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Sangre rebelde

Título original: Call Her Savage
  • 1932
  • Passed
  • 1h 28min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,0/10
1,2 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Sangre rebelde (1932)
Drama

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaSexy Texas gal storms her way through life, brawling and boozing until her luck runs out, forcing her to learn the errors of her ways.Sexy Texas gal storms her way through life, brawling and boozing until her luck runs out, forcing her to learn the errors of her ways.Sexy Texas gal storms her way through life, brawling and boozing until her luck runs out, forcing her to learn the errors of her ways.

  • Dirección
    • John Francis Dillon
  • Guión
    • Edwin J. Burke
    • Tiffany Thayer
  • Reparto principal
    • Clara Bow
    • Gilbert Roland
    • Thelma Todd
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,0/10
    1,2 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • John Francis Dillon
    • Guión
      • Edwin J. Burke
      • Tiffany Thayer
    • Reparto principal
      • Clara Bow
      • Gilbert Roland
      • Thelma Todd
    • 36Reseñas de usuarios
    • 16Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 premios en total

    Imágenes91

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    Reparto principal47

    Editar
    Clara Bow
    Clara Bow
    • Nasa Springer
    Gilbert Roland
    Gilbert Roland
    • Moonglow
    Thelma Todd
    Thelma Todd
    • Sunny De Lane
    Monroe Owsley
    Monroe Owsley
    • Lawrence Crosby
    Estelle Taylor
    Estelle Taylor
    • Ruth Springer
    Weldon Heyburn
    Weldon Heyburn
    • Ronasa
    Willard Robertson
    Willard Robertson
    • Pete Springer
    Anthony Jowitt
    Anthony Jowitt
    • Jay Randall
    Fred Kohler
    Fred Kohler
    • Silas Jennings
    Russell Simpson
    Russell Simpson
    • Old Man in Wagon Train
    Margaret Livingston
    Margaret Livingston
    • Molly
    Carl Stockdale
    Carl Stockdale
    • Mort
    Dorothy Peterson
    Dorothy Peterson
    • Silas' Wife
    Oscar Apfel
    Oscar Apfel
    • Doctor Treating Crosby
    • (sin acreditar)
    Frank Atkinson
    Frank Atkinson
    • Stevens - Crosby's Valet
    • (sin acreditar)
    Mischa Auer
    Mischa Auer
    • Agitator in Restaurant
    • (sin acreditar)
    Symona Boniface
    Symona Boniface
    • Gambling Lady
    • (sin acreditar)
    Edmund Burns
    Edmund Burns
    • Jack Carter
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • John Francis Dillon
    • Guión
      • Edwin J. Burke
      • Tiffany Thayer
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios36

    7,01.1K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    10David-240

    A neglected masterpiece with a bravura performance from Clara Bow.

    What a film! Daring to tackle issues few films would even look at today. Stunningly photographed and directed, and with greater style than many early talkies. And at its heart is one of the best film performances ever - Clara Bow proves herself to be a magnificent actress in a role that demands she go through every possible emotion. What a loss it was to cinema when she retired, as great a loss as Garbo. Please MOMA get that restored print out on DVD, so that this great classic can be seen in all its glory!
    9Sanguinaire

    Call Me Amazed!

    In the Golden Age of Hollywood, amid the storied eons of the great glamor stars, you had the Stanwyckian tough cookies, the Rogers-like high society sophisticates, and the Garboish fragile beauties - but no one was quite like the Jazz Age wild child Clara Bow. When she made an entrance, she burst onto the screen like a whirlwind and didn't look back, positively exuding earthy vitality. That she didn't have a significant sound career is truly unfortunate, for one's imagination plays happily with the notion of Clara bawdily defying the frigid censors well into the culturally stolid war years. Though we didn't get much in that way, CALL HER SAVAGE is fortunately a picture worth a thousand words.

