Bordertown (1935) Poster

(1935)

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8/10
A strange little film
AlsExGal28 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is a variation and predecessor of "They Drive By Night", and it periodically airs on Turner Classic Movies and seems to be in good condition. That's important because this film is on DVD-R via the Warner Archive and has had absolutely no restoration done to it - whatever happened to be in the Warner vault is what you get. I just thought I'd mention that in case you decide to purchase it - there is no other way to own it.

This film is not an introduction to Bette Davis. She had first worked at Universal and then switched over to Warner Brothers in 1931 where she starred opposite George Arliss in "The Man Who Played God". Universal thought she didn't have any potential. Bette Davis is still playing a largely supporting role here. Paul Muni is the actual star as a Latino man with big dreams (Johnny Ramirez) as he finally graduates from night school with a law degree. However, his first case finds him totally unprepared to the point of malpractice. Next he loses his temper and punches the opposing attorney in the nose. The judge recommends that he be disbarred, and our hero's short law career is over. A disheartened Johnny wanders down to a border town where he becomes friends with Charlie Roark (Eugene Palette), and soon becomes partners with him in a casino there. Bette Davis plays Roark's wife who secretly loves Johnny. She thinks the only thing coming between her and Johnny is her marriage, so she leaves her drunken husband in the garage one night with the car running, making his death look like an accident to the authorities. However, Johnny really loves a society girl, and this drives Roark's widow to even more desperate measures.

Muni's last lines in the film and the apparent moral to the story will have modern audiences probably saying "What the...", but you have to remember this was made in 1935 and appreciate it for the performances.
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7/10
Smoldering Anger Against Racism
bkoganbing11 October 2009
Although Paul Muni does go over the top a bit in Bordertown, the film remains a savage indictment of racism, concentrating as it does on the struggles of one man in a racial/ethnic minority to find a place in this society.

In a biography of Paul Muni I read that he deliberately hired a Mexican driver who stayed with him for several weeks so he could copy his mannerisms and get down the proper speech pattern. He didn't do half bad as Johnny Ramirez, the disbarred attorney who turns to the dark side.

The story has Muni bright and eager to start making a living as a lawyer and please his mom Soledad Jimenez who sacrificed a lot so her kid could study law. But in his first appearance in court he loses his temper and manages to get himself disbarred.

Had this been a white attorney, I assure you he might have gotten a slap on the wrist and a censure, but not a disbarment. Broken in spirit, Muni ends up working for Eugene Palette at a road house as a bouncer.

He also catches the eye of Palette's wife played by Bette Davis. But Muni has eyes for Margaret Lindsay, a society girl who likes to go slumming. In the end both women disillusion and betray him.

Bordertown is one of the darkest films of the Thirties, the future is by no means clear for Muni. Though he does overact a bit, you will not forget the smoldering anger that he brings to the part of Johnny Ramirez. This was the second of two films in which Paul Muni played a person of Mexican background. The other was Juarez and there is 180 degree difference between the angry Ramirez and the stoic Juarez. You can hardly believe it's the same actor, but Muni had one incredible range as a player.

This is a film that could probably stand a remake. I could see someone like Benjamin Bratt or Lou Diamond Phillips in an updated version as Johnny Ramirez, possibly Edward James Olmos. It was in fact made over in part by Warner Brothers in They Drive By Night. But the Mexican heritage and a great deal more was not included in that film.

Until then I recommend Bordertown highly
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7/10
South of the border
jotix10026 June 2005
Archie Mayo's "Bordertown" is a film that by today's standards would be deemed politically incorrect. The idea of the poor Mexican immigrant that wants to better himself, only to see people step all over him, is at the center of this tale.

Juan Ramirez, the young lawyer, trying to defend the victim of an accident caused by the young and reckless Dale Elwell, is defeated by a much more experienced Anglo lawyer, who happened to know the system and the judge, obviously. As a result, Juan, decides to leave L.A. to go to a border town, probably Tijuana, where he becomes a partner of Charlie Roark, a decent man who sees the potential in Johnny, as he calls himself now.

What Charlie doesn't know is that he is married to a scheming woman that couldn't care less for him. She has to get rid of her husband in order to get her hands on his money and looks to Johnny to help her, but of course, he wants nothing to do with her.

Paul Muni was a great star at Warner Bros. at the time of this film. We were never fans of Mr. Muni, who in this film gives a clichéd account of the Hispanic Juan in a performance that goes over the top and doesn't convince anyone. On the other hand, Bette Davis, as Marie Roark, is her usual excellent self in a more nuanced performance. We see why later on, Ms. Davis will use all what she shows in this film and more to be the great star that she was. In minor roles, the formidable Eugene Palette plays Charlie Roark and Margaret Lindsay is seen as Dale Elwell, the rich girl that provoked the accident.

This film is a rarity seldom seen these days.
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The Production Code Asserts Itself
dougdoepke23 October 2009
As a poor Mexican-American boy, Muni labors to get a night-school law degree, but can't make a professional living in such a poor neighborhood. Ambitious and tough, he works his way into heading a gambling casino. Though a financial success, he loses his way in a white- dominated social world.

