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Is My Face Red from 1932 with Richard Cortez, Helen Twelvetrees and Zazu Pitts
Hollywood in the 1930s churned out many movies about the newspaper business, which, along with radio, was the social media and internet of its day.
Away from the true standouts, like The Front Page, most of them just blend together. Still, you couldn't be a male or female lead back then without having worked for a newspaper in one or several pictures.
Richard Cortez gets his chance at a newspaper role in Is My Face Red. Cortez plays a Walter Winchell-like reporter who writes a popular column that traffics in salacious details about the foibles of the rich and famous.
Cortez is loud, brash, cocky and obnoxious, all things that you guess he was even before success went to his head.
A lot of his "inside dope" comes from his taken-for-granted girlfriend of five years, a Broadway chorus girl played by Helen Twelvetrees.
The main and thin story in this one has Cortez witness a real murder in which the killer threatens Cortez’s life if he prints the story, which the arrogant Cortez does to further his career.
The other storyline has Cortez kinda falling for a spoiled society girl whom he gives the engagement ring he had just taken from Twelvetrees to get remounted. That seriously coldhearted act rightfully knocks Twelvetrees off her heels.
The reason the stories sound so thin in Is My Face Red is because Cortez is supposed to carry the entire movie on his personality and screen presence, like Warren William or Lee Tracy would have in the role.
Cortez unfortunately isn’t that magnetic and, in fairness to him, his character is neither a hero nor a villain here, but just a vain, selfish man whose bad behavior is more boring than rousing.
The other thing meant to energize the movie is the excitement of a newspaper business fervent for headlines and scoops.
The movie does a little better here, in part, because of Cortez' smarter-than-him secretary played by Arline Judge, who fully has Cortez' number, and in part, because of the paper's switchboard operator played by tired, nasally and unawarely sarcastic Zazu Pitts.
Twelvetrees' charm also helps the picture along, but you keep wondering what this bright and beautiful young woman sees in conceited Cortez. Five years is a long time not to wake up.
The climax is neither dramatic nor character changing, but instead ties a neat bow on a story that didn't deserve one.
Is My Face Red is at its best when it's just showing the sleazy newspaper business being its sleazy self. But even with able assists from all the female leads, Cortez and the weak story just don't have enough to carry this one successfully over the finish line.


