Film Review
Fred Zinnemann certainly had his work cut out for him when he was given
the onerous task of bringing James Jones's mammoth novel
From Here to Eternity to the big
screen. Caught between Columbia boss Harry Cohn, who wanted to
retain the strong language and explicit love scenes of the novel, and
the Hollywood censors, who would never allow such things to be heard
and seen in a motion picture, Zinnemann must have felt he was fighting
a losing battle. It was only his tenacity that allowed him to
cast Montgomery Clift and Frank Sinatra in what would, for both actors,
be career defining roles. The gambles and hard work paid
off. The film was a major commercial and critical success and
virtually swept the board at the 1954 Academy Awards ceremony. Of
the thirteen nominations it garnered, the film won eight Oscars, in
categories that included: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Black and
White Cinematography, Best Supporting Actor (Sinatra) and Best
Supporting Actress (Donna Reed).
From Here to Eternity is a classic of 1950s Hollywood cinema but
is particularly noteworthy for two reasons. First, it
offers a far from favourable portrayal of the U.S. military, in which
soldiers are victimised and bullied by their superiors, some of whom
have clear xenophobic tendencies. The source novel is even more scathing
than the film and, initially, the army withheld their
permission for the use of Schofield Barracks until changes had been
made to the script. The most significant change demanded by the military
was that the villain of the piece, Captain
Holmes, was severely sanctioned at the end of the
film (in the novel, the character was let off without so much as a
reprimand).
Just as significant is the notorious beach sequence in which Deborah
Kerr and Burt Lancaster make love and movie history with a full-on,
partially nude horizontal clinch of the kind that had never before been
seen in an American film. This scene was especially
shocking to contemporary audiences because Kerr was then considered to
be the model of prim English womanhood, the last person to be seen
frolicking in the sand with a musclebound hunk. The fact that
this scene now appears anodyne and unremarkable shows how much
attitudes and censorship rules have changed since the film was made.
With its stark depiction of army life and its spectacular staging
of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour,
From Here to Eternity ushered in a
new kind of American war film, one with far greater realism and far
less woolly romanticism than what had preceded it. Soldiers are
portrayed not as bland action heroes but as complex individuals, many
with troubled backgrounds, some being out-and-out villains. Fred
Zinnemann's faultless direction is complemented by some stunning
performances, particularly from Burt Lancaster and Montgomery
Clift. Although Lancaster would go on to greater things, this was
the high point of Clift's short but brilliant career, a lasting
reminder of the talent of one of Hollywood's most accomplished actors.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Fred Zinnemann film:
Oklahoma! (1955)
Film Synopsis
December, 1941. Whilst a fierce war is being waged in Europe,
North Africa and the Far East, the United States waits on the
sidelines. But not for much longer. After a run in with his
superiors, Private Robert Prewitt is transferred to Schofield Barracks,
a military base at Pearl Harbour, Hawaii. The company commander,
Captain Holmes, has heard that Prewitt is a prize-winning boxer and
intends that he should fight in the coming boxing
tournament. When Prewitt refuses, Holmes order his first
sergeant, Milton Warden, to make his life as difficult as possible,
believing that he will eventually relent. Holmes, a serial
adulterer, is oblivious to the fact that Warden is having a clandestine
love affair with his wife, Karen. She wants Warden to train to
become an officer so that they can begin a new life together in the
United States, but the sergeant loathes officers and cannot see himself
as one of their kind. Meanwhile, Prewitt has become the company
punch bag, with only one man, Private Angelo Maggio, standing by
him. Maggio is himself maltreated by his superiors, especially
the Italian-hating Fatso Judson, and ends up in the stockade after
going absent without leave. Meanwhile, Prewitt has fallen for a
nightclub hostess named Lorene. Having sustained a near-fatal
stab wound after a tussle with Judson, Prewitt seeks refuge in Lorene's
apartment, just as Japanese warplanes begin to attack the island...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.