It's 1934 and the notorious Hollywood Production Code has just kicked in. Few studios were more affected than Warner Bros., the home of the uncompromising gangster films of Cagney, Robinson, and Muni. There are elements of the typical rags-to-riches gangster theme in this movie, but the tone and content have altered from the pre-Code product. Note the complete absence of gunplay, dead bodies, brutality, and other staples of such pre-Code classics as Public Enemy (1931), Little Caesar (1931), and Scarface (1932).

Technically, this is not a gangster movie-- Muni may be shady, yet he's no criminal. But that too, I believe, results from trying to get right with the new Code. Note how business rivals try to buy out Palette's casino instead of just muscling-in in classic gangster fashion. And though the girls sport some pretty revealing gowns, Muni refuses Davis's overtures, while remaining unclear on his relationship with Lindsey. Such compromises likely result from the producers not wanting sexual relationships to cross racial lines. Contrast this with the strong hints of incest, no less, in the free-wheeling Scarface.

In short, the movie has the trappings of a gangster film, yet departs in ways that I think are traceable to the newly installed Code. Among others, the new strictures were supposed to end public enthrallment with the underworld by deglamorizing it. Thus, Bordertown lacks many of the risky elements that made Warner Bros. such a riveting and dynamic studio during its classical period.

Now, this is not to say the movie is without interest or entertainment value. It took some guts to make Muni's central character a Mexican-American and cast him in a sympathetic light. In fact, the only thoroughly dislikable character is Lindsey's snobbish white boyfriend (Manville). At the same time, I agree with others who think Muni's performance is too florid, along with an accent that sort of comes and goes. He looks the part, but never gets past the impersonation stage. On the other hand, Davis's one scene of nervous frustration while alone in a room is a little gem of mounting hysteria, and makes me appreciate how well she emoted with her expressive eyes. However, it's Margaret Lindsay who walks off with the movie, at least in my view. Her devious upper-class lady is compellingly natural and unaffected, an interesting contrast to Muni's undiluted staginess.

Anyway, the movie may be a come-down from Warner's pre-Code product, but still includes a couple of good twists (e.g. the first courtroom scene). It's also worth a look-see for anyone interested in the evolution of the gangster movie.
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7/10
Made Two Years Too Late
boblipton7 April 2023
Paul Muni is a Mexican-American who has graduated from night law school, but soon learns that a law degree doesn't make you a lawyer. He heads out of town and gets a job as a bouncer at Eugene Pallette's bar. He quickly becomes so invaluable that Pallette cuts him in for a quarter of the take. Meanwhile, Pallette's wife, Bette Davis, develops an itch for him.

Muni is terrific, as always, and the cast, which includes Margaret Lindsay, Henry O'Neill, and Soledad Jiménez, work very well in this tale about a man trying to crash through the racial barrier the right way. That the film makers got this much through the Production Code is a major accomplishment, but this needs to have been a pre-code movie, with all the dirt and sluttishness that implies.
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7/10
On the way out stop at the bar and I'll buy you a drink
sol121824 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
(There are Spoilers) Having studied for five years to get his law degree self-confident in his ability in to practice law Johnny Ramirez, Paul Muni, gets the shock of his short professional career as a small time lawyer when he ends up belting defense lawyer Brook Manville, Gavin Gordon, on his first case.

Manville's client he filthy rich and beautifully bread Dale Elwell, Margaret Lindsey, was charged with drunk driving in her demolishing Johnny's friend's Manuel Deago, Arthur Stone, pick-up truck. Made to look like a fool by Manville, with his staling and double-talk tactics, Johnny realized, after clobbering the snide and condescending Manville, that law wasn't his cup of tea and checked out of town,L.A, looking for a new profession. It didn't take long for Johnny to find employment at the Silver Slipper Casino on the Mexican/US border as a bouncer and later manager of the gambling establishment.

Feeling that he's worth a lot more then what his boss Charlie Roak, Eugene Palette, is paying him Johnny ends up owning 25% of the gambling joint with Charlie more then willing to give it to him. As things turn out Charlie's scheming wife Marie, Bette Davis, sees in Johnny a meal ticket and tries to make a play for him. Not falling for Marie's poor little girl, who's needs a lot of lovin', act Johnny is very keen to Marie and refuses to betray his partner Charlie in having an illicit affair with her. It may also be that Johnny wasn't all that attracted to Marie in how cheaply she handled herself as well as how unstable she was.

One evening at the Silver Slipper when Charlie is dead drunk Marie drives him homes and in a flash see the golden opportunity that she's been looking for. Locking the drunk and unconscious Charlie in the garage Marie leaves the motor running which results in,from carbon monoxide poisoning, Charlie's untimely death but in reality cold blooded murder on Marie's part! With Johnny now in complete charge the Silver Slipper really takes off and eventually expands into the new and high class La Rueda nightclub.

On opening night at the La Rueda Dale just happens to show up and Johnny being secretly in love with her starts to make a play for Dale. This all doesn't go too well with the jealous and spiteful Marie who, in a fit of total madness, tries to pin her husband Charlie's death on Johnny not as an accident, as the local court declared, but murder! A murder that Marie, not Johnny, committed!

