Is My Face Red? (1932) Poster

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6/10
If he could get a front page spread out of his own obituary, he'd go for it!
mark.waltz15 September 2012
Warning: Spoilers
And he is mad when another reporter scoops him over the "almost" obituary! Ricardo Cortes is the aggressively friendly reporter who goes for scandal wherever he can get it. Like Warner Brothers' brilliant "Five Star Final", this is a gossip rag (movies with newspaper surroundings of this time usually were, with the possible exception of "The Front Page" were all National Inquirer type papers), and all of the reporters go for the jugular. Yes, Cortez can be sentimental (the pitch for support for a beloved elderly musical comedy star is quite touching), but for the most part, he's a betrayer, dropping his long-time mistress (Helen Twelvetrees) for a society girl (Jill Esmond) who simply uses him for her own amusement before dropping him. When Cortez gets wind of a mob-style hit, he risks his own life for the story. Future Charlie Chan Sidney Toler is the Italian mobster he goes after which leads into a dramatic conclusion.

This is basically a plethora of little stories under one big tent, and the dialog is fast, furious and filled with wonderful pre-code conversation. There are some great exchanged between Cortez and his world-weary secretary, and a great punishment for the smug Cortez by socialite Esmond. Zasu Pitts gets some great moments as a switchboard operator, but she only talks to her machine rather than interacting with the other characters. The title is uses effectively throughout to describe the anger and embarrassment of Cortez's victims, showing how they feel when they are mentioned in his column, and in the wonderful denouncement, tables are turned.
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6/10
The Houses of the Holy
1930s_Time_Machine27 November 2023
We all know someone a bit like Ricardo Cortez's smart-alec, big-headed, fast talking reporter who can answer any question with a glib witty response. Whilst we love these people we're secretly glad when they get their comeuppance.

If anyone these days is unsure of whom Ricardo Cortez was, they just need to watch this. It's not his best film but this is the role he was born for. He's New York's top muck-raking low-life journalist. He has no consideration for the harm his gossip mongering does as long as he gets a story. He thinks he's invincible, untouchable and immortal. He's self-centred, arrogant and uncaring... but what Mr Cortez does with this character is makes him the most likeable man in the world!

As I've said, he's done better work but he's so much fun in this that you can't help but enjoying it even though it's hardly a great movie. A year earlier we had Warner's hard hitting FIVE STAR FINAL. That earlier film showed in a slightly melodramatic way, the horrific consequences of gutter journalism. This however dispenses with any of the distasteful results of the job and simply focuses on the fun, devil-may-care Cortez character. It's still got a degree of tension but it's quite light-hearted - even down to his name: Bill Poster as in the old joke: 'Bill posters will be prosecuted'. Of course such an amoral lifestyle will eventually come unstuck.... or will it?

Sweet, lovely girl-next-door type, Helen Twelvetrees gets star billing but her character is completely overshadowed by Ricardo Cortez who virtually jumps in front of her every time the camera rolls. Her role is simply there to support her man but even so, she does it well. When given a more in depth role such as in HER MAN, she was an excellent actress but in this she simply does what she needs to do.

Ultimately this is great fun to watch and works perfectly as a fun, fast-paced lightweight drama. That might be all you want but it is quite shallow and doesn't get under your skin as much as it would have were it made at Warners.
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6/10
What Made Hollywood Hate Journalists?
view_and_review11 February 2024
What happened in around 1930 or '31 that had Hollywood studios clambering to pillory newspapers and reporters? There was "Scandal Sheet" (1931), "Five Star Final" (1931), "The Famous Ferguson Case" (1932), and "Is My Face Red?," all about unscrupulous journalists or newspapers.

"Is My Face Red?" is about William Poster (Ricardo Cortez), a gossip columnist for the New York Globe. He doesn't care how he gets his gossip nor does he care who the gossip is about; he's going to print it. One of his main sources is his girlfriend Peggy Bannon (Helen Twelvetrees). She's a dancing girl and always has her ears to the streets. She puts in a call to her beau whenever there's something that can be counted as news.

William goes out over his skis when he reports about a murder he witnessed. He further shot himself in the foot when he started two-timing on Peggy with a society woman named Mildred Huntington (Jill Esmond). William was a hot conceited mess.

