The White Parade (1934) Poster

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7/10
I just watched this film at UCLA on January 11th, 2011.
battlebeast12 January 2011
"The White Parade" is a film not unlike all medical series set in a hospital that we've seen over the last half-century. Marcus Welby, MD, ER and Scrubs are just some of the shows that relate to this exceedingly rare Oscar Nominee.

The film is set in a medical training hospital, where nurses are rigorously trained for duty in real hospitals. Loretta Young is the main nurse, June Arden; there are several other we follow from inception to graduation.

The film is slow and comical at first but becomes more dramatic near the end. A fine pre-cursor to other medical dramas, with decent performances. The film is short, 80 min, and feels like it could have been longer.

"The White Parade" is indeed an extremely rare film in that the only surviving print resides at the UCLA archive. I watched this film, and, to say the least, it is in very bad shape (this is why it has never been released on home video.) The print is fuzzy and almost bleached out, yet still watchable. Near the end of the film, it inexplicably cuts to an image saying, "disc 7." Fast forward a little and we continue the film to the end.

Several frames are cut and spliced together, and some frames "jump," where we see two different frames on screen at once.

I guess UCLA hasn't had a chance to restore it yet... I'm sure they will someday.

Oscar film buffs, if you ever get a chance to go to UCLA and watch this film, do so!
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8/10
Combination documentary romance salute to nursing.
bbmtwist11 March 2008
This extremely rare film is a combination view of the very rigorous training nurses used to have to undergo in the 1930s in order to get their nursing degrees and then a rather uninspiring forbidden romance between a nurse and a doctor.

Although the romance part of the film was most probably what attracted audiences, it is the serious salute to nursing and the importance of both strict confidentiality and strict adherence to responsible behavior in the plot that set it apart.

I viewed this film in its entirety at UCLA - they own a print - over 25 years ago. Deservedly Oscar nominated for Best Film and Best Sound.
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Underrated, as well as largely unavailable
bob-verini11 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Episodic ramble following a group of women--each given one defining character trait, like the 7 Dwarfs--from their first day at nursing school to their graduation three years later. In between there is a surprisingly low number of medical crises, but a lot of romantic hijinks revolving around Loretta "Dedi-Katie" Young's pretense that a wealthy polo player is her b.f., which comes true in a less than persuasive turn of events, though she throws him over for her career at the end. The overarching theme is stated again and again by the veteran nursing teacher "Sailor" (Jane Darwell, who would've had a solid shot at Best Supporting Actress had that category existed in '34) as "Some are born to serve, some to be served." The former get pride of place throughout. It was fun to see on a flatbed machine at the only location that seems to possess a copy, the UCLA Archive -- the last Best Picture nominee I had never seen before, with the exception of the presumably lost "The Patriot."
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The 24 Year Old Jesse Lasky Jr
Single-Black-Male22 August 2003
The 24 year old Jesse Lasky jr got his break on this film as a co-writer learning how to collaborate with other established writers. Although the film plods along, there are worse films out there. I still think he was lucky to get on this project, but nevertheless, the world that we live in is unfair.
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