Maid of Salem

*
Paramount (1937) Dir. Frank Lloyd
86 min. / B&W / 1.33:1 / DDS-HD Master Audio English 2.0 / SDH

Universal Blu-ray $21.98


Available from
Movie Zyng

17th century Salem, Massachusetts, and Claudette Colbert is accused of witchcraft because she prefers the company of rascally stranger Fred MacMurray to pompous and pious townsman Sterling Holloway, and if THAT makes you a witch, burn us all.

First of all, major kudos to Universal for mining the vaults of Paramount Pictures (Universal owns most of the pre-1948 Paramount titles) beyond superstar titles with the Marx Brothers, Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, Mae West, and W.C. Fields, which are mostly licensed to other companies. Random Paramount (and Universal) titles are the jewels of standalone releases when new Blu-rays are announced and are greatly appreciated.

Maid of Salem is a massively entertaining old-Hollywood picture; Colbert and MacMurray light up the screen with chemistry (they made seven pictures together!) and Puritanism and its innate danger and ridiculousness are both showcased to good effect by director Frank Lloyd (Cavalcade, Mutiny on the Bounty, The Howards of Virginia). Miss Colbert is somewhat of a free spirit, as shown by her daring to challenge the town’s morality by – wow, this is so sinful I can scarcely type it without blushing – wearing a bonnet with frills on it. Mr. MacMurray is on the run from Virginia, where he is fleeing a death penalty for inciting insurrection against the Crown. Louise Dresser, Harvey Stephens, Donald Meek, and Gale Sondergaard lead the excellent supporting cast.

Make no mistake: despite the romance and comedy, this is a very serious subject indeed, and when young, jealous town trouble-maker Bonita Granville feigns possession and accuses townswomen of bewitching her, the film reflects what actually happened in Salem, taking a dark turn from which it does not recover.

The Blu-ray from Universal lacks any bonus material, par for the course for standalone releases these days, but the picture and sound are impeccable and the release is both a delightful surprise and a film well worth seeing and thinking about.

We found it fascinating.

A female that will fritter away her time, trimming and tricking herself out in such a fashion, should be looked upon as the mere gizzard of a trifle.”