That Certain Thing (1928) Poster

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5/10
David Jeffers for Tablet Magazine SIFFblog
rdjeffers18 July 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Tuesday July 12, 7:00pm Historic Everett Theater

"Here's your handkerchief." "Keep it, and blow your brains out!"

In his first film with Columbia Pictures we see the beginnings of what would make Frank Capra the great populist director of the nineteen thirties. That Certain Thing was produced in 1928 with a budget somewhere short of $25,000.00 which shows in the production values but the film also reveals how a true master can make so much from so little. Capra alternately described the studio as a junkyard and a gold mine and his boss Harry Cohn as a bully, but ultimately found the home he needed to flourish and develop what would become his ability to portray the moral common man at odds with an unjust world. His films became a light in the darkness for millions of depression era Americans. Along with his astonishing success Capra brought to the screen a new cinematic grammar taking motion pictures closer to a naturalistic viewpoint and farther from the stage. That Certain Thing is the tale of "a girl from across the tracks", played adorably by Viola Dana, in search of a rich husband. She bumps into the son of a restaurant magnate and is married within hours then disinherited by her rich new father-in-law only to have her good-natured revenge in the end. Fast paced and filled with typical Capraesque humor this film offers a glimpse of the great work to follow. Live accompaniment at the Everett's house organ by Dennis James in this 1902 landmark theater should make for a memorable night. Tickets are sold at the door on show night only so get there early.
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7/10
Funny but also too weak for my taste
leftistcritic2 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Like many comedies, this is a romantic comedy. Since it is by Frank Capra it has social commentary but not in the way you think. The protagonist, Molly Kelly (played by Viola Dana) wants to get a millionaire to marry so she can move out of the tenement house she is living in with her mother and two children, among others. She gets that wish fulfilled when marrying the son of a restaurant millionaire, Andy Charles, Jr., played by Ralph Graves. Unfortunately, Andy's father, played by Burr McIntosh, disowns him for marrying her. As a result she leaves him as she was really in it just for the money, admitting she is a "golddigger." Despite being directly spurned, Andy sticks by her and eventually creates a booming box lunch business with Molly at the head and Andy as the bookkeeper. Andy's father ends up paying them $100,000 for the business with a scheme between Molly and Andy to "soak him" of his money, and he ends up paying them an extra $100,000 for Andy being married to Molly. So they both get off very well at the end.

I'm not sure what the social commentary of this movie is, however, other than that if you work your hardest you will get what you want, which isn't true. But I do like that they soak the rich father for money, which is totally justified. I give the film a 7 because it is relatively weak in its execution and is not as funny (despite the fact it is classified as a comedy) as other silent films, including another by Capra, named The Strong Man, which came out two years earlier.
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5/10
So many minuses!
JohnHowardReid31 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
SYNOPSIS: A tenement girl has "that certain thing" (when I went to college, we called it "that certain something") and she knows it. She wants to marry a millionaire.

COMMENT: Although many viewers accord Capra's first Columbia picture high marks, I was disappointed. The story is not only slight to the point of stupidity but, if taken seriously, it's rather obscene on at least two fronts: the heroine puts money first in both romance and business. She has no honor and no ethics and we are supposed to like her fixation on marriage-for-a-price and then even admire the fact that she sells out her customers and employees to a man who purchases her business for the sole purpose of closing it down. (Don't be fooled by any icing the script half-heartedly contrives to gild this bitter pill. When all's said and done, there's no way in the world the restaurant man is going to keep the heroine's concern operating if it will put his restaurants out of business).

The plot has fatal flaws and the characterization of the heroine is tainted. A really skillful director could easily overcome the first, and even a half-talent could alleviate the problem by simply insisting on one or two alterations in the title cards. You could, for example, have Charles exclaim that he's going out of the restaurant business. That may not solve the dilemma one hundred per cent but at least it's now reasonably disguised. But Capra does nothing. Absolutely nothing.

But if Capra lets the side down, it's a trifle compared to Miss Dana's lack of histrionic ability. Does she manage to gain audience sympathy for Molly so that we like her and are rooting for her despite her callow fixation on money-for-virginity? Well, she didn't come through to me on any front. A rather ordinary looking girl, and thoroughly unlikable at that! This was a role for someone who really possessed "that certain thing". Someone like Clara Bow, or Joan Crawford, or Gloria Swanson.

