Warren William Stars in The Match King (1932)

Warren William is The Match King. Hardie Albright is about as close as he has to a sidekick. Lili Damita is certainly his love interest, though then again so are Claire Dodd, Juliette Compton, and Glenda Farrell, though I guess those three are really more of a business with pleasure interest for him.

Note: “The Match King” airs on Turner Classic Movies just a few days from when I’ve originally posted this. If you see this post in time catch it late Thursday night, October 29, 2009 at 3:00 am EST (technically very early Friday the 30th), as part of their Life in the Depression schedule of movies airing throughout October.

The Match King

“The Match King,” released by First National Pictures at the very end of 1932 is a star vehicle for one of Warner Brother’s latest stars, having already established himself as the leading man of power on screen in the midst of the Great Depression in “The Mouthpiece,” “The Dark Horse,” and even on loan out to MGM for the classic “Skyscraper Souls,” each of which dates to previously that very same year. Warren William towers above everyone else in this part based on true life match magnate Ivar Kreuger.

After impressing relatives in Holmtide, Sweden with his fictitious success in America, they beg for him to come and save their little match company. But William’s Paul Kroll wants much more than a little Swedish match company. He tells his assistant, Erik (Albright), that he plans to sell matches all over the world. “And with them,” he says, “I’m going to buy the world.”

Claire Dodd as Ilse Wagner

Claire Dodd as Ilse Wagner

Julietet Compton as Sonia Lombard

Juliette Compton as Sonia Lombard

As familiar as pre-code fans are with Warren William’s portrayals of top executives with traits running from dedicated to criminal, we’ve also come to admire William the Wolf, and in “The Match King” he’s at his caddish best relying on a line of beautiful international socialites including Dodd and Compton to maneuver state secrets from nations in need of financing. Kroll charms these ladies with his full attention until he wrangles the necessary information from them and then he’s off in a flash offering money, and sometimes proposing a little blackmail, to governments in exchange for the rights to their national match concession.

If you think October 2009’s Turner Classic Movies spotlight on movies depicting Life in the Depression is timely, well inclusion of “The Match King” really hits the bulls-eye! For instance if you’d like to learn more about the true-life Match King BBC news published “Kreuger: The Original Bernard Madoff?” in March of ‘09.

Great ephemera! Matchbook advertising The Match King, what a natural tie-in!

Great ephemera! Matchbook advertising The Match King, what a natural tie-in!

Kreuger’s Wikipedia page presents a fine biography, though the true story probably has more movie spoilers than even I provide here, so you may want to check out “The Match King” before reading! From what I can tell, the real Kreuger may have been even shadier than Warren William’s Paul Kroll, despite a little murder on Kroll’s part!

Glenda Farrell as Babe

Glenda Farrell as Babe

What I didn’t see in Kreuger’s biography were Paul Kroll’s more humble beginnings shown to us in “The Match King.” We open with Warren William in a white uniform sweeping up outside of the Chicago Cubs’ ballpark. He quickly establishes his oft-repeated catch phrase: “Never worry about anything until it happens. And I’ll take care of it then,” before scheming with his supervisor to create a roll of ghost employees whose salaries go straight into their own pockets. Kroll then plays upon the affections of his boss’s wife (Farrell) who happily hands their bank account to him under the pretense of running away to California together. As soon as Farrell’s Babe is out of sight, Kroll is in a cab and a few minutes from First Class passage to Sweden.

Paul Kroll’s business practices are some of the most despicable we’ve seen Warren William act out on screen. While his David Dwight of “Skyscraper Souls” and Kurt Anderson of “Employees’ Entrance” are business sharks who rule their enterprises with iron fist, “The Match King’s” Kroll is actually a criminal who’s knowingly drawn himself into a pyramid scheme of the grandest levels. He tells Erik he’ll always be in debt, but that “when I circle the world. When I own it all. I’ll only be in debt to myself.”

Privately, despite his use of women, Kroll is a more sympathetic character than Dwight or Anderson, who use women simply for pleasure. Paul Kroll actually falls in love! And in love he’s willing to step away from the business to chase actress Marta Molnar across Europe trying to win her. Lili Damita as Molnar, despite one very sexy bath scene, is extremely annoying in a part Hollywood Reporter claims was originally intended for Greta Garbo. But for a high powered man such as Kroll his emotions were likely more wrapped up in the chase than in Molnar herself as he’s easily enough corralled back into the office once Erik manages to track him down.

