Saturday Night Movie: Deluge (1933)

9

Tonight’s Saturday Night Cinema classic is Deluge. This film had been lost for well over 80 years. It’s pre-code – before production codes were imposed on Hollywood. It imagines not just the destruction of civilization in earthquakes and cataclysmic storms, but life after.

A solar eclipse, a massive tidal wave, and the last few people on Earth provide the focus of this early disaster film, set in a soggy New York City. Only one man in the Big Apple survived the wave. He swims out of the city and later meets the Eve to his Adam. He believes that his wife and child are dead, so he begins courting the woman and defending her against marauding stragglers. Things go well until his real wife shows up.

‘Deluge’ – The original end-of-the-world disaster movie restored

Felix E. Feist’s 1933 ‘Deluge,’ the first end-of-the-world disaster movie

Stream On Demand

Story continues below advertisement

Deluge (1933) (Kino Lorber Studio Classics, Blu-ray, DVD), the original end-of-the-world thriller, is a curious and often fascinating artifact. Produced in 1933, before the production code came down on Hollywood, on a relatively modest budget, it imagines not just the destruction of civilization in (unexplained) earthquakes and cataclysmic storms but life after the flood, so to speak. It’s based on a popular 1920s science fiction novel by the now forgotten Sydney Fowler Wright and can claim the title as the first disaster movie.
Kino Lorber Studio Classics

Scientists are in a panic as barometers plunge and reports of cities flooded in tidal waves and hurricanes are breathlessly reported in radio broadcasts. In these opening scenes, however, the only destruction we witness is the lavish house in the woods of Martin and Helen (Sidney Blackmer and Lois Wilson), crushed under trees blown over by high winds while Martin carries them off to safety. Then the real spectacle begins: New York collapses in primitive yet evocative miniatures that are more expressionistic than realistic, like an avant-garde short dropped into a science fiction thriller. Crude travelling mattes put people amidst the destruction, fleeing collapsing buildings or getting crushed by the debris, and a magnificent miniature gives us a God’s eye view of New York City swamped in a tsunami. By modern standards it’s not all “realistic” but it’s mesmerizing in part because it’s a cinematic imagining of something no filmmaker had attempted on screen before. It’s a first pass at the kind of disaster spectacle we now take for granted and these technicians create it all from scratch, not just the technical matter of the physical special effects but the very visualization of the end of the world.

The rest of the film shifts to survival drama and it is savage. In the calm of the aftermath months later Claire (Peggy Shannon), a professional swimmer, washes up on an island where a brutish thug (Fred Kohler) lays claim to her and kills the only other man on the island for trying to molest her (it’s not out of any sense of justice, mind you, just outrage for pawing his property). Her escape leads her to Martin, now separated from his family, and the brute follows. Unlike the familiar disaster movie formula, there’s no more spectacular destruction porn, but what we get is just as interesting in its own way. Deluge is pre-code and made outside the studio system (distributed by RKO), which gives the creators a little more freedom to imagine life after the fall in terms a studio would resist. There’s a marauding gang that preys upon survivors and rapes and murders women (not shown onscreen but the implications are clear) and a community of survivors trying to rebuild from the rubble of a ruined town and reestablish society, which means pushing aside traditional ideas of marriage. Shannon is paraded about in swimsuits that anticipate the bikini and show more skin than almost any lingerie scene in the sexiest pre-code films. None of this would have survived censors just a year later. Just to cover themselves, however, the filmmakers cite the Bible in the opening credits to reassure audiences that this is a fiction that could never actually happen in real life: “We the producers present it now purely for your enjoyment, remembering full well God’s covenant with Noah.”

It’s the directorial debut of Felix E. Feist, who went on to a career that spanned specialty shorts, B-movies, a couple of star vehicles, and lots of TV work, and produced a couple of cult movies: the lean, hard-edged film noir The Devil Thumbs a Ride (1947), another film that acknowledges the savage side of human behavior, and Donovan’s Brain (1953), a science fiction drama with a cold-blooded dimension. Feist makes effective use of striking locations to give the film the feeling of a world out of time and the production a scope bigger than its budget would suggest. The human drama is a little more awkward, sustained largely by Shannon’s confidence and strength—this is woman who doesn’t wait for men to come along and save her—and by the atmosphere of a truly save world where Darwinian brute force rules until the rest of the survivors can get their collective act together. At times the dialogue is arch and the performances tentative, in other moments it can feel unstable and unpredictable, a portrait of a world where we can’t assume a happy ending. That’s no small thing.

