High Pressure (film)

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Directed byMervyn LeRoy
Screenplay byJoseph Jackson
Based onHot Money
1931 play
by Aben Kandel
High Pressure
Theatrical Film Poster
Directed byMervyn LeRoy
Screenplay byJoseph Jackson
Based onHot Money
1931 play
by Aben Kandel
StarringWilliam Powell
CinematographyRobert Kurrle
Edited byRalph Dawson
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release date
  • January 30, 1932 (1932-01-30)
Running time
74 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

High Pressure is a 1932 American pre-Code comedy film directed by Mervyn LeRoy and starring William Powell and Evelyn Brent.[1] It is based on the play Hot Money by Aben Kandel. The film is preserved at the Library of Congress and in the Warner Archive Collection.[2]

Gar Evans agrees to promote Ginsburg's product, artificial rubber created from sewage, only after his friend Mike Donahey assures him it is not a scam. Gar is superstitious; he believes he will only succeed if his long-suffering girlfriend Francine Dale joins them on the venture. She, however, has given up on him, especially since he left her five days before to pick up something, and never came back. It is only with great effort that he convinces her to give him another chance.

Gar quickly incorporates the "Golden Gate Artificial Rubber Company", rents a whole floor of a building, installs old crony Clifford Gray as president, gives Helen Wilson a job as a secretary, and hires a lot of high-pressure salesmen to sell shares. As news spreads, natural rubber company stock prices start to fall, and Mr. Banks offers to buy the company on behalf of the established rubber firms, but the bid is too low for Gar. Banks then threatens to get an injunction preventing sales of Gar's shares pending an investigation. Gar welcomes it.

However, Ginsburg (promoted to "Colonel" by Gar), has misplaced the inventor of the process, Dr. Rudolph Pfeiffer. When he is finally located and set to work making a sample, Gar invites scientists to inspect the finished product, only to discover that Pfeiffer is a deranged crackpot (his next invention involves hens laying pre-decorated Easter eggs). Francine quits in disgust and prepares to sail to South America and marry Señor Rodriguez. Despite his lawyer's advice to flee to another state, Gar insists on taking full responsibility.

Just as all seems lost, Banks offers to reimburse all the shareholders and pay Gar enough to make a $100,000 profit just to be rid of the whole mess (and restore natural rubber stock prices). Gar rushes to the dock to retrieve the Golden Gate controlling shares, which he had signed over to Francine. While there, he wins her back by promising to give up promoting, only to have Donahey show up with a scheme for Alaskan gold/marble/spruce wood. Within seconds, Gar is plotting his next campaign.

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