"Pittsburgh" is the second movie for the team of Marlene Dietrich, Randolph Scott, and John Wayne. It is better than "The Spoilers". It is fun to see almost the same cast in completely different movies.
Ms. Dietrich becomes a career woman and is the love interest for both men. The musical score is beautiful but repetitious. This is a good "B" movie with an "A" cast. Too bad they never worked again, for instance, in another western. It's fun to see Mr. Scott as a mature love interest.
Pittsburgh
1942
Action / Drama / Romance
Pittsburgh
1942
Action / Drama / Romance
Plot summary
Charles 'Pittsburgh' Markham rides roughshod over his friends, his lovers, and his ideals in his trek toward financial success in the Pittsburgh steel industry, only to find himself deserted and lonely at the top. When his crash comes, he finds that fate has dealt him a second chance.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
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Pittsburgh Is Better!
Everything good but details.
Pretty entertaining false look at history as seen through a foursome of friends whose association creates the modern Pittsburgh industry of steel and coal. The narrative starts in 1942 where three of the four explain how their industry will aide the war effort. They get together and recall darker days for themselves personally and remember the struggle which brought them to where they are in the present time.
The three men are John Wayne as a character nicknamed Pittsburgh, Randolph Scott and Frank Craven. Wayne and Scott were coal factory workers and pals of scientist Craven. By chance they meet Marlene Dietrich, the glamorously dressed sophisticate they instantly refer to as "countess". Ironically, she's from the other side of the tracks, and together, this foursome quickly (at least in screen time) rises, creating an industry that under different names, still remains prominent in the real Pennsylvania city. It isn't until Scott and Wayne separate over personal issues that the real conflict starts, leading to a tragic series of circumstances.
As entertainment goes, it's o.k., often funny but obviously fictional. I guess that was the point, just to explore how in general industry becomes involved in war. Louise Albritton plays a socialite who distracts Wayne from Dietrich with a little ceremony called matrimony, while Shemp Howard provides comic relief as a tailor. Craven provides a dramatic narration in trying to explain how the industry worked and the science behind it, but the inadequacies in a historically correct time-line is wrong in many details. As for the cast, they are all excellent, a reunion of the three younger leads from the same year's "The Spoilers".
Financial success at any cost.
John Wayne shares the screen with Randolph Scott and Marlene Dietrich. The Duke plays Charles 'Pittsburgh' Markham, who is always looking for something better, tries to make some quick bucks with his best friend Cash Evans (Scott). The two take jobs in the coal mines. Markham is unsatisfied, but has more than enough ambition and by "hook or crook" manipulates financial backing to eventually become a wealthy tycoon in the coal and steel industry. His over bearing and sometimes underhanded methods as a player in in the battle between labor and management affords him the loss of his best friend Cash and drives away the woman he loves (Dietrich).
Rounding out the cast: Frank Craven, Samuel S. Hinds, Louise Allbritton, Paul Fix, Thomas Gomez, Charles Arnt and Ludwig Stossel.