Film Review
Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee's highly acclaimed play
Inherit the Wind provided an
appropriate vehicle for the politically minded producer-director
Stanley Kramer to prompt a serious reflection on two important contemporary
themes - the fallout from the McCarthy era and a growing
public mistrust of scientific progress (fuelled by
the creation of the atom bomb). The parallels between the events depicted in the
film, based on a real-life case of 1925 (the so-called Scopes Monkey
Trial), and the recent clampdown on leftwing sympathisers is
striking. The paranoid fanaticism of McCarthy and his followers,
which led to the imprisonment and ostracisation of anyone who had
even the slightest association with Communist politics, is obviously a
close relation of the over-the-top religious zealotry that could
criminalise someone simply for teaching a scientific theory.
Today, with religious fundamentalism in the ascendant across the world,
and with Creationalism being embraced in preference to Darwinian
evolution in many American communities, this film has a powerful
resonance, perhaps offering a chilling vision of things to come.
Whilst not as groundbreaking or contraversial as some of Kramer's other
films,
Inherit the Wind
is nonetheless a superlative piece of film drama. It brings
together two icons of Hollywood, Spencer Tracy and Fredric March, for
one of cinema's most absorbing and energetic courtroom battles.
Tracy may notionally be the good guy, since he occupies the more
reasonable position that champions free thought and respect for the
individual, yet our sympathies are torn equally between his and March's
character. The more passionate and fanatical March becomes, the
more pathetic he appears - a sad deluded old man shouting in the
wilderness, surrendering all ties to humanity as he clings to the
decaying vestiges of soulless religion. Tracy is superb as the
defender of liberal values and turns in what is undoubtedly one of the
greatest turns of his career, but it is March who gets to play the more
interesting character and probably has the greater impact.
Between these two colossi there are several distinguished supporting
artistes who somehow manage to make a mark. In one of his few
straight dramatic roles, Gene Kelly is surprisingly effective as a
cynical newspaper hack, even if his character is only there to provide
Tracy's character with a good sounding board for his liberal
notions. Harry Morgan makes an excellent judge, managing to hold
his own as the two heavyweights slug it out in front of him in a
contest that looks increasingly less like a trial and more like a
Medieval jousting tournament. Away from the courtroom, there are
one or two poignant scenes, many featuring March's real-life wife
Florence Eldridge, who plays his wife in the film. Intelligently
scripted and acted with as much sincerity as gusto,
Inherit the Wind makes a compelling
cautionary drama which, whilst it has a lighter side to it, reminds us
that the battle between religious extremists and progressive thinkers
is far from over.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Stanley Kramer film:
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967)
Film Synopsis
In Hillsboro, a small town in Tennessee, schoolteacher Bertram Cates is
arrested for teaching Darwin's Theory of Evolution to a class of
high school students. According to state law, it is illegal to
promulgate any view which contradicts the exact literal truth of the
Bible. When Cates's girlfriend Rachel speaks out in his defence,
she finds herself rejected by her own father, a fundamentalist
preacher. The town rejoices when Matthew Harrison Brady, a former
presidential candidate and renowned Bible basher, declares that he will
prosecute Cates in his forthcoming trial. There is a less
positive reaction when hardnosed journalist E. K. Hornbeck arranges for
an equally prominent lawyer Henry Drummond to take charge of the
defence. Drummond is regarded as a champion of liberal thinking
and is therefore given a far from friendly reception when he arrives in
the town. What begins as the trial of one man will soon assume a
much greater significance, the trial of a man's right to think for
himself...
© James Travers
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