Film Review
They say that Truth is the first casualty of war and this film
certainly proves it. Watching
Mission
to Moscow today it is hard to believe that this could ever have
been conceived as a serious piece of wartime propaganda. Just how
naïve, gutless and ignorant did those responsible for it think its
audience was likely to be? Subtlety clearly wasn't part of the
brief when Warner Brothers set out to convince a Communist-fearing
American public that Joseph Stalin was not, as some would have it, a
neurotic megalomaniac dictator with psychopathic tendencies, but was in
fact that nice genial benefactor of mankind who brought children their
Christmas presents every year whilst waiting for the Vatican to issue
him with his sainthood.
Mission to Moscow was based on
the best-selling book of the same title by Joseph E. Davies, the United
States' ambassador to the U.S.S.R. in the years leading up to
WWII. It was directed by Michael Curtiz, a highly regarded
Hollywood filmmaker who is perhaps best known for the classic
Casablanca
(1942). It was at the personal request of President Franklin D.
Roosevelt that Warner Brothers adapted the book for cinema, as part of
a propaganda campaign to convince the American people that a close
alliance with the Soviet Union was essential, not only for defeating
Hitler, but also to safeguard peace after the war.
However much one agrees with the motives behind this film (the Allies
could not have won the war without the Soviets' immense sacrifice and
the U.S.S.R. was key to the creation of the United Nations), it is hard
not to take offence at the way the film distorts the facts in order to
paint the Soviet regime at that time in the most positive light.
Seeing Stalin depicted as the benign leader of a Utopian society in
which women are happy to be sent down coal mines is something that
chills the blood. As it turned out, the film was not a
success - most critics loathed it and it bombed at the box
office. If anything, this kind of heavily biased leftwing
sentiment merely aggravated anti-Communist feeling and helped fuel the
McCarthyist witch-hunts of the late '40, early '50s.
Whilst it may fail as an effective propaganda piece,
Mission to Moscow is not without
interest to a student of cinema. Assuming you are able to correct
for the obvious pro-Communist slant, it does provide a record of the
events leading up to America's entry into WWII which is broadly
accurate (in the Wikipedia sense of the term).
Overall, it is a well-made production which effectively evokes the mood
and drama of its time through the use of montage and newsreel
footage.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Michael Curtiz film:
Mildred Pierce (1945)
Film Synopsis
In 1936, President Roosevelt appoints Joseph E. Davies, an eminent
lawyer, as U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union. Davies's
mission is to make an assessment of whether an alliance with the Soviet
people would be effective in defeating fascist Germany in the event of
a war. Ambassador Davies is most impressed by what he sees
during his stay in Russia. The Soviets have a formidable military
and are eager to ally themselves with friendly nations like America and
other European countries to defeat Hitler and build a peaceful future
for mankind. Yes, that nice Mr Stalin is just the kind of man we
should be doing business with...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.