Chloe Love Is Calling You


1h 2m 1934

Brief Synopsis

Mandy, a voodoo practicing nursemaid, returns to the swamps of the Everglades with her half-white daughter Chloe and helper, Jim Strong, to exact revenge on Colonel Gordon, the man she believes is responsible for the lynching of her husband Sam fifteen years earlier. The widowed colonel, whose daug...

Film Details

Release Date
Apr 1, 1934
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Pinnacle Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
Pinnacle Productions, Inc.; State Rights
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 2m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
5,802ft (7 reels)

Synopsis

Mandy, a voodoo practicing nursemaid, returns to the swamps of the Everglades with her half-white daughter Chloe and helper, Jim Strong, to exact revenge on Colonel Gordon, the man she believes is responsible for the lynching of her husband Sam fifteen years earlier. The widowed colonel, whose daughter Betty Ann drowned in the swamps at the same time that Sam was killed, lives with his niece Joyce and oversees the family turpentine factory. As Chloe, Mandy and Jim near the colonel's home, Chloe expresses doubts about her black heritage and rejects the proposal of the devoted Jim. Wade Carson, the new "Yankee" foreman of the turpentine factory, meanwhile, impresses the colonel when he discovers shortages at the factory and establishes that Mose, one of his employees, has been stealing from the company. After Wade fires Mose, Mose swears revenge and then tries to force his attentions on Chloe. Wade comes to Chloe's rescue, however, further aggravating Mose and confusing Chloe with his obvious romantic interest. Mose prepares to shoot Wade but is stopped by Joe, who is then crushed to see Wade walk Chloe home. Later, while Mandy and Mose join forces and plan their voodoo revenge, Chloe and Jim argue about Chloe's attraction to the "white northerner." Then, on the anniversary of Betty Ann's disappearance, Mandy leaves voodoo switches on the colonel's doorstep and initiates a drum-beating ceremony. During the ceremony, Mandy, who is also concerned about Chloe's interest in Wade, drugs her tea and orders Jim to take advantage of her subsequent stupor to assure their marriage. Jim refuses to seduce Chloe, but aftering spying Wade kiss Chloe, confronts Wade and tells him that she is half-black and therefore "off-limits." Although Wade is reluctant to believe Jim about Chloe, he takes seriously his warning that Mandy and Mose are plotting against him and the colonel. Mandy, meanwhile, steals a photograph of the young Betty Ann from the colonel's house. The colonel and Wade then break into Mandy's cabin and there discover the photograph with clothes that Betty Ann was wearing the day she drowned. When Chloe identifies the clothes as ones she wore as a child, the colonel becomes convinced she is his daughter. Mandy, however, denies that she kidnapped Chloe to replace her own dead child, and Joyce, who is attracted to Wade, also expresses doubts about Chloe's white parentage. At a party in her honor, a confused and distraught Chloe flees into the swamps, while the colonel and Wade, determined to prove their hunch, send the local doctor to dig up a grave that the colonel believes contains Mandy's black baby. Meanwhile, Hill and Mose ambush Chloe in the swamp and bring her to Mandy's voodoo ceremony, where they plan to sacrifice her. Wade and the colonel, however, arrive in time to save Chloe, after which the doctor confirms that the baby buried at Mandy's house is black. At last assured of her "whiteness," Chloe is free to pursue her romance with Wade.

Film Details

Release Date
Apr 1, 1934
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Pinnacle Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
Pinnacle Productions, Inc.; State Rights
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 2m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
5,802ft (7 reels)

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

A 26 July 1933 Film Daily news item refers to this film as a "Kennedy Sunshine Special," an apparent reference to Aubrey Kennedy, the then owner of the picture's production studio. Modern sources add the following additional information: Chloe began production on May 22, 1933 in St. Petersburg and featured local people in the cast. At the time of filming, the studio was not called Sun Haven but was renamed Sun Haven in August 1933 when T. C. Parker, Jr., a local investor in the project, purchased the facility from Kennedy. Sun Haven then merged with a Tampa studio, Beecroft-Florida Studios, in December 1933.