THE JAZZ SINGER
1927
Alan Crosland

SYNOPSIS
The son of a traditional Jewish cantor aspires to a career in popular entertainment, creating conflict between familial obligation, religious heritage, and personal ambition. As stage performance and cultural change reshape his identity, the tension between continuity and modernity becomes inseparable from the emergence of a new era in American entertainment.
CRITIQUE
Although only partially synchronized with recorded dialogue and music, the film became a decisive landmark in the transition from silent cinema to sound. Al Jolson dominates the production through energetic performance and musical presence, while the film itself reflects broader anxieties surrounding assimilation and popular culture. Its historical importance remains immense despite the problematic racial imagery associated with blackface performance traditions.