Ralph Graves does his best with a rather unrewarding role as a soppy hero who knuckles down to both father and wife. That the movie has any appeal at all is almost entirely due to the sterling efforts of Burr McIntosh as the father who puts up a great fight before he is finally forced to capitulate.
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Excellent early Capra
I viewed this film in the David Bradley collection. In 1928, Frank Capra directed "That Certain Thing", starring Viola Dana, and then he immediately followed it with "So this Is Love", starring Shirley Mason ... apparently never realising that Viola Dana and Shirley Mason were sisters. (Capra mentioned both actresses in his autobiography, but never mentioned their relationship.) "That Certain Thing" is a sprightly romantic comedy of the late silent era, with some of the distinctive "Capra-corn" elements already firmly in place.

Ralph Graves (Capra's favourite leading man of this period) is excellent as Andy Charles, son of A.B. Charles the lunch-wagon millionaire (well-played by Burr McIntosh), who got rich by mass-producing lunches for working people. When Andy marries poor-girl Molly (Viola Dana), old man Charles suspects (not entirely without reason) that Molly married young Andy for his money, and Charles Snr promptly disinherits his son. But Andy is no spoilt playboy; to support himself and his new wife, he rolls up his sleeves and goes to work on a building site. Molly genuinely loves Andy, even though she was hoping to latch onto his father's bank balance, and now she dutifully packs her husband a box lunch that she made herself.

When a minor problem on the worksite makes Andy lose his appetite, he hands his lunch to one of his workmates ... who is so impressed with Molly's handiwork, he vows he'd be willing to pay good money for a lunch like this. Andy passes this news to Molly, and soon she's making box lunches which Andy eagerly peddles to his workmates. When word gets out that Molly's lunches are better than anything these poor working stiffs are likely to find elsewhere (especially at the Charles restaurant chain), the nickels and dimes start rolling in. Pretty soon Molly and Andy are giving Andy's millionaire father some serious competition in the lunch business...

There are some excellent Capra touches here, including some populist humour of the kind which is usually associated with the peak years of Capra's long-term collaboration with screenwriter Robert Riskin. (In Capra's films, many of the distinctive touches which film critics usually attribute to Capra are actually Riskin's work.) One of Andy's co-workers has bought a ham sandwich from the A.B. Charles sandwich company ... but he complains about the scanty portion of ham, which has apparently been sliced "with a razor". Sure enough, in his office, millionaire Charles is gleefully telling his cronies the secret of his success: "Slice the ham THIN." At the end of the film, when Molly's sandwich business is prospering, she reveals the secret of her own success: "Slice the ham THICK." This is such a typically Riskin-esquire piece of business, I was surprised to learn that Riskin didn't work on this film. The dialogue (on silent-film intertitles) is by Al Boasberg, better known for his work with comedians such as Buster Keaton and the Marx Brothers.

"That Certain Thing" suffers from the small budget typical of Columbia films from this period, especially noticeable in the scenes shot in the "luxurious" office of millionaire A.B. Charles, which is actually rather cramped and spartan. In his autobiography, Capra reveals how he was able to economise on this movie: the box lunches used as props during filming were distributed afterwards to feed the cast and crew!

"That Certain Thing" (the movie's title is never explained) is an excellent silent film, with good lead performances from Graves and Dana, two actors whose careers failed to prosper in the talking-film era. I wish that they were better known, and I wish that this movie were better known as well.
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7/10
Ends better than it begins
davidmvining7 January 2024
The first half of That Certain Feeling is a gauzy, undramatic look at two people who pretty much just fall in love at first sight. The second half is the story of two people who love each other trying to forge their path in a world of harsher reality than either of them expected, filled with wonderful moments and touching scenes. It really is a tale of two halves with the first feeling like competent but unremarkable silent filmmaking and the second half feeling like highly accomplished and perceptive silent filmmaking. Freed from working under Harry Langdon and newly hired by Harry Cohn at Columbia, Frank Capra seemed to be showing that he was already capable of much more than managing a comedian's pratfalls.

Molly (Viola Dana) is a poor widow with two children who dreams of marrying a millionaire. At the same time, Andy B. Charles Jr. (Ralph Graves), son of the restaurant magnate A. B. Charles Sr. (Burr McIntosh) who owns the ABC Restaurant chain, is living large on his father's dime and testing his patience for his wayward ways. Leaving her job one day of working at a cigar counter in a department story, Molly accidentally runs into Andy, discovers he's a millionaire in an amusing bit of business dealing with an open-top bus and Andy's car, and they are instantly smitten with each other, having a night out and quickly marrying.

Now, this business takes the first half of the film, and it's pretty typically lightly amusing but never all that engaging. There's no dramatic tension behind anything, just a rich guy and a poor girl instantly falling for each other with the smallest of obstacles quickly overcome. Some of those obstacles are amusing (there's some business with a waiter that Andy tries to keep standing up to hide he and Molly kissing by manipulating the server with a cane), but it's ultimately just light and frothy entertainment without much bite or weight for about forty minutes (depending on the speed of the presentation, mine was slowed down).

