There were some good expressions of mild disgust in the Laurel and Hardy films, "another fine mess" being the most common, I think. Jack Benny could get a lot of mileage out of one word: "Well!"
Sometimes a one-word expression could carry a lot of weight if used in an otherwise "innocent" movie, like the too-short Nancy Drew series. In one, her boyfriend said "Gosh, Nancy. I mean, GOSH!" Just the way he said it was perfect. But that's what good acting is.
I had a tape of the Jack Armstrong serial but I have no memory of any expressions but all the characters were good. I must get a DVD version. That one was made just after the war, I believe (I'm not double-checking anything in this post, so there be inaccuracies), so it's a good time-capsule of things. Curiously, if I'm remembering it correctly, Jack Armstrong has souped up car (anyone say "souped up?") that he uses to run down a hit-and-run driver. After it's all over, a policeman is admiring Jack's car and asks him what he's going to do with it and if I'm not mistaken, he says he's going to take it out to Pomona and try for a record. Anyway, one has this image of a typically dressed man walking down the street in a double-breasted suit and a snap-brim hat. But in one scene a man is walking down the sidewalk bare-headed. But it's California, after all. I'm not sure about his suit, though.
The television show "Green Acres" was obviously set in the countryside and presumably not far from New York. But I don't remember anything about their accents (Zsa Zsa,'s, yes). It might be possible there is a city accent and a rural accent no matter what part of the country you're from. And small towns used to be very city-like, I assure you.
Sometimes a one-word expression could carry a lot of weight if used in an otherwise "innocent" movie, like the too-short Nancy Drew series. In one, her boyfriend said "Gosh, Nancy. I mean, GOSH!" Just the way he said it was perfect. But that's what good acting is.
I had a tape of the Jack Armstrong serial but I have no memory of any expressions but all the characters were good. I must get a DVD version. That one was made just after the war, I believe (I'm not double-checking anything in this post, so there be inaccuracies), so it's a good time-capsule of things. Curiously, if I'm remembering it correctly, Jack Armstrong has souped up car (anyone say "souped up?") that he uses to run down a hit-and-run driver. After it's all over, a policeman is admiring Jack's car and asks him what he's going to do with it and if I'm not mistaken, he says he's going to take it out to Pomona and try for a record. Anyway, one has this image of a typically dressed man walking down the street in a double-breasted suit and a snap-brim hat. But in one scene a man is walking down the sidewalk bare-headed. But it's California, after all. I'm not sure about his suit, though.
The television show "Green Acres" was obviously set in the countryside and presumably not far from New York. But I don't remember anything about their accents (Zsa Zsa,'s, yes). It might be possible there is a city accent and a rural accent no matter what part of the country you're from. And small towns used to be very city-like, I assure you.