Norman Z. McLeod Monkey Business ((1931)

Norman Z. McLeod Monkey Business ((1931)

The picnic-in-a-barn scene in Monkey Business is fluff. Trying to save a gangster’s daughter and his sweetheart Lucille, imprisoned in a barn, Groucho and Chico enter with picnic gear. Sitting on a pile of hay, Groucho spreads a white cloth and sets out tin...
Josef von Sternberg’s An American Tragedy (1931)

Josef von Sternberg’s An American Tragedy (1931)

Dreiser disapproved of von Sternberg’s An American Tragedy. He argued Von Sternberg and screenwriter Samuel Hoffenstein played down the grinding forces of social and financial pressures and accentuated the love story of Clyde Griffiths’ infatuation with a wealthy...
Ford Madox Ford’s “Banquet at Calanques” (1932)

Ford Madox Ford’s “Banquet at Calanques” (1932)

Ford’s “Banquet at Calanques” makes his life in 1932 seem picnicky. He remembered that brilliant day and the “Homeric feast” enthusiastically. But by the time it was published in 1937, Ford was at various times ailing and depressed,...
Tod Browning’s Freaks (1932)

Tod Browning’s Freaks (1932)

Rumor has it that at a studio script reading of Browning’s Freaks, Irving Thalberg, MGM’s production head, is reputed to exclaim, “I asked for something horrifying. Well, I got it.” But when Freaks was released, it failed. Unlike...
Ann Bridge’s Peking Picnic (1932)

Ann Bridge’s Peking Picnic (1932)

Bridge’s Peking Picnic is autofiction based on her life as the wife of the British Oriental Attaché in Peking. The romantic interlude suggests that Bridge’s real-life marriage to Owen O’Malley was no picnic. It’s the story of picnic romance...
Paul Sample’s Church Supper  (1933)

Paul Sample’s Church Supper (1933)

Sample’s Church Super is his judgment of his wife Sylvia’s hometown in Westmore, Vermont. It’s dour and static. The supper is ordinary, but many details tell otherwise. Though the minister calls the picnickers for grace, many are already eating. A...
Bernard Fleetwood-Walker’s Amity>/em> (1933c.)

Bernard Fleetwood-Walker’s Amity>/em> (1933c.)

The poise of a young couple picnicking in Fleetwood-Walker’s Amity is ingratiating. The young man stares at the young woman, who looks lost in thought. She twirls a daisy, suggesting youth and innocence. The picnic basket beside her shows apples, a symbolic suggestion...
Eugene O’Neill’s Ah, Wilderness! (1933)

Eugene O’Neill’s Ah, Wilderness! (1933)

There is no picnic scene in Ah, Wilderness! There is a Sachem Men’s Club picnic on Strawberry Island, but audiences never get to see it. All we know is that  Uncle Sid Davis returns home tired and drunk. Featured Image: Eugene O’Neill with his wife and...
Norman Z. McLeod’s It’s a Gift (1934)

Norman Z. McLeod’s It’s a Gift (1934)

McLeod’s It’s a Gift is a testament to W.C. Fields’s comic skill at making a picnic an utterly messy war zone. On their way west to California, the Bissonettes pronounced bis-on-nay and stopped for picnic lunch. Blithely ignoring a “Private...
Caresse Crsby’s Picnic in Ermenonville (1934) and Elsewhere

Caresse Crsby’s Picnic in Ermenonville (1934) and Elsewhere

When Mary Phelps Jacob was nicknamed Polly, when she married her first husband, she became Mary Phelps, Jacob Peabody. Harry Crosby, her second husband, renamed her Caresse Crosby. He liked the alliteration and the pun on caress. When Harry died a suicide in 1929,...
Heath Robinson’s “Just a Picnic at Whipsnade” (1934)

Heath Robinson’s “Just a Picnic at Whipsnade” (1934)

The zany humor of “Just a Picnic at Whipsnade” is Heath Robinson’s trademark. Of the two picnics here, the lion has got the better deal. It also helps to know that Whipsnade is England’s biggest zoo, near Luton, an hour and twenty minutes north of London. Featured...
Betty Boop’s Hot Dog Picnic (1934)

Betty Boop’s Hot Dog Picnic (1934)

Betty Boop, a pretty, silly woman with a sense of humor, was created by Max Fleischer but drawn by Bud Counihan. Among the cartoon strip episodes is a picnic poking self-deprecating fun at Betty’s career as a movie star, “And I’m to ride in this...
James Hilton’s Goodbye, Mr Chips! (1934)

James Hilton’s Goodbye, Mr Chips! (1934)

There is no picnic in Hilton’s novel. Chips I (a quiet conventional school teacher) meets Katherine Bridges (a New Woman) while traipsing the English Lake District. “One day, climbing on Great Gable, he noticed a girl waving excitedly from a dangerous-looking ledge....
Judith Deim’s The Beach Picnic (1936)

Judith Deim’s The Beach Picnic (1936)

Deim’s The Beach Picnic is a portrait of the Cannery Row crowd in Monterey, California.  Among the picnickers are John Steinbeck, the kneeling figure lighting the fire, Ed Rickets (bearded) and reclining with a beer in hand, Deim playing the guitar, looks down at...
James Whale’s The Bride of Frankenstein (1935)

James Whale’s The Bride of Frankenstein (1935)

The Bride of Frankenstein is a sequel to Whale’s Frankenstein. It was received as a horror film and was generally highly regarded by critics. But on close viewing, it’s a screwball comedy—a campy hodgepodge of satire that Whale and screenwriters William...