***SPOILERS*** Johnny was in for the fight of him life in defending himself against Marie's charges but in the end it was her not Johnny who cracked under the pressure. Completely failing apart on the witness stand Marie ended up looking like she was hit by four ten ton trucks, from different directions, as she was trying to cross a busy intersection! Now a free man and wanting to marry his one and only love Dale Johnny gets the surprise of his life. Not only isn't the blue-blooded Dale Elwell interested in the non Waspy Mexican/American johnny Ramariz she also feels that he's in no way good enough for her and the crowd that she hangs with! Finally seeing the light, this after another major shock hits him, Johnny goes back home to L.A to practice law for his own people, Mexican/Americans, who both appreciates both him and the services that he, sometimes free of charge, provides for them.
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6/10
A Muni Mistake
theowinthrop15 November 2006
Warning: Spoilers
It is interesting to see how a reputation that was once high can tumble to later generations - somewhat unfairly. Paul Muni was not a poor actor. In his best work (SCARFACE, JUAREZ, LIFE OF LOUIS PASTEUR, WE ARE NOT ALONE) his work remains quite substantial in it's effectiveness - he was no mean actor. But when he got hammy....then the knives are our for him. One example is Joseph Elsner (Chopin's music teacher and friend in A SONG TO REMEMBER). Another is Johnny Ramirez in BORDERTOWN.

One can make an excuse for Muni playing a Mexican hero like Benito Juarez. In the 1930s Warner Baxter played the Cisco Kid and Joaichim Murietta and Wallace Beery was a memorable Pancho Villa. But these figures were presented as heroes - there was a degree of sympathy in these personalities. There was supposed to be similar sympathy for Ramirez, but Muni really blew it apart in the opening of the film.

Johnny has just become a lawyer - and has just hung his license up. He gets a client (Manuel Diego - Arthur Stone) whose truck was destroyed in a car accident caused by a limousine driven by a drunken socialite (Dale Elwell - Margaret Lindsey). Johnny willingly takes the case, but he is a terrible lawyer (and, to tell the truth, anyone seeing this performance would think Muni is a terrible actor - the scene in the court is the worst overacting). Johnny not only loses to the professional competence of Elwell's attorney, but the disgusted judge tells him that he is going to request that the state bar association take back Johnny's license. He is disbarred and humiliated. But he subsequently starts working for Charlie Roarke (Eugene Palette), a jolly and good natured man who has a roadhouse with gambling.

The plot is that Roarke's wife Marie (Bette Davis) meets Johnny, and falls for him (not hard - he's a romantic Mexican, and look at jolly but short, fat, and old Chalie). But Johnny is not interested. He's loyal to Charlie, and he's met Dale again. At first she makes fun of the ex-lawyer, but she starts enjoying "slumming" with him. But he's more serious.

Marie suddenly gets the idea of getting rid of Charlie. When they return home from a party, he's totally drunk. They are in the garage of their home, and she realizes that if she leaves the gasoline motor on and closes the door on Charlie - well, it's goodbye Charlie! So it works out, and now she thinks that Johnny will be easy to get. But he's not...and in a moment of anger she confesses the murder and says that Johnny was her co-conspirator.

You may sense several points here: 1935 was the year Thelma Todd died in a still mysterious death connected to her having carbon monoxide poisoning in her closed car garage like Palette did. I don't know which of the two events proceeded the other. Secondly, the situation between Davis and Muni is a model for the similar relationship of Ida Lupino and George Raft in THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT. In fact the death of Palette is a model for the same death for Alan Hale Sr. in the latter film. And the denouement in the trial court is identical too.

SPOILERS COMING UP!

Both Davis and Lupino suffer mental collapses on the witness stands, revealing their own guilt but accidentally saving Muni and Raft. Raft is able to pick up the pieces with Ann Sheridan in THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT. Muni is less lucky. Running from him when he reveals his desire to marry her, Lindsay is run down and killed by a car. The effect is overdone by Muni looking so horrified one wonders if he is actually witnessing the sinking of the Titanic! Or maybe he was thinking about his really bad performance in this film.
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6/10
Politically incorrect, but Bette's star is on the rise
blanche-24 October 2009
"Bordertown" is the story of a Mexican attorney, Johnny Ramirez, and his fight to make something of himself and realize the American dream. Who better to portray him than the Jewish Paul Muni. After physically attacking another attorney during a disastrous court appearance, Johnny becomes a bouncer in a nightclub. However, his brains, ability, and negotiation expertise come to the attention of his boss, Roark (Eugene Palette), who agrees to bring him in as a partner. Johnny has also come to the attention of Marie Roark (Bette Davis), the restless wife of the boss, and she throws herself at him. Johnny, however, has fallen for Dale (Margaret Lindsay), a socialite. Marie kills her husband, and when he rejects her again, she tells the police that Johnny killed Roark.

Paul Muni was an excellent actor whose style of acting is perhaps dated by today's standards. He could disappear into his roles, often to great effect, but unfortunately, he doesn't disappear enough into Johnny Ramirez. His portrayal is over the top and his accent is bad. The standout is Bette Davis, young and pretty, as the unstable wife. Just off her great success in "Of Human Bondage," which was a loanout by Warners, she demonstrates here how well she takes charge of the screen.

Most of the characters are pretty stereotypical. "Bordertown" is badly dated but worth seeing for its early Bette Davis performance.
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8/10
To Hollywood, furriners is furriners
morrisonhimself9 May 2009
Paul Muni was an East European Jew, so naturally he was cast as a Hispanic Californian.