    Okay, the first ten minutes make it look like a dusty old western, but STAY WITH IT...otherwise you'll be missing one of the boldest and brightest pre-Code items this side of CONVENTION CITY. When Clara first appears on horseback, the wind blowing through her hair, you will be transfixed for the remainder of the show. The narrative opens in Texas, with a rich landowner punishing his tomboy daughter Nasa (Clara) by sending her off to Chicago for charm school. He also has latent motivation in wanting to marry her off to the man of his choice. Once in the big city, Nasa becomes known as "Dynamite" in the tabloids for her volatility and elopes with a slippery charmer instead of her intended beau. He strays, so to speak, as soon as their honeymoon, leading Clara to take her leave. From here, it's a road to ruin and back again for the young lady, with a startling secret in store for her at the climax. A free-form blend of western, romantic comedy, tragedy, and everything in between, CALL HER SAVAGE takes (sometimes jarring) turns from comedy to pathos, creating an absolutely unique experience.

    I can only imagine how Joseph Breen and his ilk must have gnashed their teeth over this film - virtually every scene seems to have been calculated to drive them up the wall. For all its brazenness, it's surprising that CALL HER SAVAGE was a Fox production, for one would expect it more from Warner Bros. We first see Clara in a tight-fitting white shirt, enthusiastically whipping a snake - then a handsome ranch hand when he laughs at her! Clara then tears off a portion of her shirt to tend to his wounds (my, hasn't that one been appropriated time and time again!). Further mix in race relations, prostitution, and an attempted rape of Nasa by her STD-ravaged husband ("Don't get up" she cautions. "I GET UP every afternoon!" he answers). And don't miss the detour to cinema's very first gay bar where the waiters sing about sailors in pajamas (!). On a seedier level, there's a brief but unsavory taste of pederasty when a drunken old fool approaches a little girl.

    But it's Clara who makes this movie. The early scenes of her scantily clad and writhing on the grass have a palpable erotic charge that no black and white vintage can dilute (remember, this was the woman who sat through a stage performance of Dracula dressed in a fur coat - and little else). I really hope that Clara is well remembered today, for she was TRULY a star and incredible personality. A lively, vital, and eternally beautiful free spirit. But there was always a touch of sadness in those big, childlike eyes, wasn't there...
    7Philipp_Flersheim

    Might have been a pre-code classic...

    On the face of it, 'Call Her Savage' has all the element needed for a smash hit and a pre-code classic. It is sexy, shows things designed to shock audiences (such as a drag act in a bar) and does not shrink from addressing issues such as prostitution. More importantly, it is also well-acted throughout, with Clara Bow deserving special praise. She displays a range of emotions rarely seen in one actress in one and the same film, and she does so absolutely convincingly: from boisterous fun to despair, it is all there. Still, the film is today almost forgotten: 29 user reviews on this site and on the date I am writing mine is not a lot. Why? I believe there are two reasons. First, the plot is pretty episodic and jumps from one setting to the next - from the ranch in Texas to Chicago, to New York, New Orleans etc. Etc. The episodes are linked by the character played by Bow and by a few minor figures who appear in several of them, but they are so disparate that the audience has no chance to get into the mood of the film, so to say. A secondary issue that is jarring at least for modern audiences is the blatantly racist message of 'Call Her Savage'. Bow's character literally is a 'savage'; her lack of self control and bouts of violence are explained with her Indian ancestry (rather than for example with her father having neglected her). She is a half-blood. The film thus denounces indigeneous Americans as unfit for civilised society, and what is worse, unfit not for cultural but for biological reasons. Hard to stomach. I am rating 'Call Her Savage' seven stars in recognition mainly of Bow's performance.
    8AlsExGal

    Call her unlucky, but she's still got It!

    This is a tale of tragedy with a very old fashioned message - that the sad life of the protagonist Nasa Springer (Clara Bow) is part God's vengeance for the sins of the fathers, and part the result of her heritage, because Nasa is half Indian and thus has a savage nature. Cue eye rolls.

    The film opens on a 19th century wagon train with the head of the wagon train, Silas Jennings, openly cheating on his wife and also getting violent with anybody who calls him on it. One man says that the Indian attack that the wagon train suffers and the resulting dead are God's judgment and talks about the sins of the father passing on to Silas' further generations. Next the film is in Texas, eighteen years later, and Silas' daughter Ruth has married her childhood sweetheart Pete. But Pete has no time for romance since he wants to get rich quite badly. Sad and neglected Ruth strikes up a friendship with a well educated and handsome Indian, Ronasa, and the two have an implied affair. The fruit of that affair is Nasa. (Didn't Pete think it strange that his wife basically named her after Ronasa? But I digress.)

