Tuesday, February 10, 2026

High Pressure

High Pressure (1932)

Runtime: 74 minutes

Directed by: Mervyn LeRoy

Starring: William Powell, Evelyn Brent, George Sidney, John Wray, Evalyn Knapp

From: Warner Bros.

Some will be overjoyed to hear that that this hitherto difficult to track down motion picture can now easily be seen by those subscribed to the Criterion Channel. This month, they have a section devoted to 10 Pre-Code Mervyn Leroy films. Most are his expected hits-and some were already reviewed by me-but the other rarity part of the collection is 1934’s Hi, Nellie!

The plot of High Pressure is simple: William Powell is a cad named GAR EVANS who is a con artist. We first see Gar in the speakeasy after a bender, as drunk as Cooter Brown. A pal and a business find him & bring him to a spa. As he is refreshed in the spa (some will like that he spends several minutes sans shirt), the businessman tells him that he has a way of creating rubber… out of SEWAGE. That sounds like Number Two to me—but this is supposed to be silly yet fun, breezy entertainment.

Of course, Powell is great as the bold, self-assured con man who could sell ice cubes to Inuit people but there’s many Warner Bros. character actors that fill out the cast and there were things I appreciated, such as some great set design—Gar’s office in particular was awesome, rectangle shape-dominant on both the walls & the windows, & an ornate desk. There’s also the expected snappy patter and rapid-fire dialogue you’d expect, and with a romantic subplot, all in a tidy 74-minute package to boot.

The two lead female roles aren’t exactly dynamic but Evelyn Brent-as Gar’s girl-and Evalyn Knapp-as Gar’s secretary-both do a fine job. I’m glad the Criterion Channel made this film easy for fans of Old Hollywood to check out.


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