Well, heck, to name just one, Leo Carrillo, a native Hispanic Californian, was cast as everything from Greek to French to Italian to Latino, and so many other "ethnic" actors played various nationalities besides their own heritages.

Muni apparently wore dark makeup for this role, but it wasn't a stereotype; it was, in fact, a very sympathetic character.

Bette Davis never looked lovelier. For years, I have tried to spread my conspiracy theory that she was not made up, but made down, that she was, in fact, a very lovely lady and the Westmore family apparently had it in for her and put the make-up on in such a way that her looks were coarsened, and she was aged long before her time.

She was such a great actress that her looks didn't matter, but she was very attractive and I find it a shame she wasn't allowed to show her natural beauty.

The female, though, who stole this movie, both in looks and in animated characterization, was Margaret Lindsay. She was absolutely fascinating in this role as spoiled rich girl, an almost good guy. In fact, she made this movie worth seeing.

The presence of a genuine Hispanic, Soledad Jiménez, gives one pause to wonder why more genuine Hispanics weren't cast in movies like this. She was just great.

The ending was rather puzzling, perhaps a sop to somebody's nativism, but the story was a good one, the acting was generally great, and all of that, with Archie Mayo's directing, make this one worthwhile.
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7/10
Surprisingly good film that is NOT another WB gangster tale
vincentlynch-moonoi6 August 2014
Warning: Spoilers
One thing bothers a lot about the Warner Brothers of this era was their beating to death of the gangster film genre. This isn't a gangster film, although I almost didn't watch it, since I thought it probably was. That would have been a shame, because it is a very interesting film.

A second that bothers me is not the film, but so many of the reviews here on IMDb. Is the film racist, or is is portraying the reality of the time? I'm not sure...I wasn't born until 14 years after this film was made. And unless you're in your 80s, you weren't alive yet to know the tenor of race relations in the 1930s in L.A. Stop making so assumptions based on today's trends. My guess is that it's just portraying the reality of that era.

One thing I like very much about this film is that quite a few scenes -- far more than you would see in most films of the era -- were filmed on-locations; very interesting! Here we have a young Latino fellow in Los Angeles who has graduated from night school for a degree in law, but then gets in a fight in the court room during his first case and is disbarred. He heads back south of the border and becomes a bouncer in a cheap casino owned by an American with a surprisingly young and attractive wife. The Latino fellow transforms the low-grade casino into a top notch nightclub and becomes a partner. But then, the lovely wife gets angry when she can't get an affair started with the young Latino, so she kills her husband and begins a slow descent into madness. When that still doesn't get the affair going, she accuses the Latino fellow of planning the murder, but she goes nuts on the stand and the case is thrown out of court. Meanwhile, the White woman he has fallen in love with rejects him due to his ethnicity, and during a quarrel she runs into the road and is hit by a car and is killed. The Latino fellow decides to return to his L.A. roots and sells his nightclub to endow a law school. Okay, it all works pretty well, but the ultimate message seems to be that Latinos in southern California can never really "make it". Of course, at that time, that may have been true.

Paul Muni -- as the young Latino fellow -- is excellent here, and other than his most famous bio pic, this is the first film of his I have seen. You might think this was one of Bette Davis' earliest roles, but actually it was her 25th film...and a humdinger of a role for her! Margaret Lindsay is wonderful as the woman who ultimately spurns Muni. Eugene Palette is a hoot -- as usual -- in his role as the partner in the casino. Robert Barrat looks slightly out of place as the padre, but does nicely with the role. And, I should make mention of Soledad Jiminez, who plays Muni's mother; I can't say she was a wonderful actress, but she looked the part and played many such roles in her career.

Highly recommended, this is a very interesting film, both plot-wise and in terms of cultural history.
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5/10
Who doesn't want to kick it with Johnny?
Caroline8881 December 2010
Warning: Spoilers
People that say this film is racist must be oversensitive paragons of political correctness. Yes, many of the Mexican characters are "types" (singing La Cucaracha, for example)- and today "types" are so often condemned as "stereotypes" that it's getting to be impossible to make art anymore. But these characters are types in the old-fashioned sense. They are funny, sympathetic, folksy and lovable but not patronized or simplified by the writers. If anything, the white people are portrayed negatively, as irresponsible people who hurt the downtrodden without thinking twice. Johnny's mother, on the other hand, reminds me of my own grandma, although she provides comic relief by doing so.

The reason I gave it 5 out of 10 was not any of that - it's still worth a watch. Bette's OK - not her greatest BD self. The problem is: the film involves too much plot with not enough dramatic exposition. There are 2 court cases, 2 deaths, 3 car-related "mishaps," the rise-and-fall of a tycoon, two love affairs...there are at least 2 feature-length films here. Bette's motivations could fill a whole film - and as a Bette fan I have to say I'm sad that she didn't manage to wind her web around Johnny a little tighter before fessing up. I'm upset Johnny didn't have a real mad scene...and Bette should have had a longer one. But as I said - it's worth a watch.
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9/10
Make it your town!
JohnHowardReid11 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
A fascinating variant on the Biblical story of Joseph, as told in the book of Genesis. The favorite of his community, and revered and only son of his mother (his father is dead), is sold into slavery in a foreign land by his brother lawyers, where through sheer weight of his brains he works himself up to a position as right-hand man of the local big wheel.