The second half is far better, though, and I dare to call it kind of great. It all starts with Senior cutting Junior off completely because he's convinced that Molly is just a gold digger out for Junior's money. She tries to leave him as a favor to Junior, but Junior won't have it. They end up determined to make a life together, no matter how they have to manage it. See? There's dramatic stakes around this. They have a real obstacle, Senior's insistence on keeping them apart or at least away from his money, and they have to overcome their own poverty to build a life together. It's not groundbreaking storytelling, or anything, but it is solidly built storytelling.

After some amusing business around Andy being completely unsuited for physical labor, he comes up with the idea of selling boxed lunches to his fellow workers, directly competing with his father's business. Molly ends up running it, and we get our first full dramatization of the American Dream from Frank Capra. It's all about a vision and hard work, providing a better product at a better price than your competitor and succeeding because of the combination of it all (and not one scene of filling out a business license for some reason). It's satisfying to watch, but it gets even better when Senior, trying to figure out why his thinly sliced ham restaurant business is in the opening stages of failing, shows up at the little sandwich factory.

We get bits of farce as Senior sees Junior but doesn't know that Molly is Junior's wife, thinking that Junior is just the place's bookkeeper, all while Junior helps Molly with negotiations from behind her glass door, playing with the conventions of silent cinema as Junior tries to get himself understood by his wife in assorted ways. I think my favorite is when he covers the words on boxes to send specific messages.

It's kind of amazing how satisfying the second half of That Certain Thing really is as the young couple triumph through their own gumption. Performances are all solid with Graves pretty much just charming his way through the film and Dana having the larger gamut of emotions to carry, which she handles well.

This Frank Capra character...I think he may go places in the movie business. If only he can get the first half of his next film to work better.
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6/10
Capra's Touches Already Apparent in Silent Era Film
CitizenCaine25 May 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Frank Capra wrote, directed, and co-produced (his first credit) That Certain Age, which was released to theaters on New Year's Day 1928. Capra, now free of Harry Langdon's influence, was free to succeed on his own. The film is a pale example of the romantic comedies Capra would later become famous for. Viola Dana stars as a gold-digger who is out to win a millionaire instead of settling for a steady-eddy street car conductor. Ralph Graves is the millionaire's son who's smitten with Dana. When Graves quickly marries Dana, his father disinherits him, denouncing her as a gold-digger. Graves and Dana then have to roll up their sleeves to make it, and they find an ironic way to do so in spite of Graves' millionaire father's restaurant business. Many of the famous Capra themes and touches are here in this film: characters who need a comeuppance get one, the common man vs. the system, a strong female lead character, and equal doses of comedy and romance. The pathos is missing, although this kind of film didn't really require it. The editing and Capra's script move the plot along quickly, and it's breezy, light-hearted entertainment. The career of Viola Dana dissipated with the advent of sound; however, due to the strong female lead role, played by Viola Dana, the film continues to have contemporary appeal. **1/2 of 4 stars.
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8/10
Viola Dana's Romantic Comedy
Maleejandra1 February 2006
That Certain Thing is the story of a gold digger (Viola Dana) from a tenement house. Her mother uses her to take care of her two brothers, but they are a loving family. Although Dana's character has the opportunity to marry a streetcar conductor, she refuses and holds out for a millionaire. Everyone makes fun of her for her fantasy, but are surprised when one day she really does meet a millionaire, son of the owner of the popular ABC restaurant chain. The two marry hastily, but the girl's dreams of wealth are shattered when the rich father disowns his son for marrying a gold digger. However, she truly loves her new husband and the two are unexpectedly successful at making it on their own.

A rare glimpse of movie star Viola Dana, this film is a lot of fun. Dana's role is accessible, natural, and entertaining. She displays a knack for comedy as well as an ability to do drama.

The mechanics of the film are a lot of fun too. The camera displays sophisticated late silent techniques like mobility. The title cards are also incredibly clever.

If you like films like My Best Girl, It, or The Patsy, you will enjoy this film.
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8/10
Very Accomplished Early Capra
dcole-24 September 2004
Even this early in his career, Capra was quite accomplished with his camera-work and his timing. This is a thin story -- and quite predictable at times -- but he gets very good performances out of his cast and has some rather intricate camera moves that involve the viewer intimately. The first part looks like a Cinderella story, though anyone with brains can see that the bottom will fall out of that -- the rich 'prince' will lose his fortune.

Nonetheless, because of his good cast and fast pace, it's easy to get caught up in the clichés. Then the movie does become more original, as the married couple have to find a way to make a living. The ending is very predictable but satisfying. I also want to compliment the title-writing: very witty and fun.
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