ive
work on cows. After years of neglecting the wife that he originally
changed his career to be with, he comes up with some kind of cure for
bubonic plague. Then Arrowsmith is convinced by some Swedish bloke that
he should go over to some Caribbean island where everybody is dying of
the disease and see if his cure works. He is told only to inject half
with the cure and let the rest suffer and die. Meanwhile his loving wife
has decided to come over to the island where everyone is dying
presumably so she can be closer to him to nag him for ignoring her all
the time. Blatantly all the people that are given the cure are cured,
and there is a good bit of class warfare as all the white people who
live on the island obviously get to live. But Arrowsmith has to pay for
his experiment as both the Swedish scientist and his wife die before
they get back home.As you can tell by resentment I really didn't enjoy this film. I found dull, meandering and downbeat most of the time. The ending really did nothing for me as I hadn't really invested any time in the characters to speak of. I didn't think Ronald Coleman did very well in the lead role and it certainly didn't suit his everyman hero image that he perfected in Lost Horizon, but then that was made years before. Similarly British actress Helen Hayes was a bit of a wet blanket here whereas she was a lot stronger in the film I'd seen her in previously, A Farewell to Arms. Again I feel Arrowsmith was simply making up the numbers the year that the far superior Grand Hotel won, but Arrowsmith did get another three nominations including bizarrely one for the incredibly dodgy script thankfully it didn't win any. Although Coleman would redeem himself in the film that I would watch the next day.
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