Gable is "Big John" McMasters and Tracy is "Square
John" Sand, or as Big John calls him right from the beginning, "Shorty".
They are two wildcatters out west trying to strike oil. They pool their
money and smarts and soon hit it big. Putting
a snag in their festivities is
the arrival of Elizabeth or "Betsy" (Colbert), Shorty's sweetheart from back
home.
She arrives to see him but falls in love with Big John instead, and
they are married the night they met.
A year passes and when Shorty thinks
that Big John is not treating Betsy right, the two men come to blows
and
flip a coin to decide who gets the oil rigs. Shorty wins and Big John and
Betsy hit the road. The film follows
them through the years as Big John and
Betsy have a son and strike it rich, first in Oklahoma, then in New York.
Shorty
also strikes it rich but soon loses it all. When the two men meet
again and decide to let bygones be bygones, their friendship and working
relationship is tested again when Shorty discovers Big John is having an
affair with the elegant Karen VanMeer (Lamarr).
Reviews
Silver Screen Magazine, November 1940
Super Super Special. And here is your biggest box office hit since "Gone with
the Wind." Not only does it have one of the greatest casts in cinema
history--imagine Clark Gable, Claudette Colbert, Spencer Tracy, Hedy Lamarr,
Frank Morgan--but it has one of the grandest stories. You have no idea how
thrilling oil fields can be. The story is about the oil fields in Texas and
Oklahoma, and about a couple of two-fisted wildcat operators, Big John
McMaster and Square John Sande, played to the hilt by Clark Gable and
Spencer Tracy. Both guys make and lose a couple of fortunes during the
course of the picture, which all goes to show there is nothing stagnant
about the oil business. After their first run-in, Gable and Tracy become
staunch friends--though outwardly, what with one thing and another, they are
bitter enemies. When Tracy's girl (Claudette) comes out to the boom town to
visit him she and Gable fall in love and marry at once--which breaks up the
partnership. Gable finally attains great financial success, and goes to New
York to be in on the bigtime. Hedy Lamarr, one of those luxurious sirens of
the city, begins to get in some dirty work on Gable, when suddenly Tracy
blows into town--and to save the happiness of the woman they both love, he
sets out to ruin Gable. The picture ends with both of them broke and happy.
Claudette hopelessly in love again and the partners in a wildcat operation
in California. All five of the stars are excellent, couldn't be better. In
the supporting cast are Lionel Atwill, Marion Martin, Minna Gombel, and
Chill Wills.
Watch the re-issue trailer
Quote-able Gable
"Shorty, do you mind backing up and letting me by?" first line
"You know I wouldn't turn my back on a lady!"
"Hey Whitey, I'll be back down like a spring breeze. Don't let those apes
steal all your peanuts."
"Looks like we got company, Shorty."
"Hey wait a minute, little man! I was pulling oil out of the ground when
your ma was giving it to you for your health"
"If I thought that much about a girl I'd...It'd have to be a girl like you.
I'd want her right where I could take a hold of her and tell her."
"Hey! Come down here. I make up my mind quick. I made it up when I first saw
you I guess. You aren't ever going to leave."
"Oh, you are my gal. Well, wildcatting it is. And our house will be wherever
we are. If there's oil at the North Pole,
we'll live in an igloo and you won't freeze to death either."
"Tell Mr. Sand he can ram his $50 a day up his nose! I don't need the work."
"What'd you expect, stranger? A bald head and a bread basket?"
"You slaphappy windbag!"
"When you whistle for me, I'll whistle back with a blowpipe!"
"I'll fly a kite down your windpipe!"
"You're just a crooked old jerk!"
"This is an old time bar room fight--the man that hits first wins and that's
me!"
"Back-dooring me, that's what you've been doing--sneaking in my back door!
Well, you're not going to get away with it!"
"You're not getting away from me. You know that, don't you? I'm not blaming
you, baby, but you aren't walking out with him or anybody else, understand?"
"Sand! He told me all about it. I had to give him a licking to show him
that's out! You're my girl, see, and you always will be.
Even if I have to lick you to prove it!"
"I'm getting tired of your face, sonny."
"Came from some old guy named Ketterman." last line
Behind the Scenes
Rita Hayworth was considered for the role of Karen
Vanmeer.
Gable added a few lines and events to the script from
his days working in the Oklahoma oil fields in the 1920's.
Carole Lombard made a point to visit her husband on set on the days he was
filming with Lamarr, always,
as observers pointed out, "looking like a
million bucks."
When filming the fight scene between Gable and Tracy, Tracy's stunt double
accidently punched him square in the jaw,
breaking his false teeth and cutting up his lips. He was out for three weeks
to heal and the film was shot around him until he returned.
Gable's first scene upon his return to the set was a love scene with
Colbert. She kissed him so hard his temporary dentures cracked.
Upon completion of this film, Gable accompanied Lombard to Napa Valley while
she did location shooting for her film They Knew What They Wanted.