So, that brings me back to my original question: what happened in the early '30's to spark the production of these movies? It was as if society at that time had an unflattering opinion of news media altogether so Hollywood put it on celluloid. Some things never change.
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3/10
An unlikable reporter risks life and limb to get the story.
planktonrules30 October 2016
William Poster (Ricardo Cortez) is a tabloid news reporter. He's willing to go to practically any length to dig up the dirt on people and that would include dressing up in costumes or using his girlfriend, Peggy (Helen Twelvetrees). She's a chorus dancer and hears a lot of gossip on her job...and he uses this to help make a name for himself. While he's a real egotistical cad, just how much of one is evident when he meets a rich heiress, Mildred (Jill Esmond). He impulsively gives her the ring he intended to give Peggy and when both find out about this, he's sure in trouble with them. And what about the ring...was he seriously thinking of marrying Mildred or was this just a ruse in order to get her to open up and talk about her society friends...something Poster takes full advantage when he hears about them.

While treating these two women like dirt is reprehensible, Poster also is an idiot. When he witnesses the evil bootlegger, Tony (Sidney Toler), murder someone he decides to publish this story AND take no apparent precautions to protect himself. So, by the end of the film, practically EVERYONE wants to see the guy dead!!

The main problem with this film is that they took the unlikability of the main character too far. He's such an egotistical jerk that you want him to get killed...and that greatly harms the picture. Watchable but not much more.
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4/10
Nothing much happens for the first half of the movie
scsu197520 November 2022
Not-so-interesting account of a gossip columnist who is more or less a rat - which probably explains why Ricardo Cortez was cast in the part. Cortez is surrounded by his girlfriend (Helen Twelvetrees), a rich society dame he is after (Jill Esmond), his secretary (Arline Judge), and phone operator (Zasu Pitts). Robert Armstrong plays a rival reporter.

There is some snappy dialogue. Cortez gets to slap a chorus girl on her posterior, which quickly disqualifies him from becoming President.

The story picks up a bit when Cortez witnesses Sidney Toler (playing a character named Tony Mugatti) stick a shiv in a mug. Don't bother calling the police, Ricardo. Let's see if we can get a column out of this. Cortez faces some trials and tribulations the rest of the way, and even takes a shot to the tabloids. The ending is phony.

Toler's attempt at an Italian accent immediately made me sympathetic to the Asians who didn't like him playing Charlie Chan. But hey, at least they didn't call this thing "Is My Face Yellow?"
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8/10
Another great newspaper yarn!
JohnHowardReid21 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
With a title like Is My Face Red? I was expecting a comedy – a romantic comedy – but this is actually a newspaper yarn and the emphasis is on crime rather than comedy, thrills rather than romance. This is not to say that the feminine side of the equation is inadequately represented in Red. In fact, there are no less than three young women tied up with the movie's central character, William Poster (played by Ricardo Cortez), including the lovely Jill Esmond and Arline Judge as well as Helen Twelvetrees. (I always though "Twelvetrees" was a weird name to choose for a screen career, but it was in fact her real, married name). Ricardo Cortez is perfect as the stop-at-nothing newspaper columnist, although it's Sidney Toler whom most viewers will focus upon simply because both scriptwriters Casey Robinson and Ben Markson and most especially director William A. Seiter go out of their way to draw him to our attention. He even merits a very extended (and very effective) close-up – rare for an actor who doesn't even figure in the main credit titles. Incidentally, I always thought Seiter was a journeyman director at best, but in point of fact he seems to have gone out of his way to direct at least one really outstanding movie a year. Like John Ford, Seiter is one of the very few really top-of- the class silent movie directors who not only successfully made the transition to sound, but actually did better! Is My Face Red? with its actionful long take in Poster's office and a startlingly effective if brief use of a first-person camera on the steamer is obviously his 1932 choice. Available on an excellent Warner Archive DVD.
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5/10
wrong path
SnoopyStyle23 June 2022
William Poster writes The Keyhole to the City, a gossip column for the Morning Gazette. He gets most of his information from showgirl gal pal Peggy Bannon. He has a fling with heiress Mildred Huntington and joins her on the boat to Europe. He witnesses a murder and writes about it.

