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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Plot  





2 Cast  





3 Production  





4 Release  





5 See also  





6 References  





7 External links  














Marihuana (1936 film)






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Marihuana
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDwain Esper
Story byHildagarde Stadie
Starring
  • Hugh McArthur
  • Pat Carlyle
  • Paul Ellis
  • Dorothy Dehn
  • Richard Erskine
  • Juanita Fletcher
  • Hal Taggart
  • Gloria Browne
  • CinematographyRoland Price
    Edited byCarl Himm
    Distributed byRoadshow Attractions Inc.

    Release date

    • May 1936 (1936-05)

    Running time

    57 minutes
    CountryUnited States
    LanguageEnglish
    Budget$100,000

    Marihuana is a 1936 exploitation film directed by Dwain Esper, and written by Esper's wife, Hildagarde Stadie.[1]

    Plot[edit]

    Marihuana (full film)

    Burma is a confused girl who likes to party. One day she meets some strangers in a bar who invite her and her group to a party. At the party everybody drinks alcohol and the girls unknowingly smoke marijuana, which keeps them laughing. Burma and her boyfriend have sex on the beach while her friends go skinny-dipping.

    One of the girls drowns at the skinny-dipping party and all her friends must keep the details of the party a secret. When Burma tells her boyfriend she's pregnant from their beach encounter, she pressures him to marry her. He says everything will be fine and turns to the strangers who threw the party for a job to support his family-to-be. The stranger gives him a job unloading smuggled drugs from a secret shipment to the docks. The police find out about this shipment, chase the smugglers, and shoot and kill Burma's boyfriend.

    After Burma finds out about this news, she runs away from home, is forced to give her baby up for adoption, and becomes a drug dealer. She moves on to harder drugs, including injecting heroin into her body. In the film's ending, Burma hatches a plan to kidnap and ransom her sister's adopted daughter for $50,000, then finds out that the child is actually her own.

    Cast[edit]

    Uncredited

    Production[edit]

    The film's screenwriter, Hildagarde Stadie, appears as an extra in the beginning of the film.

    The original trailer showed a girl being brutally attacked, but this scene does not appear in the final film.[citation needed]

    Release[edit]

    In 1938, Roadshow Attractions packaged Marihuana with the short film How to Undress in Front of Your Husband.[1]

    In an April 13, 1938, the poet Elizabeth Bishop details a Key West, Florida screening of Marihuana: "We have settled down to the summer session of banned movies — I went to 'Marihuana' last night. Several thousand Negroes, Cubans, and I, fought our way in, and then we were all very disappointed—even the two (2) thrills of the pre-view were not repeated, and the whole production was staged in what looked like a dentist's office (the 'lavish apartment of a dope-fiend'). The poor, wrecked 'high-school set' were all Hollywood matrons of at least 40, and at one point the corrupted darlings went for a nude swim—you saw little white specks way, way out in the ocean, then 'What's going on here?' and the bedraggled matrons were shown covering themselves with blankets, etc. Even from descriptions of marihuana, I thought there’d be some slow-motion work, at least."

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Marihuana_(1936_film)&oldid=1222623130"

    Categories: 
    1936 films
    1936 drama films
    1936 in cannabis
    American exploitation films
    American black-and-white films
    American social guidance and drug education films
    1930s exploitation films
    American films about cannabis
    Films directed by Dwain Esper
    Anti-cannabis media
    American drama films
    1930s English-language films
    1930s American films
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Articles lacking in-text citations from July 2019
    All articles lacking in-text citations
    Template film date with 1 release date
    All articles with unsourced statements
    Articles with unsourced statements from May 2019
    Commons category link from Wikidata
    Articles with Internet Archive links
    Articles containing video clips
     



    This page was last edited on 7 May 2024, at 00:05 (UTC).

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