    So about 18 years later we meet grown Nasa (Clara Bow), fiery in both hair color and disposition. She gets into physical altercations, gets sent to a finishing school by her disapproving "dad" and manages to finish off a few of her classmates in fights in the process, rejects dad's choice for her marriage and weds a wastrel, and things just go downhill from there. At times she has money, at other times she doesn't, but she just can't stop being a wildcat.

    The end is bittersweet, and the implication is that Bow will end up with "Moonglow" (Gilbert Roland) because the two are racially alike, NOT because all through the years, and the ups and downs, and through Nasa's bad treatment of him at times, this guy is the sweetest nicest person you could ever meet, has always been there for her, and is not bad on the eyeballs either.

    Bow's acting is wonderful in this. Fox, at a time when it seemingly could do very little right (1930-1935), managed to make a true classic here, and a true precode, and they managed to do what Paramount never really could do - give Bow a really meaty talking picture role. Bow's outfits take great advantage of her figure, with bold shots of her cleavage and everything else she has above the waist There is plenty of infidelity and the resulting VD that occurs in one case, an attempted rape, prostitution, and a tragic fire. . And all of this from a studio that, at the time, was known for its homespun entertainment for rural folk. Gilbert Roland has a pretty small role, but he is absolutely charming. Thelma Todd is true to her nickname of "Hot Toddy" and almost unrecognizable with that short haircut, vying with Bow for the same men and matching Bow's character insult for insult and hair pull for hair pull when the two get into some very public altercations.

    I'd strongly recommend this. It is great precode entertainment even with some of the maudlin melodrama and the muddled message.
    drednm

    Clara Bow Is Great

    Lurid-but-fascinating tale of wild half-breed Texas heiress has everything in it, including whippings, prostitution, extra-marital affairs, a neglected baby, and singing homosexuals. Pre-Code stunner boasts Clara Bow's great talkie comeback (after a bunch of so-so talkies) and she is WONDERFUL as well as Gorgeous. Playing Nasa Springer, Bow gets to whip a snake and Gilbert Roland, have a cat fight with Thelma Todd, beat Monroe Owsley senseless, smash a guitar over a servant's head, and run wild from Texas to Chicago to New York City. Clara Bow is great in this film. Too bad Bow made only one more film after this one (the underrated Hoopla).

    Estelle Taylor, Weldon Hayburn, Russell Simpson, Fred Kohler, Dorothy Peterson, Margaret Livingston, Anthony Jowitt, and Mischa Auer co-star.

    Great line as the father drives up and says "Why are you whipping that man?" Clara Bow answers, "I'm practicing in case I ever get married." Priceless!

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que...?

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    • Curiosidades
      (at around 1h 5 mins) The Empire State Building and its observation deck are shown briefly in what may be the iconic world landmarks' earliest depiction in any motion picture. King Kong (1933) is often credited as the first but Sangre rebelde (1932) came out a year earlier. As it was filmed in 1931, this means the building was barely completed during filming.
    • Pifias
      Opening scene depicts wagon train crossing the west, which would have happened in the 1840s -1860s. The title card after this scene says "18 years later in Rollins, Texas". The following scenes shows Nasa being born and, then approximately 20 years later, Nasa riding her horse. Her father observes her whipping Moonglow from his 1930s auto. Therefore, about 40 years have transpired, suggesting the wagon train was crossing the west in 1890. Transcontinental rail travel was common by 1880.
    • Citas

      Pete Springer: [having seen Nasa and Moonglow] Why were you whipping him?

      Nasa Springer: I was practicing in case I ever get married.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Before Stonewall (1984)
    • Banda sonora
      Oh! Susanna
      (1848) (uncredited)

      Written by Stephen Foster

      In the score during the wagon train sequence

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    Preguntas frecuentes17

    • How long is Call Her Savage?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 27 de noviembre de 1932 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Salvaje
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • William Fox Studios - 1401 N. Western Avenue, Hollywood, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos(Studio)
    • Empresa productora
      • Fox Film Corporation
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • 489.652 US$ (estimación)
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      1 hora 28 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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