Romance of Radium (1937) Poster

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6/10
An undiscovered element
bkoganbing4 February 2016
For those now undergoing cancer therapy with radiation this film should be of interest. It's from Pete Smith the legendary head of MGM's short subject department back in the golden days of the studio system. The subject is a serious departure from his comedy shorts.

Quite by accident radium was discovered by Henri Becquerrel and he brought it to the attention of fellow scientists in Paris, Pierre and Marie Curie. It was them who identified it as an undiscovered element and it took years to isolate it.

Eventually Madame Curie, a widow for many years after Pierre was killed in a Paris traffic accident died from so much exposure to the stuff. Now it's commonly in use, but the danger of over exposure remains.

MGM eventually gave this story the big screen treatment with Greer Garson and Walter Pidgeon as the Curies. But for a factual and less romantic story, I recommend this MGM short subject.
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5/10
OK, we've learned more about this topic since then
lee_eisenberg18 April 2018
Pete Smith's Academy Award-nominated "Romance of Radium" is worth seeing as a science lesson. It focuses on the chemical element radium, its discovery, and its uses. Of course, nowadays we know how dangerous that stuff can be, so seeing the characters handling it so casually looks insane. In fact, Marie Curie had died from radiation exposure a few years before the movie got released. Not to mention that the movie contains some politically incorrect material.

Aside from those missteps, the movie does contain some good information about the stuff. It's one of the many shorts that got shown to movie audiences back in the '30s right before the feature came on.
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5/10
Nothing funny or romantic about this serious Pete Smith specialty...
Doylenf18 June 2009
I prefer my Pete Smith Specialties to be on the light side, so it's unusual to find such a relentlessly grim short subject on the subject of radium--with very little in the way of romance, which makes the title questionable.

The accidental study of radium gets off to a start with one man's discovery of stones exposed to the rays of sunlight and then informing the Curies of his experiment. They were so excited by the prospect of looking further into the matter that they began their famous exploration of radium.

Over the years, other discoveries reveal that the substance has a curative power, dangerous as it is--and the narrator refers to the Jekyll/Hyde nature of radium which has to be carefully handled and controlled when scientists are working on it.

The narration ends with the fact that over the decades radium has been beneficial in saving numerous human lives.

A low-key episode from Pete Smith of moderate interest.
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Decent Short
Michael_Elliott13 February 2009
Romance of Radium (1937)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Oscar-nominated Pete Smith short takes a look at radium and how it become so important. Dr. Henri Antoine Becquerel (Andre Cheron) discovers that while radium has the power to kill many it also, if used right, has the power to heal. This is a shockenly sober Smith short, which normally isn't the case with his films. Often times he tells sly jokes or wisecracks but that's not the case here as he takes the subject matter very straight. There were other short series out there doing real-life dramas and I can't help but think one of those would have handled the story better. That's not to say this is a bad film because it isn't but it's not good either. Tourneur's direction really doesn't get to add much since a lot of the action is cut up to tell different parts of the story. The best sequence, where the director does get to work some magic, is when an African tribesman is buried after being injured by a tiger. I won't spoil what happens but it's a very nice sequence.
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5/10
"Here indeed was a discovery to excite the physicists"
boblipton29 September 2020
A Smith called Pete abandon his usual snarky delivery -- although he maintains his nasal tone -- to narrate this short subject covering the discovery of radioactivity and eventually radium.

Like many of MGM's shorts in this period, the performers of this short subject do so in dumb show, while the narrator tells you what's going on. This survivial of silent film and benshi-like narration persisted through the middle of the 1950s, with series like Pete Smith's and James A. Fitzpatrick's TRAVELTALKS. Both of these producer-narrators were fond of a long-winded style of delivery. Whether that has any relevance is up to you to figure out.
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8/10
Atypically serious Pete Smith short subject
llltdesq30 December 2001
This Pete Smith Specialty, nominated for an Academy Award, was not the standard Pete Smith effort. Serious in tone and subject matter, this tells the story of the discovery of the diagnostic and curative powers of radium. The more subdued, less humorous, narration is a departure for Smith and is not entirely successful, but it's still a fascinating work nonetheless. Worth seeking out. Turner Classic Movies runs this between movies periodically. The best chance to catch this is probably in March, as part of the "31 Days of Oscar" festival. Recommended.
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4/10
I don't feel the love
Horst_In_Translation12 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
"Romance of Radium" is a black-and-white sound short film from 1937, so this one has its 80th anniversary this year. The title gives away that it is about the chemical element radium and some will say right away "How boring!" and these will sadly be mostly correct, at least about the way it is presented to us in these slightly under 10 minutes. The good moments with Becquerel (, the Curies) or the scene with the African boy were not frequent and also not memorable enough for me to recommend this little work by French director Jacques Tourneur. You will also find more Frenchies in the cast, but it is of course an American film in the English language. Narrator Pete Smith scored one of his many Oscar nominations through it and while I can see it being a success in terms of the facts, I don't think it is an appealing, entertaining or particularly interesting achievement. I give it a thumbs-down, but hey what do I know. After all, I really gated chemistry back in my school days.
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8/10
"This Jekyll and Hyde chemical" will soon cure the world of . . .
oscaralbert30 September 2020
Warning: Spoilers
. . . many ills, promises the narrator of ROMANCE OF RADIUM in 1937. This poor man's Nostradamus seems to have snuck into the ground floor of the Manhattan Project, which was then just a gleam in the late Madame Curie's eye sockets. Less than two pounds of the Fat Man and Little Boy stuffings existed when this warning shot was fired across the bows of heedless Japanese aircraft carriers. As George Bernard Shaw cogently observed, "A lack of imagination is the Father of All Wars." (This adage probably sounded much more romantic when Pygmalion himself said it.)
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10/10
Medical Milestone
Ron Oliver30 September 2005
An MGM Pete Smith Specialty.

This unusually sober Pete Smith Short, directed by Jacques Tourneur, gives the history behind the discovery of the marvelous substance, radium, and discusses a few of its potential applications, as understood in the 1930's.

Often overlooked or neglected today, the one and two-reel short subjects were useful to the Studios as important training grounds for new or burgeoning talents, both in front & behind the camera. The dynamics for creating a successful short subject was completely different from that of a feature length film, something akin to writing a topnotch short story rather than a novel. Economical to produce in terms of both budget & schedule and capable of portraying a wide range of material, short subjects were the perfect complement to the Studios' feature films.
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