The Power of the Press (1928) Poster

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7/10
This is a Wonderful little film that was forgotten because it was squeezed between the silent era and the race to sound movies.
Larry41OnEbay-221 December 2000
Warning: Spoilers
This is a Wonderful little film that was forgotten because it was squeezed between the silent era and the race to sound movies. The acting and story are smooth and show a competent Frank Capra early in his career. The story begins with light humorous touches but quickly turns into a dramatic crime story. SPOILERS: Fairbanks plays a cub newspaper reporter stuck writing about the weather forecast. And even that gets edited by his tough, cigar chewing boss. One day all the "real' reporters are out covering other stories when the phone rings with the news that the local distract attorney has just been shot. The editor is forced to send the boy wonder (Douglas Fairbanks Jr.) out to cover his first big assignment. Rushing out the door he bumps into a stranger and accidentally switches hats. His hat contained his press pass and he later discovers he is blocked from the crime scene by the cops because he has no other credentials. Stymied he wonders around the back of the house just in time to see a pretty young woman trying to sneak out a window. Trying to stop her as she runs towards her car, she drops her purse but gets away. He takes her purse back to the editor and they go through it and discover from her ID that she is the mayor's daughter. This story fills the front page and the new reporter is a star! Quickly the young girl tracks down the reporter to explain she does not know who committed the murder, but was just there by accident. She asks him to retract the implications of the story as she cries and pleads. Softheartedly he believes her and fights with the editor for the retraction threatening to quit. He's immediately fired. Back on the streets he runs into a guy he also saw outside the house where the murder occurred. Putting two and two together he tries to ingratiate himself with this gangster. Following him and acting drunk he drops clues that he knows more about the motives and the murder plot. The gangster tries to lead him wrong, but the young reporter uses a scrapbook found at the scene to bait the man. When the gangster steals a picture of his pretty female accomplice from the scrap book the report knows who he needs to talk with next. The scene switches to a country house where this pretty night club singer is hiding out. She's staying out of sight because she's working for the gangster who is working for a corrupt politician trying to become mayor! Young Douglas eventually finds her and explains that if she signs a confession he will help get her off and help prosecute the men who forced her to join in their plan. Just as she sees that he's right and starts to write out her version of the story the gangster shows up and fights with the reporter. With the rest of the gang waiting outside the singer and reporter come up with an elaborate escape plan that distracts the gang as they rush back to the paper with the murder tied up and save the day! With his job back and the mayor's daughter cleared of all suspicion they two fall in love. fade out.
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7/10
This Is Available As A DVD-R
blue-74 November 2010
This is a Capra film that I have always wanted to see and finally had the opportunity when it was released by Grapevine Video (www.grapevinevideo.com) in 2010. This was Frank Capra's final silent film. Hereafter they would at least be "Part-Talking". Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. proves to be a chip off the old block. He has the same kind of charm that made his father world famous and is even more striking in the looks department. It's also a pleasure to see Jobyna Ralston, the girl who was so wonderful in six of Harold Lloyd's very best features (including The Freshman, Girl Shy, Why Worry? and The Kid Brother) in a drama. She is also excellent in the 1927 Best Picture winner "Wings". As has been noted it is Charlie Chaplin's ex-wife Mildred Harris who is the BIG surprise. She turns in a very nice performance. THE POWER OF THE PRESS does a credible job of capturing the feel of the newspaper world. One of my favorite parts is the documentary-like scene of showing the procedure that takes place to get a story from notes to the printed page. Setting up the type and the running of the large presses is well captured. Worth taking a look at if your are a Frank Capra fan.
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6/10
The big scoop
bkoganbing21 August 2013
In the Citadel Film series book on the Films Of Frank Capra, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. wrote a letter to the editor saying that while he has enjoyed the great body of Capra work this film The Power Of The Press was not one that rated high in his or Capra's career. I'd tend to agree with that assessment.