Muni is most adept in the Joseph role, whilst Eugene Pallette has one of his meatiest parts ever as the chief of the gambling tables. His wife of necessity makes an extremely late entrance, but when she does come on, Davis rivets the attention - partly through her supreme acting charisma, partly through the incredibly slinky costumes Orry-Kelly has designed for her here.

Of the support players, Samuel S. Hinds as the initial trial judge and William B. Davidson as an opportunistic dentist make the most impression. Other cameos we enjoyed were Willie Fung as Wong ("I no cleep, walkie same alla time!"), Oscar Apfel as the sententious Barnswell, and Frank Puglia as the police captain. I hope you spot Chris-Pin Martin as a policeman, Jack Norton as the first man in Roark's casino, and Hobart Cavanaugh as an easily-led drunk (the reverse of his fighting part in Rose of Washington Square).

Assisted by Tony Gaudio's superlative camerawork, Archie L. Mayo's direction reveals a skill and a flair that we don't usually associate with his work. The camera is often on the move, with sweeping tracking shots making light of what would otherwise be dull dialogue scenes.

Although Muni is undoubtedly the star, the script gives all the sharpest, wittiest and most colorful lines - as well as the best bits of business - to other players, particularly Davis who has a wonderful stooge in Pallette. In fact, the Muni character emerges as less colorful even than Roberts, the butler, played by Arthur Treacher. Sincere and earnest enough, Muni is full of fighting words, but inclined to be dull. The art direction is incredibly lavish. The interior of the re-designed casino will knock your eyes out.
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7/10
Before Bette Davis was big
susansweb30 November 2001
A film where everyone gets whats coming to them, and true to the 1930's formula, in melodramatic fashion. Featuring the now forgotten Paul Muni (was he really a superstar back then?) as a Hispanic lawyer who learns a hard lesson about the facts of life. Muni, as usual plays it weird; before and after Bordertown, he is a pretty normal guy but while he is in Bordertown he becomes a Hispanic parody. But nevermind that, this film has Bette Davis playing yet another scheming psychopath as only she can. Like the several other Davis movies that she had a minor role in ("Fog over Frisco" and "In This Our Life", to name two), her twisted character stays with you long after she is gone. Plus, she's a blonde! Yowza!
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5/10
The power of acting vs. the power of the mind.
mark.waltz11 January 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Following in the footsteps of the legendary stage actor George Arliss, the powerful Paul Muni took over at Warner Brothers as the most distinguished male star on the lot after Arliss left in 1933. Like Arliss, Muni wasn't just a portrait of famous historical figures; he took his talents into comedy and romantic drama, always adding different dimensions to the characters he played. Back in a time before political correctness took over the ability for artists to play outside their own race, Muni took on a variety of unique parts, and in this film, he's playing a Hispanic man determined to become a successful attorney, and thanks to the male libido, almost ends up in the electric chair.

The source of temptation is the alluring Bette Davis, the wife of Muni's portly boss, Eugene Palette. When Davis sees the opportunity to get rid of her husband, she takes it, nearly taking down the subject of her obsession in the meantime. Together, Muni and Davis are dynamic, with Palette giving a strong performance as the unfortunate sap. Margaret Lindsay plays the nicer lady Muni really loves. This has two major remakes, with George Raft and Gary Cooper taking on Muni's role, and Ida Lupino and Barbara Stanwyck equally exciting in the Davis role. But this being the original is the version worth seeing first, showing how standard melodrama can be made better thanks to brilliant performances.
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Follow-up to Bondage
dgibsonia6 December 2004
Confronting Muni in one scene, Davis suddenly so forcefully expels cigarette smoke from her nose that she looks like a cartoon bull about to charge. But though it's funny, it's not ludicrous: it's one of those startling, inspired B.D. moments.

Warners cast Davis in "Bordertown" when it became apparent that her just-completed loanout to RKO for "Of Human Bondage" was not going to wreck her career, as Warners had feared. Instead, as Davis had gambled, the risky "Bondage" had been her breakout performance. "Bordertown" was a worthy follow-up, with Davis just as compelling as the obsessor rather than the obsessee.
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6/10
Bette as Femme Fatale
nycritic15 May 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Talk about a politically incorrect movie. BORDERTOWN has German-born actor Paul Muni playing Mexican, in a made-up tan and fluctuating "accent". Although this isn't the worst of it -- hardly -- as much as when Margaret Lindsay, Warner Bros. reliable secondary leading lady, tells him off near the end just before she gets creamed by an oncoming car off-screen that he's a "savage brute" who belongs to "another tribe". Being Latino, I found myself a little bemused instead of bothered by these lines, but I'm aware of how the times were back then and Hollywood has always found itself playing catch-up with other cultures. One only has to see how wrong and off the mark the industry was in portraying Blacks and Asians on camera to get the point.

