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The Good Earth (1937)
In Sidney Franklin's dramatic epic - an adaptation
of Pearl S. Buck's famous novel published in 1931:
- the arranged-marriage wedding day scene of self-sacrificing
O-Lan (Luise Rainer), a kitchen slave sold from the "Great
House"; to young peasant famer-bridegroom Wang Lung (Paul
Muni), who was told: "She has a strong body, and will work
well for you in your house and your fields. Take her and use her
well! O-Lan, obey him! And bring him many sons. Bring the first
son for me to see. Well, go, go, go!"; outside the palace,
he had his first look at O-Lan and was dismayed by her crouched
posture
- as they were waking down a pathway together, she
knelt down and picked up a discarded peach pit and said to her
newly-wed young peasant farmer-husband Wang Lung (Paul Muni): "A
tree will grow from this seed" - and later, she planted the
seed that grew into a flowering peach tree; he looked at her in
disbelief
- the sequences of severe drought and famine, forcing
O-Lan and Wang Lung to relocate to the city, after O-Lan had wisely
insisted that he not sell their land: "No ! Not the land. We'll
not sell the land. We'll keep it. We'll go south and when we return,
we'll still have the land"
- the terrifying revolutionary mob scene (filmed with
100s of extras) in which the palace "Great House" (of the
powerful local rulers) was ransacked/looted and pregnant O-Lan was
knocked down and trampled, and her stomach was stepped on during
the mad rush (causing a miscarriage)
Discovery of Bag of Jewels - Fearful of Death
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- after she gained consciousness, O-Lan discovered
a discarded bag of jewels, but her joy was short-lived; she fearfully
realized that it would endanger her life when she saw a firing
squad freely executing others who were suspected looters; fortuitously,
she was saved from certain death when the regiment of soldiers
was ordered to leave ("Prepare to march"); the jewels
allowed her family to return to their land and become very prosperous
("Look! We can go back, we can go back to the land!")
- she kept only two pearls for herself ("If I could have 2,
only 2 small ones, 2 white ones... I wouldn't wear them, I'm much
too plain-Iooking...But I could hold them in my hands, sometimes"
- the scenes of straying husband Wang Lung entranced
by seductive and pretty young tea house dancer Lotus (Tilly Losch)
- he married her (she became his second wife) and gave her O-Lan's
two pearls
- the amazing, brilliantly-photographed battle against
the locust plague and invasion devastating the crops and farms, when
there was a buzzing, marauding locust attack on the land recreated
with special effects, accompanied by the frantic efforts of poverty-stricken
farmers to save their lands
- the exhausted O'Lan's poignant deathbed scene in
the film's ending when husband Wang Lung came upon the deathbed of
his selfless and ailing first wife O-Lan; from a pouch, he returned
the two pearls to her; he affirmed that she was always the one: ("But
now I know that you are the one, and the best a man can have");
he was sorrowful about her coming death: ("This I cannot bear.
I'd sell all my land if I could heal you...I beg you. Stay here with
me"), but she told him: "I cannot. Forgive me" (she
closed her eyes, and her head went limp on the pillow) - and as she
died, the two pearls rolled from her outstretched hand and rolled
onto the bed
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O-Lan's Death
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Pearls Rolled From Her Outstretched Hand
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Wang-Lung: "O-Lan, you are the earth"
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- in the conclusion, Wang quietly walked outside to
an adjacent, flowering peach tree planted by O-Lan on their wedding
day; as he grasped two limbs, he spoke in a reverential tone as
the film ended with a final fade-out - his words next to the peach
tree outside were: "O-Lan, you are the earth"
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O-Lan to Wang Lung: "A tree will grow from this seed"
Pregnant O-Lan Stepped On During Mob Scene
The Seductive Lotus
Locust Plague
Final Scene
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