I don't care for the William Mildred pairing. It's a waste of time. The better pairing is William Peggy and she has the additional positive of being involved in his underworld dealings. She could have made him better. Mildred is a waste of time. I'd rather have more time building up Peggy. This could be a fun screwball crime romance comedy but it goes down a wrong path somewhere. He never gains full rooting interest.
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8/10
Luminous Helen Twelvetrees!!
kidboots22 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Even though he had only made his radio debut 2 years before, in 1932 Walter Winchell was one of the most powerful newspaper and radio gossip columnists in America. He had already been caricatured by Lee Tracy in "Blessed Event", mentioned in a popular song "Shuffle Off to Buffalo" - "it's a cinch Winch'll know"!! Now it was time for a nitty gritty portrayal of a lovable heel as only Ricardo Cortez could do. He had been bought to Hollywood in the 1920s to bring Rudolph Valentino into line - Paramount thought Cortez may have had some of the Valentino magic. No one did but Cortez proved he was a capable leading man. In talkies he went from strength to strength and while his villains are indelibly etched in memory (who could forget his psychotic mobster in "Bad Company") it is nice that he could "lighten up" as well.

Sprinkled with some terrific supporting players - Robert Armstrong as Poster's rival columnist who finally scoops him and perky Arline Judge as Poster's world weary secretary ("Remind me to give you a break baby", "I've had a break, big boy"), Cortez plays William Poster who invites the public to look through his "Keyhole" column in the Morning Gazette and uses and abuses friends in his eagerness to spill the dirt on high society.

His girl, Peggy (beautiful Helen Twelvetrees), a showgirl, also helps him out with hot tips and overheard bits of gossip but she is soon forgotten as Will gets on the track of a genuine British Blue Blood, Mildred Huntington (unattractive Jill Esmond - why she was always cast as the sultry upper crust other woman, I'll never know - maybe because she talked posh!!)

When Will accidentally witnesses a murder in a bar he feels no fear in telephoning the story to his paper - even though the killer (Sidney Toler) is crazy and desperate and even though Helen has her best piece of emoting in the movie as she desperately pleads with the unbending Will in the phone booth to think of his safety!! Things start unravelling for Will (they always do!). Peggy dumps him after seeing his ring on Mildred's finger (can't Helen remember how he was in "Bad Company" - it was only the year before!!) Then Mildred gives him the air claiming she has just been using him as her "rough diamond" and seeing what it was like to walk on the wild side. Crazed killer finally confronts him in his office but fortunately Peggy is waiting in the wings to see he gets to the hospital on time - what a girl!!

Gorgeous Helen Twelvetrees was one of Radio's first discoveries and in "Millie" all stops were pulled out to make her "Sin Pictures No. 1 Star". But by the next year Radio and Pathe merged, Katharine Hepburn became the studio's big hope and established stars such as Irene Dunne, Ginger Rogers and Constance Bennett were far out distancing Helen in public popularity. Unfortunately after "Is My Face Red?" Helen's contract was terminated but seeing her luminosity in this movie, I think RKO were crazy!!!

Spot Rochelle Hudson as a surprised young bride through a porthole!!
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8/10
fun early newspaper caper
ksf-225 October 2016
Warning: Spoilers
In addition to HUGE stars Helen Twelvetrees and Ricardo Cortez, this one also has Sidney Toler (Mugatti) and Zasu Pitts! In this one, Twelvetrees is Peggy, the showgirl. Cortez is Poster, the gossip-column writer who keeps getting his paper in trouble by finding and exposing things that might be better left unsaid. He meets up with rich socialite Mildred Huntington, gets engaged, and things start getting spicy. Z. Pitts is the Gazette operator with some funny lines. When Poster witnesses a moidah, things go off the rails. Mobsters don't appreciate when Poster starts talking about them. Another fun character is Poster's secretary "Bee"... played by Arline Judge. Judge's personal life story is just as interesting as her character.. married eight times! and the first one was to her mentor and director Wesley Ruggles. The story takes a turn when the OTHER paper in town gets the scoop on Poster for once. It's pretty good. An early talkie. Moves right along. Early roles for Twelvetrees, Toler, Judge. Directed by William Seiter, the master.
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