In Caliente: Movies about Writing

Here’s another short blog about yet another 1930s film.

Larry (Pat O’Brien) is a magazine writer and editor who is taken to Mexico by his friend and publisher Harold (Edward Everett Horton) to escape a manipulative girlfriend named Clara (Glenda Farrell). Despite just helping Larry to escape a woman, Harold decides that a good distraction for Larry is famous dancer Rita (Dolores Del Rio). What Harold doesn’t know is that Larry wrote her a terrible review in his magazine which she memorized. Personally, I’d have been more insulted that he wrote such a scathing, hateful critique and didn’t bother to remember her face. She and her gambler manager plan to humiliate Larry for what he wrote about her. Shenanigans ensue.

This film includes several stereotypes of writers (and of Mexico, but that would be something for a different blog topic). Larry is an alcoholic who wants to have reckless fun between assignments. He waxes poetic when he sees a pretty face and thinks he’s more charming than he actually is. He uses his job as an excuse to avoid responsibility, stating exact word numbers like one of Hercules’s labors.