Anyway, the story of a Mexican lawyer who gets involved with a murderous female while having his own attraction to a patrician socialite (Lindsay) is a better than average crime-drama that would be remade less than ten years later as THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT. Made at around the time that OF HUMAN BONDAGE had been released, Bette Davis manages to out-act Paul Muni in her portrayal of a very wicked woman with little to no scruples, but despite her manic energy on screen and the blackness of Marie Roark, she remains fairly suppressed down to the moment her character spins out of control in a key scene. Her rendition of a femme fatale is less bosomy, less hushed, but close to a she-dog able to commit an act of horror for the love a man she can't have.
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7/10
Poignant and well-acted by Muni
HotToastyRag27 February 2019
You're going to have to get over the fact that in Old Hollywood, white actors were cast as ethnic characters. It happened; there's nothing we can do to change the celluloid. In Bordertown, Paul Muni plays a Mexican who gets his United States citizenship and tries to build a new life for himself. If it makes you feel better, Paul hated getting cast in these parts, and after The Good Earth, he chose not to renew his studio contract for that reason. If you can get past that, Bordertown is a pretty poignant movie. Paul's emotional range behind the character is genuine and heartfelt, earning him a well-deserved Hot Toasty Rag nomination. You're going to need your Kleenexes during this movie. His raw style of acting wasn't commonplace in the early thirties, and I'm always impressed by how modern he seemed. Paul and his mother, Soledad Jimenez, are incredibly proud of his new citizenship. His goal is to become a lawyer to help out poor Mexican families who too often get a bad deal in court. Paul works hard, passes the bar, hangs out his shingle, only to be humiliated during his first court case. Margaret Linsday, a spoiled rich woman, wins the case because she hired a rich, white lawyer. Time after time, Paul gets obstacles put in his path to decency and giving back to his community until he throws in the towel and becomes a nightclub owner. There he meets floozy Bette Davis and her clueless husband Eugene Pallette, where things take an even greater turn for the worse. . .

Paul Muni fans can rent this movie for another great performance, but if you're looking for a solid Bette Davis performance, this isn't it. No one would ever guess she could act if they saw her in this movie.
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6/10
Paul Muni, Bette Davis and Margaret Lindsay sizzle
jacobs-greenwood15 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Directed by Archie Mayo, this film was later remade, better, as They Drive By Night (1940). It's based on a Robert Lord story, and Henry O'Neill appears uncredited.

Paul Muni plays Johnny, a poor Mexican working as a mechanic while he puts himself through law school. A rich socialite Dale (Margaret Lindsay) runs into his friend (Arthur Stone) Manuel's car, which becomes his first case. Johnny sues Dale in court but is ill- prepared, losing to her boyfriend Brook (Gavin Gordon). Though she offers to pay anyway, Brook stops her. So, Johnny hits him causing him to be disbarred.

Johnny hits the road and finds his way to a gambling establishment run by Charlie (Eugene Palette), who hires him. As a hard worker, Johnny quickly becomes Charlie's partner, earning unwanted affections from his wife Marie (Bette Davis). Her attraction to Johnny is so great, Marie uses an automatic garage door mechanism to kill her husband with carbon monoxide one night when Charlie is drunk. She is able to convince everyone it was an accidental death. With the insurance money, Johnny builds a successful casino with silent partner Marie.

But Marie isn't pleased with her and Johnny's platonic relationship, especially when Dale, with Brook in tow, shows up as a guest at their casino. When Johnny begins seeing Dale, who is merely towing with him though he fails to see it, Marie confesses the murder and its purpose. Johnny wants nothing to do with her, as he blindly pursues Dale. So, Marie tries to pin the murder of her husband on Johnny. Ms. Davis's acting ability is in full exhibition at the trial, and there is a bit of redemption concerning Lindsay's character too, as this sad parable comes to an end.
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7/10
"Johnny, you -- you didn't make 'em fix my automobile. Wh-why Johnny?"
utgard147 August 2014
Young Mexican-American lawyer Johnny Ramirez (Paul Muni) is disbarred after punching out a lawyer who beat him in court! Embittered, he heads to Mexico where he goes to work in a border town casino. There Johnny falls for a stuck-up socialite (Margaret Lindsay) while he becomes the object of infatuation for the boss' crazy wife (Bette Davis).

Good WB drama with broad but enjoyable performances from Muni and Davis. Margaret Lindsay is always lovely. Nice supporting cast includes Eugene Palette, Robert Barrat, and Samuel S. Hinds. Well-intentioned social messages seem slightly embarrassing today. And yes, the movie is politically incorrect, for those who are bothered by that. Elements of this story were later used in the superior They Drive By Night with George Raft and Humphrey Bogart. A good movie, especially for Bette Davis fans.
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8/10
Sweet Smell of Success
lugonian27 May 2018
BORDERTOWN (Warner Brothers, 1935), directed by Archie Mayo, stars Paul Muni in one of his many ethnic characterizations for which he is famous. Best known for his Italian accented SCARFACE (1932), followed by his latter biographical passages as both French Louis Pasteur and Emile Zola, along with the Chinese Wang in THE GOOD EARTH (1937), Muni attempts one that of a Mexican who breaks away from his people to make something of himself outside his jurisdiction. As much as BORDERTOWN virtually belongs to Muni during its entire 90 minutes, the movie overall is noted more as a Bette Davis film shortly before her achieving super stardom by 1937. Even though Davis' character comes late into the story (35 minutes from its start), she makes the most out of her character enough to gather the most attention.