Nevertheless The Power Of The Press has a certain charm to it and certainly was worth preserving. Fairbanks really carries this film as a charming if bumptious and slightly obnoxious cub reporter looking for a big scoop. He was all of 19 years old when he did this film.

Fairbanks is hanging around the city room hoping to get a big assignment and make his mark when word comes across that the District Attorney was murdered in his apartment. No one else is around so editor Robert Edeson sends Fairbanks who does get a big scoop when he finds the daughter of the opposition candidate Jobyna Ralston fleeing the scene. It is a big scoop, but it was carefully contrived to shield the real murderer and ruin Jobyna's father at the same time.

The key to all of this is Mildred Harris best known for being one of Charlie Chaplin's wives. Watching Mildred portray your typical 20s flapper make me realize why she got Charlie's mojo going. She really does steal the film whenever she's on screen.

The Power Of The Press is minor league Frank Capra, but still holds up well as entertainment.
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Rare but Entertaining Capra
Michael_Elliott30 April 2010
Power of the Press, The (1928)

*** (out of 4)

Nice comedy/drama from Capra. Clem Rogers (Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.) is a cub reporter who gets his big break covering the murder of a District Attorney. One the scene Rogers sees the daughter (Jobyna Ralston) of an upcoming Mayor leaving the house and soon it's all over the news that she was involved in her death. She claims she's innocent so the reporter sets out to see if she really is and soon uncovers a dark political plot. This Columbia film runs a brief 64-minutes and while it doesn't feature anything ground breaking, it does manage to keep you entertained with a smile on your face. The best thing going for the film are the performances with Fairbanks coming off very charming. He's very believable as the rather dumb reporter yet when it's time to be serious he can manage this as well. Fairbanks can play both the comedy as well as the drama and his energy helps keep the film moving. Ralston is also very good as the daughter and the chemistry with Fairbanks comes off very well. Mildred Harris is terrific as the mystery lady who might know a lot more than anyone else and Philo McCullough and Wheeler Oakman turn in fine performances as well. The movie is so short that we really don't get any sort of character development or a well drawn out story but I really don't think the point was to make some sort of grand mystery. The movie was clearly meant to be light entertainment and that's what it is. Capra's direction perfectly handles the lighter moments as well as the romantic moments but he also handles the suspense quite well. There's a terrific scene where Fairbanks plays drunk to try and find some information from a bootlegger that works perfectly and what really happened to the D.A. is good as well. Fans of Capra and Fairbanks will certainly want to check this out even though it's rarely talked about when people discuss either man.
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6/10
The Power of the Press review
JoeytheBrit4 May 2020
19-year-old Douglas Fairbanks Jr plays a cub reporter who stumbles upon Jobyna Ralston as she exits the house of a recently violently deceased DA by the window. A snappy little drama from Frank Capra with welcome touches of humour to paper over the thin plot.
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7/10
Corruption in City Hall
davidmvining12 January 2024
Frank Capra follows up a well-made but misguided naval thriller with another thriller, this one centered around a young reporter trying to uncover some corruption and crime at the highest levels of his unnamed city, and its right back to feeling like a Capra film. It doesn't have the same warmth as some of his better-known films, but it's got that little guy standing up alone against the big guy dynamic, all while Capra shows surprising affinity with thriller mechanics. It's a surprisingly effective little film.

Clem (Douglas Fairbanks Jr.) is the newest man at the newspaper, given the task of writing weather reports while his editor (Robert Edeson) cuts out all of the florid language he adds in while he dreams of breaking the big story that will make his career, much to the derision of Johnson (Dell Henderson), a senior reporter who laughs at his dreams. Luck comes when Clem is the only one around as the editor receives news that the district attorney has been murdered, sending Clem to the scene to pick up what news he has. He stumbles across a young woman, Jane Atwill (Jobyna Ralston) fleeing the scene, given the scoop by the nearby Van (Wheeler Oakman) that she had something to do with the murder. Clem has made his mark, his editor accepting the story and putting it on the front page in a huge headline.

