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"Employee's Entrance" a solid pre-code in which a ruthless department store president has an affair with a female employee (it's kinda of squishy, definitely not physically forced but, in modern speak, he used his "position of power"). She later secretly marries another employee of the store who, then, becomes the president's protege. I leave the rest for those who haven't seen it - and if you like pre-codes, you do want to catch this one.
What's amazing is how consistently negative capitalists were betrayed in the '30s - amazing, not because of the negative view as this was during the great depression and business was hated, but amazing that the country didn't become socialists (yes, the New Deal had some elements, but the country basically kept its capitalist structure).
Let me emphasize, I am not advocating for either socialism or capitalism - that's not for this thread - what I am saying is that I have watched many 1930s movies and most are very anti-capitalist. If this truly reflected the mood of the country, I'm surprised the politics of the era weren't much more socialist.
What's amazing is how consistently negative capitalists were betrayed in the '30s - amazing, not because of the negative view as this was during the great depression and business was hated, but amazing that the country didn't become socialists (yes, the New Deal had some elements, but the country basically kept its capitalist structure).
Let me emphasize, I am not advocating for either socialism or capitalism - that's not for this thread - what I am saying is that I have watched many 1930s movies and most are very anti-capitalist. If this truly reflected the mood of the country, I'm surprised the politics of the era weren't much more socialist.
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