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The Power and the Glory (1933 film)

The Power and the Glory
The Power and the Glory poster.jpg
Theatrical Poster
Directed by William K. Howard
Produced by Jesse L. Lasky
Written by Preston Sturges
Starring Spencer Tracy
Colleen Moore
Ralph Morgan
Cinematography James Wong Howe
Edited by Paul Weatherwax
Distributed by Fox Film Corporation
Release date
August 16, 1933
Running time
76 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $563,323.88

The Power and the Glory is a 1933 Pre-Code film starring Spencer Tracy and Colleen Moore, written by Preston Sturges, and directed by William K. Howard. The picture's screenplay was Sturges' first script, which he delivered complete in the form of a finished shooting script, for which he received $17,500 ($323,800 today) and a percentage of the profits. Profit-sharing arrangements, now a common practice in Hollywood, were then unusual and gained Sturges much attention.

The film, told through flashbacks, was cited by Pauline Kael in her essay "Raising Kane", as a prototype for the narrative of Citizen Kane (1941). (Screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz, who along with Orson Welles won an Oscar for the screenplay of Citizen Kane, was a friend of Sturges.) Tracy's performance in a boardroom scene remains widely considered one of his most thrilling sequences as an actor.

The Power and the Glory was loosely based by Sturges on the life of C. W. Post, his second wife's grandfather, who founded the Postum Cereal Company, which later became General Foods. Like Tom Garner, the lead character of the film, Post worked his way up from the bottom, and ended his own life. Otherwise, according to Sturges, their lives did not correspond.

In 2014, The Power and the Glory was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.

The film is unrelated to the 1940 novel of the same title by Graham Greene.


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