Now, there's a small thing that films occasionally do, that I find to be more prominent in silent films than sound ones, where we get montages of "how things work", and Capra offers us a quick montage of how the newspaper press works mechanically. We watch Clem write the article, the papers go to the layout men, the layout men hammering the new plates into place, the new mold getting made, and the new printing plate getting put on the roller. It's quickly paced, doesn't get bogged down in the details, has no intertitle to explain what's going on, and it's informative while being germane to the plot, if not entirely necessary. It's a good little interlude that's well handled in its place.

The plot ends up turning when Jane shows up, demanding that Clem retract the story because it's not true, she's the daughter of the leading candidate for mayor, and the story is tanking his chances of winning. Clem goes to his editor demanding it to be retracted, a demand that leads to him being fired. Clem and Jane end up following the trail they pick up that takes them into the corruption of the other candidate, Robert Blake (Philo McCullough), and his band of crooks defending his secret past that involves the hidden dame Marie (Mildred Harris). The specifics of the actual history aren't that detailed (it's a MacGuffin, in the style of Hitchcock, so fine), but the trail of getting to that secret is detailed (a bit silly in a couple of respects, to be honest) and straightforward, making Clem into a real reporter who wears out his leather soles to get the story.

There's fun to be had in this film, and part of it is the winning performance from Fairbanks Jr., having adopted some of his father's charm and applying it as liberally as he could to this brash, young reporter. He's not swashbuckling, but he's adventuring anyway. It's a very plot heavy film, not allowing much in the way for character exploration, so charming is the right way to go for a lead. His supporting cast is the result of strong typecasting, especially with Oakman as the violent gangster who pops in and out of the story.

In a curious note, the print I saw seemed to be missing a brief section of the exciting climax where Clem gets a gun away from Van, the sort of plot mechanics that matter in some small manner, the movement of people from one place to the next is important to make sense, but ultimately don't matter that much for meaning and intention of the overall piece. I only bring it up because it was jarring but didn't affect my appreciation for the film. It's not like Capra left it out on purpose, it was just lost to some projectionist or other over the course of the previous 95 years.

Anyway, The Power of the Press is a demonstration of Capra's ability to move in and out of genre like any good studio director of the era. He was making films his own within them, the little guy who gets fired from the newspaper being the only one to continue the fight against the corruption of city hall (well, sort of, just a guy who wants the position) is purely the sort of thing that Capra would get known for, in particular films like Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. His storytelling is rougher, but his technical skills are surprisingly adept (there are some tracking shots in here that are really quite fun). It's him in proto-form, and it's nice to see him continue to change and grow as an artist.
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10/10
Capra clicks, Fairbanks shines, but Mildred steals the show!
JohnHowardReid16 April 2010
Frank Capra's fast-paced "The Power of the Press" is even more dazzling in its 66-minutes (cut from 72) Kodascope version. Young Douglas Fairbanks plays it just right as the go-getter hero, taking care that his brashness is always cleverly tempered. His delightful interpretation of an always-laughing bootlegger is highly amusing. It's also good to see Jobyna Ralston as the in-peril heroine, Robert Edeson as the cigar-chewing editor, Dell Henderson as a blob of a reporter and Wheeler Oakman as the crook's chief accomplice, but it's blonde Mildred Harris who manages to steal the movie from all of them – and that's before you realize who she actually is, none other than the Mildred Harris who married Chaplin and then flitted around high society after her divorce in 1921, had a running affair for years with the Prince of Wales, married a gent named Everett McGovern, divorced him in 1930, and that some year introduced the Prince to another high-flying socialite, Mrs Wallis Simpson. She was only 42 when she died of pneumonia in Hollywood in 1944. Of her 134 movies, only a few survive. "The Power of the Press" was her last starring role. But what a role!
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10/10
The power of the press strikes again!
leftistcritic3 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
While this is a silent film, the music (which sets the mood) and actions make this an effective drama. In the days of front-page propaganda in "mainstream" media and "alternative facts" in publications like Breitbart, this Frank Capra film is one of his better ones. It shows the part of the press and how it can be manipulated by bad actors, with one man manipulating one young aspiring newspaper reporter named Clem Rogers, played by Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., to say that Jane Atwill (played by Jobyna Ralston), the daughter of the mayor, John Atwill (played by Edward Davis), killed a local district attorney. But then the plot thickens as those opposing the mayor, the campaign of Robert Blake (played by Philo McCullough), plotted together to kill the District Attorney (played by Charles Clary). This drama, mixed with romance is a perfect movie not only of the silent era but about the press.

