Those early one-act melodramas are truly odd. Were audiences really hungry for a reel of tears and depression between the cartoon and the feature?
Which as I noted there, has been my question too ever since seeing that little vaudeville playlet about the immigrant in Godfather II. Could you get audiences worked up in a melodrama and its characters that quickly— basically, one reel? I mean, sure, if you're D.W. Griffith making The New York Hat you could. But by the early 1930s? Did anyone successfully make standout examples of the speed-drama? Are there great ones with great performances? The only one I can think of is A Star in the Night, the Don Siegel Christmas short (which besides being a decade later is also, one should note, 22 minutes long, which is almost as long as, say, an episode of Twilight Zone or the old religious TV drama series Insight).
Anyone want to make a case for a genuinely great one or two reel talkie-era drama, or at least performance?