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Street scene (Motion picture)

An enthralling story of an unfaithful woman, neighbours gossip, and a little girl caught up in the middle.

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  • "An enthralling story of an unfaithful woman, neighbours gossip, and a little girl caught up in the middle."@en
  • "This film centres on a young man's struggle to escape from the New York tenements where he has been brought up. It is his love for the girl next door that is most likely to hold him back from bettering himself by going to college. Street Scene also attempts quite consciously to be a slice-of-life drama filmed on a large single set. Vidor was apparently hamstrung by Goldwyn's excessive respect for the original stage play."@en
  • "Based on Elmer Rice's Pulitzer Prize's winning play, Street Scene is a bold exploration of Jewish immigrant life in America early in this century. It examines the themes of assimilation, socialism, antiSemitism, and identity. Abraham Kaplan lives with his family in a row house populated by a kaleidocope of characters looking to break out of poverty. Kaplan's revolutionary, socialist views grate against some of his neighbors; even his son wants little to do with him."
  • "Lives of New York City residents are explored when a young girl's life is torn apart as her father returns home unexpectedly to find her mother with another man, in this version of Elmer Rice's Pulitzer Prize winning play."
  • "Lives of New York City residents are explored when a young girlÅ› life is torn apart as her father returns home unexpectedly to find her mother with another man."@en
  • "As the mid-July sun sets on one of the summer's hottest days, little groups of people gather to discuss the newest neighborhood scandal. Standing in front of a rusty brownstone in Manhattan's West Sixties, they gossip about all the tenants of the building, but especially Mrs. Marrant, who has been seeing the local milkman behind her husband's back. When Mr. Marrant takes a trip out of town, the two lovers have a tragic meeting when her husband doubles back, catching them together. The confrontation will change everyone's lives forever, especially the Marrant's beautiful young daughter Rose, who is left to pick up the pieces of their shattered lives."
  • "Based on Elmer Rice's Pulitzer Prize's winning play, Street Scene is a bold exploration of Jewish immigrant life in America early in this century."@en
  • "Lives of New York City residents are explored when a young girl's life is torn apart as her father returns home unexpectedly to find her mother with another man."@en
  • "Lives of New York City immigrants are explored in this version of Rice's prize winning play. A young woman attempts to bring happiness to her own life despite the problems between her parents."@en
  • "Lives of New York City residents are explored when a young girl's life is torn apart as her father returns home unexpectedly to find her mother with another man in this version of Elmer Rice's prize winning play."@en
  • "Lives of New York City residents are explored when a young girl's life is torn apart as her father returns home unexpectedly to find her mother with another man in this version of Elmer Rice's prize winning play."
  • ""On a hot evening in a New York tenement, neighbors gossip about each other as they return home. The main object of comment is the sadly romantic Anna Maurrant, who is having an affair with married milk collector Steve Sankey. Anna's brutish husband Frank is often away, and while he is supicious, he has no proof of the affair. Frank comes home and yells at Anna for not knowing where their children Willie and Rose are, while social worker Alice Simpson reprimands poverty-stricken Laura Hildebrand, who is about to be evicted, for taking her children, Mary and Charlie, to the movies. Kindly Filippo Fiorentino, who longs to have children with his wife Greta, gives the Hildebrands money for the show, and socialist Abe Kaplan argues with Frank about the negative effects of capitalism. Abe's son Sam tells the building's most active gossiper, Emma Jones, to mind her own business when she passes along a juicy tidbit about Anna to Greta, and later, Rose comes home. She is accompanied by her married office manager, Mr. Easter, who wishes to set her up in an apartment. Although Rose desperately wishes to escape her dirty, mean-spirited surroundings, she refuses to become Easter's mistress. After Easter leaves, Rose talks with Sam, whom she regards as a best friend even though he is in love with her. She encourages Sam to believe in himself and nourish his individuality. The next morning, Sam's sister Shirley, a schoolteacher who has sacrificed everything so that her brother might succeed in life, asks him why he wants to get involved with Rose, as she is not Jewish. Sam tells Shirley to forget her race prejudices, after which Frank yells at Anna as he leaves for work. The Hildebrands are evicted, and Shirley asks Rose not to encourage Sam's romantic ideas about her, because Shirley wants him to go to law school. Rose assures her that she does not want to be married yet, and she leaves with Easter for the funeral of their employer. Sam sees Sankey arrive to visit Anna, then watches in horror as Frank comes home unexpectedly. Sam yells a warning to Anna, but it is too late, for Frank has caught the lovers together. Frank shoots his wife and Sankey, then rushes away. Rose arrives home as Anna is taken away in an ambulance. While the neighborhood thrives on the scandal, Rose returns from the hospital, where she saw her mother die. Easter offers to help her, but Rose states that she will be able to care for herself and Willie. After Rose has packed her clothes, the police capture Frank, who tells Rose that he meant to be a better father. Sam wants to go away with Rose, but she tells him that they are too young to be married, and that it is important for him to fulfill his goals first. Rose hugs Sam and Shirley, tells them that she will see them again, and then leaves to begin a new life away from the tenement"--AFI catalog, 1931-1940."@en
  • "Lives of New York City residents are explored in this version of Rice's prize winning play. A young woman attempts to bring happiness to her own life despite the problems between her parents."
  • "Lives of New York City residents are explored in this version of Rice's prize winning play. A young woman attempts to bring happiness to her own life despite the problems between her parents."@en
  • "The film has a single location, a segment of a city block. The cross-section of humanity that lives and dies in the film provides vignettes of frustrated or achieved spiritual evolution."@en
  • ""In a New York slum street on a hot summer night, an adulterous woman is shot by her husband."--Halliwell's Film Guide. 2d ed."@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Melodramas (Motion pictures)"
  • "Melodramas (Motion pictures)"@en
  • "Film adaptations"
  • "Film adaptations"@en
  • "Feature films"@en
  • "Drama"@en
  • "Drama"
  • "Feature films"
  • "UCLA preservation"@en
  • "Adaptations"@en
  • "Features"@en

http://schema.org/name

  • "Street scene (Motion picture)"
  • "Street scene (Motion picture)"@en
  • "Street Scene"
  • "Street Scene"@en
  • "Street scene (Motion picture : 1931)"@en
  • "Street scene"@en
  • "Street scene"