Sunday, November 9, 2025

Employees' Entrance: The Monsters We Make

This is my entry in The Classic Movie Blog Association Early Shadows and Pre-Code Horror Blogathon. Click HERE for more monstrous fun.

This store is an HR nightmare

Film and literature have given us non-human monsters who sometimes serve to instruct us about or illuminate our own inhumanity. Some are fearsome, some are weirdly touching, some bring out the best in mankind, and some bring out the worst. But there is no more horrid monster than the kind our society makes and allows; you know, the ones who walk among us and look just like us. They are the ones who not only are allowed to live, but are encouraged to thrive. They are the ones who gleefully hold up a mirror to our society and proudly say "look what you've made."

A wolf in a Brooks Brother suit is still a wolf

1933's "Employees' Entrance" is such a fun Pre-Code feast that it is easy to check your emotions at the door and enjoy all it has to offer. First and foremost, it has Warren William at his leering, lupine best. Here he is Kurt Anderson, the manager of a large department store. It is a position of considerable power and he wields it with glee and gravitas. How tiresome his day is! He is surrounded by ninnies everywhere. From the snooty do-nothings that make up his Board of Directors (but who love that fact that he makes them money), to his uninspired co-workers and business associates (one whose suicide elicits the bloodless response from Anderson that the man had outlived his usefulness), Anderson is the ruthless self-made man rising from the ashes of the Great Depression. So, who would begrudge this hard-driving workaholic a little fun? After all, even monsters need to relax.

The job interview

And boy does this guy take his relaxation seriously - almost as seriously as his work. You see, Anderson just loves the ladies, especially those young, vulnerable ones who depend on him for a living. He is the classic predator. And who was more vulnerable and lovely in 1933 than the moist and luscious Pre-Code  Loretta Young? While Loretta later became rather great lady-ish on screen, her Pre-Code films reveal a very sexy gal of fungible morality. Here she is the perfect prey, a down-on-her-luck beauty who desperately needs a job. She tries that old trick of keeping Anderson at bay without insulting him, but this wolf will not be denied. He's played with amateur babies before. After a night of too much drink (Prohibition has ended. Yay!) and some personal turmoil due to the fact that she is secretly married to another employee, Anderson makes his move and rapes her. 

Some store goods are not for sale to the general public

Make no mistake. Although he has been given a bit of a sorrowful back story (love lost and all), Anderson is a monster. But monsters can not move among us unless they have help. In "Employees'' Entrance" the chief helper in the seduction game is Alice White at her cunning, conniving but somehow pathetic best. She, too, needs to survive and she throws her lot in with the monster. She helps Anderson in a direct, quid pro quo way, but there are other helpers, so many of them, whose silence enables Anderson to thrive.


Alice White reminding her boss of her value to the company

Now before I get all huffy, let me say this is quite an eye-opening, fast-moving and sometimes funny film with lots of snappy dialogue peppered throughout. Was anyone as dangerously oily as Warren William? Was anyone more beautiful than Loretta Young in 1933? Add the always welcome Alice White and the stable of Warner Brothers supporting players and you will definitely be entertained for 75 minutes. Because it is Pre-Code, Anderson is not required to pay for his past bad behavior and he is allowed to soldier on behind his power desk even though Loretta manages to escape his clutches. However, there are those lurking in the shadows who seek to supplant him - monsters that Anderson has helped create. So, maybe karma awaits Kurt Anderson after all.

A Pre-Code feast: back off, Barrymore - Warren William is the real "great profile." And any time Alice White appears, everything just seems better.

Now for the rant. "Employees Entrance" is one of those films that you can only enjoy is you are able to view it through the lens of the time it was made. Once you do that, you can sit back and enjoy. But I'll wager you will find it impossible to watch this film in 2025 in America and not draw parallels to our current headlines. Monsters and their helpers still exist. And it is not funny, and it is not charming. Victims rarely get a happily ever after and it all doesn't go away in 75  minutes. That, to me, is scarier than any fantasy monster born in a laboratory.


16 comments:

Karen said...

Really enjoyed this, Marsha! We are sisters under the mink when it comes to viewing pre-Code cads as the monsters they are. It's been a while since I've seen Employees' Entrance, but I well remember how awful Warren William's character was. Super kudos for a first-rate post!

carygrantwonteatyou.com said...

Wow. Yes, what a frightening plot, and he really is the right person for that role. It's interesting to think of this film (which I haven't seen yet) paired with Stage Door, where instead of an enabler supporting the predatory (though not THIS predatory) man, we get the woman with power (Hepburn) standing up for her peers.

FlickChick said...

Karen - sisters under the mink! I love that. Thank you for stopping by.

Quiggy said...

My father raised me to respect women so I find such characters as this in movies to be repulsive. Of course, my viewpoint may be a little too far on the opposite scale, since I tend to want to be the "knight in shining armor" that rescues them. Take that as you will. Interesting review.

FlickChick said...

Thanks for stopping by, Carygrant.... And yes, Warren William is so good at being bad. In the few times I've seen him in a nice guy role it just didn't feel right.

Shawn said...

So glad you talked about Employees’ Entrance, one of my favorite Pre-Codes!

I love how you mention all those who enable or look the other way at Anderson’s abhorrent behavior. I think it’s really fascinating how the Depression plays into the story as Anderson is able to treat everyone so badly because he provides them and the company financial stability. And it’s easy to initially get swept up in his aura, especially when he goes against the stuffy bankers and stands up for the working man. As you say definitely a film that mirrors all too many of the monsters still around today.

Christian Esquevin said...

Interesting post Marsha! And yes - Warren William definitely plays a wolf in wolf's clothing. I'm sure he was not just the reflection of most all of the studio moguls of the era, but an inspiration for many others down the line. It's interesting to compare this with William in the film The Match King, where his dominating character finally gets his comeuppance.

FlickChick said...

Knights in shining armor are always appreciated, Quiggy! But, in a better world, women should not need to be rescued from such cads.

FlickChick said...

Thank you for stopping by, Shawn. And yes - those helpers are just as guilty as the wolf - then, now and always.

FlickChick said...

Ah, Christian, a mogul behind a power desk is dangerous - whether in a store or a studio, right? Looking forward to your post later this week!

Jacqueline T. Lynch said...

Well done, and a great choice for this blogathon! "Warren William is the real "great profile." And any time Alice White appears, everything just seems better" - I couldn't agree more.

FlickChick said...

Jacqueline - those real life monsters are the scariest, aren't they? Especially the one in suits.

The Last Drive In said...

You really captured the spirit of the blogathon! William’s (the wolf!) performance is a standout in this pre-Code gem; his presence IS nearly as unforgettable as Barrymore’s. I enjoyed this immensely. Great work!

FlickChick said...

Many thanks, Drive In. Warren William is just so good at being bad. When I've seen him in nice guy parts it just didn't seem right.

The Classic Movie Muse said...

Excellent post! I have yet to see this film but feel as if I already have from your vivid writing. Thanks for introducing me to this one, Flickchick.

FlickChick said...

Thanks for stopping by, Classic Muse. If you're into Pre-Code, this is a must-see.