Once a lost film and for decades only available in an Italian language print with English subtitles, it was recently restored from a newly-discovered 35mm nitrate negative with the English language soundtrack by Serge Bromberg’s Paris-based Lobster Films. Kino Repertory picked up the film for a limited theatrical rerelease in the U.S. and now Kino Lorber Studio Classics presents the stateside disc debut of the Lobster restoration. It looks very good for its age, especially considering the original elements suffered partial decomposition. Digital tools have restored much of the image and the sharpness and the soundtrack is even more impressive, with a clarity not often heard in orphaned films of this vintage and a dynamic range to the musical score.

The Blu-ray and DVD Kino Lorber release also features new audio commentary by film historian Richard Harland Smith and a bonus feature: the 1934 B-movie Back Page, a newspaper drama starring Peggy Shannon.

The Truth Must be Told

Your contribution supports independent journalism

Please take a moment to consider this. Now, more than ever, people are reading Geller Report for news they won't get anywhere else. But advertising revenues have all but disappeared. Google Adsense is the online advertising monopoly and they have banned us. Social media giants like Facebook and Twitter have blocked and shadow-banned our accounts. But we won't put up a paywall. Because never has the free world needed independent journalism more.

Everyone who reads our reporting knows the Geller Report covers the news the media won't. We cannot do our ground-breaking report without your support. We must continue to report on the global jihad and the left's war on freedom. Our readers’ contributions make that possible.

Geller Report's independent, investigative journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to produce. But we do it because we believe our work is critical in the fight for freedom and because it is your fight, too.

Please contribute here.

or

Make a monthly commitment to support The Geller Report – choose the option that suits you best.

Quick note: We cannot do this without your support. Fact. Our work is made possible by you and only you. We receive no grants, government handouts, or major funding. Tech giants are shutting us down. You know this. Twitter, LinkedIn, Google Adsense, Pinterest permanently banned us. Facebook, Google search et al have shadow-banned, suspended and deleted us from your news feeds. They are disappearing us. But we are here.

Subscribe to Geller Report newsletter here— it’s free and it’s essential NOW when informed decision making and opinion is essential to America's survival. Share our posts on your social channels and with your email contacts. Fight the great fight.

Follow Pamela Geller on Gettr. I am there. click here.

Follow Pamela Geller on
Trump's social media platform, Truth Social. It's open and free.

Remember, YOU make the work possible. If you can, please contribute to Geller Report.

Join The Conversation. Leave a Comment.

We have no tolerance for comments containing violence, racism, profanity, vulgarity, doxing, or discourteous behavior. If a comment is spammy or unhelpful, click the - symbol under the comment to let us know. Thank you for partnering with us to maintain fruitful conversation.

If you would like to join the conversation, but don't have an account, you can sign up for one right here.

If you are having problems leaving a comment, it's likely because you are using an ad blocker, something that break ads, of course, but also breaks the comments section of our site. If you are using an ad blocker, and would like to share your thoughts, please disable your ad blocker. We look forward to seeing your comments below.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
9 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
lostlegends
lostlegends
4 years ago

I’m gonna watch Midway at home w/family.

Leonard Payne
Leonard Payne
4 years ago
Reply to  lostlegends

The 1976 version is much better.

DemocracyRules
DemocracyRules
4 years ago

Oh, WOW Deluge is great! All Hell is breaking loose! Boom, Bang, Shmoosh, etc.!
But in 1933, look how hard it was to do crisis surveillance, prevention, damage assessments, remediation, etc. They lacked the tech for communication, interventions, life saving, etc., and that’s the way it was for epidemics back then too.

DemocracyRules
DemocracyRules
4 years ago
Reply to  DemocracyRules

The strong conservative Howard Hughes bought RKO and did some good things with it. But Leftist Hollywood hated him and the movies he made.

mtman2
mtman2
4 years ago

A very well done film = well worth the watching…thank you…!

DemocracyRules
DemocracyRules
4 years ago
Reply to  mtman2

I feel sorry for the careful city model builders who had to smash up their own work for the earthquake and flood scenes.

mtman2
mtman2
4 years ago
Reply to  DemocracyRules

Hahahaha – yeah be like dominoes on steroids.

However imagine how many “takes” it took in having to rebuild again and again for just the right effect on screen.

Gotta givem credit not having all the hi-tech stuff like now = there tedious hard work definitely got the point across.
I’ve always distrusted going up into high rise buildings.

2nd floors one can jump or lower oneself down from in case of fire…but a collapse for whatever reason is bad news.

mtman2
mtman2
4 years ago
Reply to  mtman2

Not to forget a falling brick(etc) or busting out window far above if just walking below…!
I prefer the hills, streams, mountains, fields + forests…!

mtman2
mtman2
4 years ago

hmmm

Sponsored
Geller Report
Thanks for sharing!