Johnny Farada Ramirez (Paul Muni), is a young Hispanic man living with his people in the Mexican quarter of Los Angeles, California. Labeled "THE tough guy of a tough neighborhood," Johnny has made something of himself by studying five years at the Pacific Night Law School, and graduating with other would-be lawyers of all ethnic background. With a diploma in hand, as witnessed by his aged mother (Soledad Jimenez) and close friend, a priest, better known as Padre (Robert Barrat). Johnny abandons his garage mechanical job and opens a law office of his own. After leaving the Café La Paloma with her escort and lawyer friend, Brook Mandigan (Gavin Gordon), socialite Dale Elwell (Margaret Lindsay) drives off in high speed down the road, crashing into the truck driven by Johnny's poor friend, Miguel Diego (Arthur Stone). For his very first courtroom case, Johnny poorly constructs himself, losing his case for Miguel, as told to him in the chambers of the Judge (Samuel S. Hinds). After being called a shyster lawyer by Mandigan, Johnny loses his temper by striking Dale's acting attorney. His savage actions find Johnny disbarred. Feeling Mandigan and Dale won their case because they have money, Johnny's goal now to leave home, make something of himself and earning enough money for himself to become respected. A year later, the once down-and-out Johnny Ramirez has now risen from ballroom bouncer to adviser and partner to Charlie Roark (Eugene Pallette), owner of a gambling casino, The Silver Slipper. Knowing his full worth, Johnny wants and gets his 25 percent interest in Roark's business, thanks to Roark's young and attractive wife, Marie (Bette Davis), who happens to be much more interested in Johnny than her middle-aged, fat businessman husband. Because Marie's married to his friend, Johnny respects Charlie and stays away from his wife. After Charlie meets with an accidental death, Johnny inherits Roark's business and renames it La Rueda Casino. While the business is successful, Marie demands more than money. When she discovers Johnny has been seeing Dale Elwell, who's come back into his life to be with her "savage," Marie stops at nothing to break up their relationship. Other members in the cast include familiar Warner Brothers stock players as William B. Davidson (Doctor Carter, the dentist); Hobart Cavanaugh (Howie); and Henry O'Neill (J. Elwell Benson). Look for Arthur Treacher (Roberts, the Butler) and Akim Tamiroff in uncredited roles. If some of the plot sounds familiar, certain scenes were revamped into a trucking story titled THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT (Warner Brothers, 1940) starring George Raft, Ann Sheridan, Ida Lupino and Humphrey Bogart. Raft assumes the Muni part as the ambitious trucker while Alan Hale plays the Pallette part of boss and business partner, but it's Ida Lupino who comes off best reprising Davis' impulsive Marie. While Lupino's performance was easily a standout, her performance is over the top acting as opposed to Davis doing very much the same but in a better and more natural style. For BORDERTOWN, Davis shows her early ability to become a good dramatic actress, especially during the courtroom scene where her method of going insane is different and better constructed than Lupino's.

Though the role of the ambitious Mexican Johnny could have been played by a Hispanic-born actor as Gilbert Roland for example, it's the better known Paul Muni, in darker hairstyle and Spanish accent, who becomes more Mexican by being as opposed to playing a Mexican. Though noted for not being one to be type-cast by playing the same role twice, Muni played a Mexican once more, this time as a historical figure of JUAREZ (1939). Though Bette Davis became Muni's co-star once again, she and Muni shared no scenes together in what would have been their second (and final) collaboration. BORDERTOWN is nearly a forgotten melodrama known for its early screen depiction of racial prejudice among Hispanic-Americans, and a Mexican's uneasy struggle for equality with the outside world. It's not only available on DVD, but can be seen from time to time on cable television's Turner Classic Movies. (*** jumping beans)
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7/10
Bette doing Bette
journeygal4 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Johnny Ramirez is a poor mechanic who attends law school in the evening. He finally gets his degree, and his mother is filled with pride, trading in her wedding ring to buy him a 'shingle'. Trouble is, he's poor and his office is in a poor part of town which means his customers are all poor. He finally gets a practically open and shut case that he loses due to being unprepared. He ends up taking a swing at the opposing lawyer who gets him disbarred (on his first case!). The woman who caused the accident is the very wealthy Dale Elwell (Margaret Lindsay), who feels sorry for Johnny and gives his client money to fix his truck. Feeling he isn't cut out to be a lawyer, Johnny decides to leave, taking to the road to find his fortune. A year later, he is working at a popular nightclub as the manager. The owner is a dumpy middle aged guy named Charlie. Bette is his very young wife Marie (she would have been about 27 here) She makes a move toward Johnny when Charlie is out of town, but is politely rebuffed. One night Charlie drinks way too much. Johnny offers to take him home but she says she'll be fine. Although she is not fine, he is too large for her to get into the house. She figures she will just leave him in the car to sleep it off, but as she goes to turn the car off an evil light bulb goes off. She leaves it running and closes the garage door. Not surprisingly, she takes his death very well... She tries to give Johnny a key to her house but again he politely says no thanks. She is well taken care of in the will and she gives Johnny money to create a huge, gorgeous casino. On opening night it is packed and a table of six shows. Johnny is surprised to see the lawyer who had him disbarred and Dale Ellwell. He seems to like her, so much so that he forgot he was to pick up Marie and was two hours late. She was not happy. She is even unhappier when she realizes that Johnny likes Dale so she insinuates she is his partner 'in every way'. Johnny yanks her inside and tells her off, and in a fit of pique Marie blurts out that she killed Charlie so she could be with him. He tells her to never darken his door again. Marie runs to the police and tells them Johnny coerced her into killing Charlie. Apparently there was no due process then because they run right out with a warrant for his arrest. So he is tossed in jail, and with haste never seen in today's day and age, it goes to trial. Marie gets up on the stand and lies her feet off and then completely goes bonkers. With just as much speed, Johnny's lawyer moves to have the case dismissed due to Marie's insanity and apparently this works because in the next scene he is going to Dale's house. He asks her to marry him and she puts him down, telling him they run in different circles and there's no way she would marry him. She runs off and gets hit by a car. He sells the casino and goes back home. Totally unsatisfying ending...
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5/10
"Bordertown" evokes memories of "They Drive By Night"...
Doylenf7 May 2009
PAUL MUNI with dark make-up and an Hispanic accent is a hot-blooded Mexican lawyer who turns to a different sort of life when his career as a lawyer leads nowhere. He works for EUGENE Palette in a gambling joint and is soon the jovial man's partner. On the sidelines watching him is BETTE DAVIS, in one of her early femme fatale roles, a bleached blonde whose advances toward Muni are promptly rebuffed.

