The Cabin in the Cotton is a 1932 American drama film directed by Michael Curtiz. The screenplay by Paul Green is based on the novel of the same title by Harry Harrison Kroll. The film perhaps is best known for a line of dialogue spoken by a platinum-blonde Bette Davis in a syrupy Southern drawl - "Ah'd love t' kiss ya, but ah jes washed ma hayuh," a line lifted directly from the book. In later years it was immortalized by Davis impersonators and quoted in the 1995 film Get Shorty. Marvin Blake is a sharecropper's son who wants to better himself by studying for a college education instead of... working in the fields under the heat in the Deep South. Initially, greedy Peckerwood plantation owner Lane Norwood is opposed to the idea and says he needs to work in his fields, but after the sudden death of his over-worked father, he grudgingly helps Blake achieve his goal and gives the young man a job as a bookkeeper when his vampish daughter Madge intercedes on his behalf. Blake uncovers irregularities in Norwood's accounts and soon finds himself embroiled in a battle between management and workers and torn between the seductive Madge and his longtime sweetheart Betty Wright.
more
| Release date: | 1932 |
| Directed by: | Michael Curtiz |
| Runtime: | 78 Minutes |
| Producer: | Jack Warner, Darryl F. Zanuck, Hal B. Wallis |
| Editor: | George Amy |