Criterion Corner: The Story of Temple Drake (1933) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Janus Films

William Faulkner’s 1931 novel Sanctuary which told the story of the rape and kidnapping of an upper-class Mississippi college girl named Temple Drake during the Prohibition era at the hands of bootleggers was a lightning rod for controversy when it was initially published.  At once a commercial and critical success catapulting the author into the mainstream, the text horrified readers and faced condemnation from numerous avenues including being banned in Canada 1932 and Faulkner himself being ousted from the Boy Scouts as a den leader.  That it was made into a film at all just two years after being unveiled to a still unprepared public eye (let alone two more adaptations decades later) is the focus of today’s Criterion Corner: Stephen Roberts’ harrowing and controversial pre-code film The Story of Temple Drake.
 
Temple Drake (Miriam Hopkins of Trouble in Paradise) is an aggressive carefree granddaughter of a notable and admired small-town judge in Mississippi.  Unwilling to marry her clean-cut lawyer boyfriend Stephen Benbow (William Gargan) whose proposals she declines twice thus garnering the reputation of a town tart, she goes out to party with one of her alcoholic suitors Toddy Gowan (William Collier Jr.) where they eventually wind up crashing their car near a dilapidated farm now functioning as a speakeasy.  Meanwhile Trigger (Jack La Rue) a gangster-bootlegger working the speakeasy forces the drunken Toddy and now terrified Temple Drake into the household leading towards maybe the silver screen’s very first depiction of sexual assault and/or slavery. 

 
Written for the screen by Oliver H.P. Garrett of Duel in the Sun, the film was considered lost until the 1950s when it re-emerged in 16mm prints.  Kept from view following the installment of the Hays Code which the film was primarily responsible for engendering, The Story of Temple Drake though dated somewhat by what is or isn’t allowed onscreen nevertheless is a powerfully ferocious pre-code drama featuring an astonishing performance from Miriam Hopkins and a nefariously scary heavy with Jack La Rue.  While the more extreme elements of the text were ironed out by censors with the infamous assault with a foreign object being reshot with no allusion to it and the screen fades out before we can see the implied act, it nevertheless roused the ire of what would or wouldn’t become the Hays Code as well as angered newspapers who initially objected to it being greenlit in the first place. 

 
Initially thought to be tawdry and trashy, the film is a masterclass work of confrontational filmmaking replete with tight closeups of actors staring directly into the camera and first person point-of-view tracking shots rendered by Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans cinematographer Karl Struss.  From images of the upper-class town club dance to the squalor of the speakeasy, the film was something of a marvel for the levels of grime being conveyed on the silver screen though Miriam Hopkins remains radiant in close-up.  Featuring music by four composers Karl Hajos, Bernhard Kaun, John Leipold and Ralph Rainger, the movie starts off as something of a musical journey before boiling down to a thunderous chamber piece of being bounced around riff raff that eventually segues into the framework of a courtroom drama whose coda differs considerably from the text.

 
In spite of the controversy and subsequent burial, The Story of Temple Drake was a commercial success among the top box office winners of 1933.  Some think perhaps the intent of Faulkner’s text got lost in translation but nevertheless the film was savaged by critics and following the installment of the Hays Code it disappeared completely.  Nevertheless, that didn’t stop director Tony Richardson from adapting a hybrid of both Sanctuary and it’s sequel novel Requiem for a Nun into a 1961 CinemaScope film featuring Lee Remick and Yves Montand to mixed reviews though nowhere near the same level of public outcry.  Then in 2007, Sanctuary saw the most complete and extreme adaptation to date with Aleksei Balabanov’s Russian transposition Cargo 200 which caused almost as much (if not more) controversy in that country than the 1933 film. 

 
Outside of the furor Cargo 200 was whipping up, the Museum of Modern Art restored The Story of Temple Drake in 2011 and began screening it to the public again circa 2011.  Years later in 2019, The Criterion Collection finally released the film on DVD and Blu-Ray disc and seen now is something of a proto-MeToo film about finding the courage and strength to come forward and confess a painful memory of sexual assault against a fiercely judgmental court of public opinion.  While bleak and foreboding, in this version of Sanctuary there is a glimmer of hope found in Miriam Hopkins’ impassioned performance of a well-to-do woman thrust into unforeseen terrible circumstances and her fight for survival.  Not a nice film but an important, necessary pre-code epic whose cries and whispers are just as vitally relevant now as they were then.

--Andrew Kotwicki