You could say it unnecessarily glorifies the press, but truth be told, it actually says unorthodox reporting, like literally kidnapping the murder suspect is ok, as is going on an unlicensed investigation of a murder case. As such while those associated with the camp of individuals who oppose the mayor are sleezy criminals who almost seem like a form of Mafia (one is literally a bootlegger), the truth is that the reporter himself literally commits a crime by breaking and entering into a house where Marie Watson is being held and then engages in kidnapping which is also somehow ok, which makes little sense. Those who detest Rogers, like his editor Robert Edeson, as do his work colleagues Bill Johnson (played by Dell Henderson) and the sports writer (Spottsiwoode Aitken).

All in all, this movie is a classic worth watching even if you aren't used to watching silent movies.
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8/10
Capra's First Film On The Corruption in Politics
springfieldrental16 May 2022
Director Frank Capra, signing with Columbia Pictures in 1927 after severing ties with comedian Harry Langdon, said he "wasn't at home in silent films." But his body of nine movies without sound was a learning visual tool for the young director. It helped that Columbia, headed by brothers Jack and Harry Cohn, was a recent start-up studio producing mainly shorts and two-reel comedies as fillers to play between the bigger studios' main feature films. When the ambitious Capra was hired, he at first had to prove himself as a talented filmmaker whose resume, besides directing a scant few of Langdon films, was thin. Judging from his first couple of years's output at his new studio, he definitely proved his worth.

In the first year with Columbia, Capra directed seven 1928 feature-length films. His final movie that year was October 1928's "The Power of the Press," about a cub reporter (Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.) who gets the assignment to cover the murder of the city's attorney general. The young newspaper man stumbles upon a web of organized crime and corrupt local politics. The fourth estate factors in a number of future Capra films. "The Power of the Press" also begins a common theme of the director's by focusing on dishonest politicians.

The magic of "The Power of the Press" is seen in Capra's quick pacing when the action unfolds. He absorbed the Soviet filmmakers's philosophy that an inch of static footage is wasted space. The "fat" has to be excised when the activity on the screen quickens. Capra also had the gift of interjecting humor into certain scenes his audience least expects. "The Power of the Press" follows a familiar pattern of Capra's showing a sincere but inexperienced protagonist getting duped by corrupt people surrounding him, but emerges much the wiser by triumphing over such dishonesty.

The lead in "The Power of the Press" was 19-year-old Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. (son of the famous actor), whose presence in the tail-end of 1925's "Stella Dallas" increased his visibility, securing him larger roles. He's exuberant as the rookie reporter Clem Rogers, who's given the large murder story when the paper's editor finds no other reporter in the newsroom so late at night. Clem discovers Jane Atwill (Jobyna Ralston), daughter of the opposition candidate running against the city mayor, hightailing out of a window of the murdered city attorney's house. It's a set-up by the current mayor, knowing if she's a prime suspect, he's golden for a no-opposition election. But Clem digs deeper to discover the corruption inside city hall.

Jobyna Ralston, comedian Harold Lloyd former lead actress for a number of his films, was enjoying success in her free-lancing days She appeared in eleven movies after her final picture with Lloyd, 1927's "Kid Brother," before she received her big role in "The Power of the Press." Another actress in the film was the former Mrs. Chaplin, Mildred Harris, who continued her busy stagecraft playing Marie Weston.
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