Daniel
L. Haynes, Nina Mae McKinney , William E. Fountaine, Harry Gray,
Fannie Belle de Knight
Hallelujah! was, for its
time, an impressive achievement. Director King Vidor, anxious to
make a "personal" project for the impersonal MGM studios,
proposed to film a spiritual story set in the deep South with blacks
as the main characters. The Texas-born Vidor was familiar with certain
particulars of African-American life, having witnessed the mass
baptisms and religious ceremonies of the employees of his father's
lumber mills. MGM, concerned that it would lose the "bigot
trade," balked until Vidor offered to direct Hallelujah without
salary. The decision to film on location was problematic: talking
pictures had just come in, and the existing equipment was not ideally
suited for exterior scenes. Vidor elected to film most of the picture
silent, then post-dub the sound once he returned to the studio;
with very few exceptions, the resulting synchronization (a "maddening"
process, according to Vidor) was quite convincing. The plot may
seem a trifle condescending in the light of heightened racial sensitivities
(even the director admitted this), but in 1929 it was considered
the ultimate in realism. Nina Mae McKinney plays a voluptuous young
woman who disrupts the stability of a black sharecroppers' community.
Daniel L. Haynes co-stars as an impressionable young man who is
moved to manslaughter for the sake of McKinney. He is saved from
himself when he embraces religion (hence the title). True to MGM's
predictions, Hallelujah ran into resistance from southern exhibitors
(and not a few northern ones), who were fearful that "too many"
blacks would be attracted to their theatres. This problem was solved
by a loose network of independent exhibitors who were willing to
give the film a try; once the big-time theatre chain owners realized
that the film would draw a mixed, rather than exclusively black,
clientele, they were more receptive to the film. Still, Hallelujah
was more a critical than a financial success.
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