grandson. The story is told through his son-in-law (H.B. Warner), losing wife Lois Wilson to her own addictions, and eventually seeing their children afflicted as well. Each generation gets in deeper and deeper until it is controlled by organized crime, hense the title which indicates that indeed family because of its bloodline was "born to gamble". Maxine Doyle, Eric Linden and William Janney fill out the above average cast.

This is an interesting premise for a low budget film, and almost instantaneously, I recognized connections between this and the 1933 oscar-winning best picture "Cavalcade". There's even one relative who ends up on the Lusitania, a striking coincidence considering that in "Cavalcade", family members were on the Titanic. It is Warner's performance that holds this together, covering approximately 50 years and filled what's a little tidbits of history thrown in. Only moderately creeky yet episodic, it's still an interesting variation of a similar story, but I wished that technically, it had been a bit better.
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