Hardie Albright as Erik with WWs Kroll in foreground

Hardie Albright as Erik with WWs Kroll in foreground

Kroll isn’t just crooked on paper either. What he has done to the inventor that his agent Nyborg discovers, a man who could potentially crush the entire match trade with his creation, as well as his actions against the counterfeiter Scarlatti, who delivers $50 million in forged Italian bonds, are far more chilling actions than we’re used to seeing even from the slimiest Warren William characters!

“The Match King” is one of an handful of pre-code era Warren William pictures that best defines the cult of William. It’s not to be missed.

Promotional photo features Lili Damita with Warren William in The Match King

Promotional photo features Lili Damita with Warren William in The Match King

An interesting coincidence is that just a few months prior to “The Match King’s” release movie fans were treated to a kindly Warren William in “Three on a Match.” In “The Match King” it’s William’s Kroll who comes up with the plan to sell more matches through propaganda. He hatches the story that it was bad luck to share a match in the trenches and starts a publicity campaign based around the idea that if three cigarettes are lit from the same match one of those three men wouldn’t make it back alive. The “Three on a Match” scare tactic was used by the real Kreuger and so “The Match King” naturally uses it as well, but how odd that Warren William’s previous starring vehicle would take it as its title and incorporate it into its story as well.

Note: The Claire Dodd, Juliette Compton, and Glenda Farrell items are all tobacco premiums from Uruguay. I picked up a few hundred of these recently and singles can be found in my shop at MovieCardsForSale.com.

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Posted on October 27th, 2009
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8 Comments a “Warren William Stars in The Match King (1932)”

  1. Noirkiss3 says:

    That matchbook is amazing where did you get it? That i the type of ephemera jut love to see.

  2. Noirkiss3 says:

    Hey I was searching the site for posts on “Strange Wills” . It was a radio show staring WW as investigator John Francis O’Connell. I haven’t heard the show but was excited being I love OTR. Do you know much about this show.

  3. Noirkiss3 says:

    Sorry to fill up your posts but here is a link to free download of all 20 episodes of Strange Wills.
    I have yet to listen to them but I’m quite excited.

    http://otrarchive.blogspot.com/2009/08/strange-wills.html

  4. Cliff Aliperti says:

    Hey Noirkiss3–

    Don’t worry about the multiple posts, thanks for contributing!

    Yes, I have a bunch of notes on Strange Wills ready to go at some point … which judging by TCM’s lack of Warren William features in future months may be sooner than later!

    I’ve listened to most of them while working and for the most part they’re quite fun.

    Grabbed the matchbook in an eBay auction–had never seen it before and frankly nobody was going to outbid me on it :) Could there be a more perfect tie-in for that specific movie?

    Thanks again, Cliff

  5. The_Mouthpiece says:

    Whoops, forgot to log into my own blog for that last reply, but Noirkiss3, I assure you that is me just above.

    Thanks again, Cliff

  6. Jeffers says:

    Now that you’ve clarified how groundbreakingly evil Kroll is even among WW’s other “amoral titan” portrayals, I’m looking forward to seeing this with almost as much dread as anticipation! But, as I hoped, Vintage Classic Movies is already offering it on DVD-R, so I should have it in a few days (and have a chance to see it, maybe, by Thanksgiving). Great thanks to you, Cliff, and to Thomas Cote of Vintage Classic Movies! And thanks as well to Noirkiss3–I never even dreamt of a WW radio series, but am thrilled to learn of its existence, to say nothing of its free online availability. Now, if only I could download a few more hours of TV and computer time into every day!

  7. The_Mouthpiece says:

    Hey Jeffers,

    I only hope you agree with me upon watching it, but I have it firmly planted in that handful of 6-8 Warren William pre-code titles which really serve to define him to me.

    Sorry for the lag in reply, been busy, but that’s a poor excuse for rudeness on my part. New post just went up, hope you like it!

    Cliff

  8. Jeffers says:

    “The Match King” was really a GREAT wrap-up to my viewings of those essential 6-8 pre-code WW titles you mention (I think I’ve seen all those you have in mind, anyway). Now that it readily available, I think it is the one I’d recommend as the starting point for someone embarking on viewing those films, unless they were already sure they wanted to see them all, in which case I’d go for chronological order. The topical interest of the plot, in relation to more recent world-spanning financial houses of cards, only adds to the grip on today’s viewers of a really terrific film. Amazing to think of it as the (collaborative) directoral work of Howard Bretherton, previously known to me for his subsequent work as a solid B-Western director; little did I dream he had done such sensational “A” picture work. Like WW and many others, he was able to keep doing good enough work in the post-code period, but not on the prestige level one might have hoped for.

    Speaking of WW continuing to do work, I’ve been listening to the “Strange Wills” episode “The Mad Concerto” while typing this–at least, nominally I have! But I guess I’ll have to get back and re-listen at a later sitting.

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