In our weekly old movies column, a chat with the man trying to get us all to watch late 1920s and 1930s cinema this April.
Stumbling into pre-Hays Code 1930s cinema, for me, was an accident. Another obsession (the Victorian era) led me into the history of cinema when I watched Rouben Mamoulin’s
Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde (1931). Since, I have discovered a whole different world of cinema that wasn’t bound by the rigidity that we think of when we look back at the Golden Age of Hollywood. From saucy, head-strong women to topics such as adultery, depression, and more, these movies are surprising and brilliant.
Thankfully, there seems to be a whole community of people online who are eager to promote these movies. Much like #Noirvember or #Shocktober, film critic, author, and podcaster Matthew Turner has created Pre-Code April for people to enjoy a whole month of pre-code movies. I happily spoke to Matthew Turner to talk about the upcoming event.
What exactly is Pre-Code April?
Broadly, the term Pre-Code refers to American movies made between 1929 and 1934, before the introduction of the Hays Code, which enforced standardised censorship guidelines across all Hollywood films.
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The basic idea is that people watch ā or at least tweet about ā a Pre-Code film a day in April, adding the hashtag #PreCodeApril so that all the tweets can be seen in the same place. That said, there are no hard and fast rules ā if people want to watch just one Pre-Code film in April or spend the month watching as many as they can back-to-back, thatās great. The more the merrier.
As for where the idea came from, I need to give credit where itās due. I donāt know who came up with #Shocktober, but #Noirvember (watching and tweeting about film noir movies in November) was invented by Marya Gates (@oldfilmsflicker).
The idea for #PreCodeApril was directly inspired by how much fun I had during #Noirvember over the past two years. I thought it would be great to do the same thing for Pre-Code movies, in part because although Iāve seen most of the classic 1930s films, I realised there were a huge number of Pre-Code films Iād never seen.
For example,
I have a Letterboxd list of 700 Pre-Code films and Iāve only seen 170 of them. I picked April partly because itās six months away from #Noirvember and partly because of the shared āprā sound in APRil and PRe-Code. I love a bit of word play, however tenuous!
Where did your love of Pre-Code come from?
As my social media username (@FilmFan1971) suggests, Iāve been a lifelong film fanatic, so Iāve always loved old movies. I was given a copy of Danny Pearyās
Guide for the Film Fanatic in 1987 (thatās where I took FilmFan from when I first discovered the internet) and Iāve spent the last 34 years of my life working my way through it, so the Pre-Code films Iād previously seen were the ones in Pearyās book. Theyāre also the ones Iāll be prioritising with my own #PreCodeApril line-up.
What do you enjoy about Pre-Code movies?
Iām interested in how incredibly shocking some of the Pre-Code films are, particularly in terms of sex, drugs, language and violence.
I saw
The Public Enemy (1931, pictured at the top of the article) as a teenager not long after I got Pearyās book and I remember being absolutely horrified by the ending of that film. The subject matter of Pre-Code films is always fascinating ā all the social issue stuff (poverty, alcoholism, drug use, prostitution) hits hard and there are depictions of, say, sexual relationships that still seem shocking even by todayās standards. Thatās of particular interest to me also, as I have a podcast on erotic thrillers (
Fatal Attractions ā see @FatalAttractPod on Twitter) and itās fun to compare and contrast.
There are lots of other different aspects too, from seeing the early appearances of stars like Barbara Stanwyck and Humphrey Bogart to discovering the work of 1930s actors like Kay Francis and Joan Blondell, both of whom made dozens of films in the ā30s but largely disappeared in the ā40s (Francis retired in the ā50s, but Blondell moved into TV and continued working right up until her death in 1979).
And of course thereās Mae West and Jean Harlow, whose careers perfectly encapsulate Pre-Code movies.
What do you hope people get out of Pre-Code April?
I think it probably depends where youāre coming from.
For classic film fans like myself, I hope people share their pre-existing love of Pre-Code films and flag up some of their favourites, as well as maybe taking the opportunity to tick a few unseen films off their own watchlists (thatās what Iāll be doing). For newcomers, I hope people discover a love of the genre and will be inspired to seek out more Pre-Code films. I feel quite strongly that more people should see classic films, so if even one person is inspired to watch their first 1930s film because of Pre-Code April, Iāll consider that a great success. Iām also hoping that Pre-Code enthusiasts will make connections with each other through the hashtag and share each otherās posts, have their own conversations, that sort of thing.
What films should people start with?
How much space do we have?
For horror, Iād start with stuff like Tod Browningās
Freaks (1932, pictured below), famed for the chant
“one of us, one of us.” There’s also Rouben Mamoulianās
Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931) and A. Edward Sutherlandās
Murders in the Zoo (1933
), which has one of the most shocking images Iāve seen in any film, let alone 1930s stuff.

For gangster films, Iād go with the classic trio of
Public Enemy (1931),
Little Caesar (1931) and
Scarface (1932).
For sex comedies, Iād suggest
Design For Living (1933), or anything by Ernst Lubitsch, really,
Bombshell (1933) ā or any Jean Harlow comedy ā and
The Greeks Had a Word For Them (1932).
For social issues, I highly recommend
Ladies of Leisure (1930) ā which is an extraordinary film anyway ā
Wild Boys of the Road (1933) and
Gabriel Over the White House (1933).
Then thereās the Busby Berkeley musicals, which are a genre in and of themselves ā but
Gold Diggers of 1933 is a must-see if youāve never seen it.
On top of that, I have a handful of my own favourites, like the 1931 version of
The Maltese Falcon (which I only saw recently, but fell instantly in love with it ā itās
amazing),
Finishing School – which has a fabulous supporting turn from Ginger Rogers (1934),
Iām No Angel (1933) ā Mae West and a very young Cary Grant, and
Three on a Match (1932) ā which has an
insane ending), alongside established ā30s classics like
The Thin Man (1934),
Duck Soup (1933), and the quintessential romcom,
It Happened One Night (1934).
Where can people watch these movies?
This is the tricky bit. Many of them are in the public domain, so there are quite a few on YouTube and a handful on Amazon Prime, although obviously the quality varies quite a bit. Lots of them are available quite cheaply on DVD too (you can pick up Pre-Code box sets), plus itās always worth keeping an eye on channels like TCM and TalkingPicturesTV.
Iāll be posting YouTube and Amazon Prime lists on my Twitter feed a few days before Pre-Code April kicks off, to point people in the right direction. I will say this though ā pretty much everything is out there somewhere, so if thereās a specific film that you want to watch, then please DM me on Twitter and Iāll help you find it.
āā
You can follow Matthew Turner at @FilmFan1971 and listen to his podcast @FatalAtractPod.
You can also pick up his book
What to Watch When on Amazon!
We can’t wait to see you all at #PreCodeApril!
ā
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