When the Empire Learned to Speak: The Black Watch (1929)
It can be disarming to watch a film from 1929. Not because it feels ancient, but because it feels certain. The people on screen move as if the world they inhabit is stable, durable, permanent. The regiments stand straight. The flags hang heavy. The rituals are unquestioned. The institutions appear immovable. We, of course, know better. The Black Watch was released the same year the global economy would fracture. It was also John Ford ’s first sound feature. Hollywood had just learned how to speak. That fact alone gives the film a strange electricity. It exists at the precise moment when one system, cinema, was renegotiating authority, while another system, empire, still believed its authority required no renegotiation at all. The story is deceptively simple. Victor McLaglen plays Captain Donald King of the Royal Highlanders , a man who publicly disgraces himself before his regiment. In a ceremonial banquet scene, filled with toast and tradition just before World War I, he ...