A sub-plot involving Muni's romance with a society girl (MARGARET LINDSEY) is really rather predictable, especially when she flirts with him from the start and then turns on him when he becomes serious, flinging words at him like "savage" and "brute" and telling him to stay with "his own tribe." The script resolves this ill-fated affair in an abrupt manner before the fade-out.

The highlight of the drama is Bette Davis turning on Muni too, on the stand, declaring that he conspired with her to kill her husband, when in fact she is the guilty one. She goes to pieces on the stand, allowing us a Bette Davis moment that was an indication of the kind of actress she was on the verge of becoming.

Frankly, this whole story bears a strong relationship to another tale Warners produced in '41 with Ida Lupino as the stressed out woman filled with guilt over the murder of her husband. Lupino was even more impressive in her mad moment than Davis. In fact, the whole picture was smoother and produced with more polish than this similar version using some of the same story elements.

Summing up: Intense drama suffers from Muni's overacting as the Mexican lawyer and a script that doesn't develop the wife's character sufficiently to lead to her mental breakdown. A better version is THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT ('41)with George Raft and Ida Lupino and Alan Hale as the hubby she wants to get rid of.
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8/10
Much better from Paul Muni in a good film!
alexanderdavies-9938228 August 2017
"Bordertown" features a far more convincing performance from Paul Muni, who manages to curtail his usual theatrical approach to film acting. Bette Davis is an excellent female lead for Muni and their scenes radiate with tension. Maragret Lindsay is OK in the supporting cast but she isn't in Davis's league. Paul Muni plays a newly qualified lawyer who decides to make a career for himself near the Mexican border after some problems earlier on in the film. He is employed by a wealthy businessman (Eugene Pallete) to handle all the legal wranglings for his building firm. However, trouble soon rears its head in the form of the businessman's wife, Bette Davis. The second half of "Bordertown" was remade by "Warner Bros" for the 1940 film, "They Drive By Night." It is a coin toss as to who is more fiery and feisty out of Bette Davis and Ida Lupino in the same role. For me, it is an even draw. The plot and the narrative are both strong and with some good dialogue. This is one of the best films Paul Muni whilst at "Warner Bros."
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7/10
Solid Soap Drama - Bordertown
arthur_tafero10 September 2021
This film is a soaplover's dream. Will our hero Ramirez go with Bette Davis, or will he go with the silver spoon debutante from LA? This film is not cut and dried. It has at least two major twists which I will not reveal. And the conclusion is probably not what you will think it will be. Muni occasionally goes over the top, but we forgive him because it was the style of the day. Davis does likewise, and we forgive her for the same reason. This is a fast-paced piece of cinema, and the characters are well-defined. Enjoy the ride and add a star if you love soap.
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5/10
Mexican Jumping Beans
wes-connors6 August 2011
In Los Angeles, poor Mexican-American mechanic Paul Muni (as Johnny Ramirez) studies hard to become a lawyer. After losing his first case, an ill-tempered Mr. Muni punches out the opposing attorney. Disbarred, and carrying a chip on his shoulder, Muni goes to work as strong-arm manager for gravelly-voiced Eugene Palette (as Charlie Roark) in a Mexican "Bordertown". Business booms and Muni is made a partner. However, Muni must fend off bosomy blonde bombshell Bette Davis (as Marie), Mr. Palette' s trophy wife. Muni prefers pretty socialite Margaret Lindsay (as Dale Elwell)...

Eventually, Muni finds himself on the wrong side of the law...

The main problem with "Bordertown" is that the message is to stay in your own "place," and with your own "class" of people. You will see the characters who venture outside their own "kind" are punished. Also, Muni and Ms. Davis were both capable of scratching the edges of their acting range, which sometimes resulted in great performances - but sometimes not. Early in the running, Muni's hot-tempered Spanish youth is too much of a stretch. He gets better as Davis slowly begins to chew the scenery. Both would end the year with better roles, and "Academy Award" winning performances.

***** Bordertown (1/23/35) Archie Mayo ~ Paul Muni, Bette Davis, Margaret Lindsay, Eugene Palette
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