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MusicDrama

Hallelujah

- HEAR AND SEE 100 JUBILEE SINGERS!

A black laborer turns preacher after accidentally killing a man.

Release Date : 1929-08-20

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles : Hallelujah!

Cast

Daniel L. Haynes

Character Name : Zeke

Original Name : Daniel L. Haynes

Gender : Male

Nina Mae McKinney

Character Name : Chick

Original Name : Nina Mae McKinney

Gender : Female

William Fountaine

Character Name : Hot Shot

Original Name : William Fountaine

Gender : Male

Harry Gray

Character Name : Parson

Original Name : Harry Gray

Gender : Male

Fanny Belle DeKnight

Character Name : Mammy

Original Name : Fanny Belle DeKnight

Gender : Male

Everett McGarrity

Character Name : Spunk

Original Name : Everett McGarrity

Gender : Male

Victoria Spivey

Character Name : Missy Rose

Original Name : Victoria Spivey

Gender : Male

Milton Dickerson

Character Name : Johnson Kid

Original Name : Milton Dickerson

Gender : Male

Robert Couch

Character Name : Johnson Kid

Original Name : Robert Couch

Gender : Male

Walter Tait

Character Name : Johnson Kid

Original Name : Walter Tait

Gender : Male

Matthew Beard

Character Name : Child (uncredited)

Original Name : Matthew Beard

Gender : Male

Clarence Muse

Character Name : Church Member (uncredited)

Original Name : Clarence Muse

Gender : Male

Reviews

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2025-03-04

I think that to get anything at all from this, you need to try to approach it with 1929 eyes and not 2029 ones, and even then this film may no longer have any part to play as it is doesn’t so much reinforce stereotypes but quite possibly originate some. Briefly, the story sees the hoodwinked “Zeke” (Daniel L. Hayes) fall foul of of some crooked dice and lose his family’s meagre $100 cotton crop revenue. Without that they will be destitute and so a fight ensues during which his brother “Spunk” (Everett McGarrity) is slain. Distraught, “Zeke” flees the scene and seeks a solace in God that sees him swiftly return to his township reborn as pastor “Zekiel”. He’s an enthusiastic preacher whose upbeat and celebratory sermons appeal to the poverty and hope-stricken local population, and even to “Chick” (Nina Mae McKinney) who’d had an hand in luring him to his gambling predicament in the first place. Meantime, he has alighted on the feisty “Missy Rose” (Victoria Spivey) and is proposing nuptials. Thing is, “Chick” now sees the green-eyes monster rear it’s deceitful head and so nothing is likely to be straightforward for the minister. From an observer’s perspective, the characterisations here generally have a decency and goodness to them that sees them joyously steeped in their Christian faith and in a faith in their community. It’s a society with little expectation or aspiration that gets by picking cotton, eating basically and celebrating the Lord at just about every opportunity - in or out of the river. There’s a good deal of charisma on display here too, but always in the back of my mind I was wondering just how conscience-easing this presentation was from a King Vidor who’s own political views would have had to compromise with the prevailing attitudes of an American audience who were, at best perhaps indifferent, at worst downright hostile to even the vaguest idea that these uneducated African Americans were at anything like the same level of the gene pool as their “superiors”. As you might expect, there is a fair amount of singing and dancing and certain aspects of the behaviour of the men towards the women play uncomfortably a century later, but as a piece of cinema that depicts attitudes to both entertainment and fellow human beings, it is still worth a watch as perhaps, and just perhaps, it offers us some green shoots portending change?