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City Girl
Overlook Pick

City Girl

SEE AND HEAR LIFE IN THE "RAW" WITH THE "CITY GIRL"
75
User Score104 ratings
TMDB 7.516+19301h 28mEnglish
DramaRomance

Synopsis

A waitress from Chicago falls in love with a man from rural Minnesota and marries him, with the intent of living a better life - but life on the farm has its own challenges.

Director
F. W. MurnauFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Fox Film Corporation2 production companies
Release
January 12, 1930Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 24
Charles Farrell
Charles Farrell
Lem Tustine
Mary Duncan
Mary Duncan
Kate
David Torrence
David Torrence
Lem's Father
Edith Yorke
Edith Yorke
Lem's Mother
Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
Reaper
Anne Shirley
Anne Shirley
Marie Tustine
Tom McGuire
Tom McGuire
Matey
Richard Alexander
Richard Alexander
Mac

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Jun 6, 2022

This is one of those films that you can just sit back and let wash over you... The plot is simple, as are the characterisations involved - but that's what makes it effective. "Lem" (Charles Farrell) is a young man sent by his overbearing father to Chicago to sell their annual wheat crop. He frequents a diner where he meets the young waitress "Kate" (Mary Duncan) and the pair are soon an item. Meantime, though, the price of wheat is dropping so he must quickly secure a deal before he and his gal return home to rural Minnesota. His father "Tustine" (David Torrence) is less than impressed with both the deal he got for his crop and with his new daughter-in-law, and a period of unpleasantness culminates in some deliberate and selfish actions by the father as the harvesting is going on, that could spell ruin for everyone. The camera simply loves Farrell and Duncan - and the accompanying score helps them to convey their love and frustrations expertly. The ending is maybe just a little twee - but it does offer some redemption that illustrates how difficult it could be for a father to show affection for his son, and also of the somewhat trivial roles accorded to women at the time - many of whom were far more competent than their men folks! It is based on Elliott Lester's play 'The Mud Turtle", which like this film, I suspect, doesn't get out much nowadays - but this flows smoothly and effortlessly and really is quite a joy to watch.

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