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  1. Employees' Entrance is a 1933 pre-Code film about the devious manager of a New York department store (Warren William) and his romantic involvement with a reluctant new employee (Loretta Young). It was directed by Roy Del Ruth . [2]

  2. Employees' Entrance: Directed by Roy Del Ruth. With Warren William, Loretta Young, Wallace Ford, Alice White. A working girl is menaced by her tyrannical employer.

    • (1.6K)
    • Drama, Romance
    • Roy Del Ruth
    • 1933-02-11
  3. Employees' Entrance (1933) -- (Movie Clip) All I Want Is You Good clean fun in Warner Bros.’ (First National's) otherwise plenty provocative pre-Code Employees’ Entrance, 1933, as department store middle-manager Wallace Ford, in his first scene, can’t help noticing the knockout new model (Loretta Young), with clever popular song references.

    • Roy Del Ruth, Chuck Hansen
    • Warren William
    • Employees' Entrance1
    • Employees' Entrance2
    • Employees' Entrance3
    • Employees' Entrance4
    • Employees' Entrance5
  4. Employees' Entrance. Manipulative Kurt Anderson (Warren William), the manager at a department store, treats his employees ruthlessly. He hires Madeline Walters (Loretta Young) as a model only ...

    • (7)
    • Warren William
    • Roy Del Ruth
    • Comedy, Drama
  5. Summaries. A working girl is menaced by her tyrannical employer. Kurt Anderson is the tyrannical manager of a New York department store in financial straits. He thinks nothing of firing an employee of more than 20 years or of toying with the affections of every woman he meets. One such victim is Madeline, a beautiful young woman in need of a job.

  6. Employee's Entrance is a highly effective film that presents ruthlessness in business and personal relationships as an acceptable and successful lifestyle. William engages in sexual promiscuity for his pleasure and in sexual blackmail to retain his position at the store; he is effective and unrepentant at both.

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  8. After a prologue establishing a roughly 50-year history of department store profits, and mentions of a cut-throat executive named Anderson, we meet Warren William, intimidating his chairman (Hale Hamilton), Ross (Albert Gran) et al, in Warner Bros.’ Employees’ Entrance, 1933.

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