Red Dust

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This article concerns the 1932 film. For the 2004 film, see Red Dust (2004).
Red Dust

Video Cover
Directed by Victor Fleming
Produced by Hunt Stromberg
Irving Thalberg
Written by Play:
Wilson Collison
Screenplay:
John Lee Mahin
Starring Clark Gable
Jean Harlow
Gene Raymond
Mary Astor
Cinematography Harold Rosson
Editing by Blanche Sewell
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s) October 22, 1932
Running time 83 minutes
Country Unites States
Language English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Red Dust is an American 1932 film directed by Victor Fleming.[1]

The picture is the second of the six movies Clark Gable and Jean Harlow made together. It was produced during the pre-code era of Hollywood.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Conditions are spartan on Dennis Carson's (Clark Gable) Indochina rubber plantation during a dusty dry monsoon. The latest boat upriver brings Carson an unwelcome guest: Vantine (Harlow), a floozy from Saigon, hoping to evade the police by a stay upcountry.

Carson, initially uninterested, soon succumbs to Vantine's charms, that is until Gary Willis (Gene Raymond), ill with malaria, and his attractive wife Barbara (Mary Astor) show up.

Spoilers end here.

The movie was remade in 1953 as Mogambo, this time set in Africa rather than Indochina, with Ava Gardner in the Harlow role and Grace Kelly playing Astor's part. Clark Gable returned, twenty-one years later, to play the same character.

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