Film Review
Mr Deeds Goes to Town is the
first of Frank Capra's great morality films that combined raucous
comedy with mordant social comment. It belongs to a quadrilogy of
films - the others being
You Can't Take It with You
(1938),
Mr Smith Goes to Washington
(1939) and
Meet John Doe (1941) - which
satirise the failings of capitalism and the political system in America
in the 1930s. Although Capra had made several impressive
films before this, and some major successes such as the prototype
screwball
It Happened One Night (1934),
this is the first of his films where that distinctive Capra-esque voice
is unmistakably apparent.
So determined was Frank Capra that Gary Cooper should play the lead in
this film that he held up production for six months, costing his
employers, Columbia Pictures, $100,000. Capra was right to do so
- Cooper is perfect for the part of the country bumpkin Longfellow
Deeds, a likeable everyman character who is transported into a world of
greed, guile and deceit, the lamb taking on the wolf.
Cooper, a firm favourite of Capra and one of Hollywood's biggest names,
would star in the director's subsequent
Meet John Doe (1941).
Jean Arthur was a last minute casting choice, hired to replace Carole
Lombard who pulled out three days before filming began on her
scenes. Arthur had starred opposite Edward G. Robinson in
John Ford's classic comedy
The Whole Town's Talking (1935)
but it wasn't until she appeared in her three Capra films -
Mr Deeds Goes to Town,
You Can't Take It with You and
Mr Smith Goes to Washington - that
her career took off. The actress was so nervous about
appearing in this film that she was frequently sick in her dressing
room and would pace up and down whilst waiting for her cues, although
she acquitted herself with a performance that could hardly be bettered.
Mr Deeds Goes to Town started
out as a story entitled
Opera Hat
by Clarence Budington Kelland, who collaborated on the screenplay with
Robert Riskin, a frequent Capra collaborator. The film was
originally intended to be a pure screwball comedy, but this changed
when Capra and Riskin saw an opportunity to bring in some important
social themes which a contemporary audience would respond to
favourably. Made at a time when America still hadn't emerged from
its worst economic crisis, the film starkly evokes the hardship
experienced by many in the 1930s, and this could explain its
extraordinary success at the box office, out-grossing even the
phenomenally successful
It Happened
One Night. The film won Capra his second Best
Director Oscar and Cooper garnered his first Oscar nomination.
Like many of Capra's films of this era,
Mr Deeds Goes to Town continues to
have a powerful resonance. The vices and venality that Capra
portrays so vividly are things that continue to poison and weaken our
civilisation, and probably will do so whilst men (and career
politicians) walk upon the face of the Earth. The only
consolation is that there are men (and women) of character who somehow
manage to avoid plunging into the mire of corruption and self-interest,
men like Longfellow Deeds, Jefferson Smith, Grandpa Vanderhof and Long John Willoughby,
who point the way to a better world, where individuals strive not for
their own selfish gain, but for the betterment of their fellow
man. The philosophy "To thine own self be true" is one that will
ruin us all if applied in a purely materialistic vein.
Many regard Capra as a cynic, a director who seemed to delight in
showing us the worst that mankind is capable of - corrupt politicians,
immoral newspapermen, bloodsucking bankers, unscrupulous conmen and
rapacious businessmen. In fact, he was also a sublime
optimist, since virtually all of his films end on a positive note with
the hero, a beacon of hope, scoring a victory over the dark forces that
disfigure our society. Capra's message is as relevant today as it
was when the Great Depression, the product of flawed economics,
political ineptitude and unimaginable greed, took millions to the brink
of despair.
Nil desperandum,
Capra says with a wry smile, the good guys will see us through.
Who are the good guys? Why, you and me.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Frank Capra film:
Lost Horizon (1937)
Film Synopsis
Longfellow Deeds is unsure how to react when he learns that he has
inherited 20 million dollars from his uncle, the magnate Martin
Semple. He has no need of wealth. He lives a contented
existence in Mandrake Falls, amusing himself with his tuba playing and
writing poems for greeting cards. His uncle's lawyer, John Cedar,
finally persuades Deeds to accept the legacy and to begin a new life as
a millionaire businessman in New York City. Hard-bitten newspaper
editor MacWade sees a scoop in Deeds's rags to riches story and sends
his star report Babe Bennett to win his confidence and extract
information about his private life. Pretending to be a hard up
unemployed woman, Babe appeals to Deeds's chivalrous side and in no
time she has gained not only his confidence but his friendship.
When a ruined farmer threatens him with a gun, Deeds realises that he
can put the wealth he has inherited to good use. He will create a
number of farms to provide work for hundreds of men who have lost
everything in the Great Depression. His uncle's lawyers are
unimpressed by this gesture of philanthropy. A trial is arranged
to establish whether Deeds is mentally deranged and therefore unfit to
inherit the Semple fortune. By this time, Deeds has discovered
Babe's deception and, broken-hearted by the one person he thought he
could trust, he slumps into a deep depression, which his opponents see
as clinching proof of his insanity...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.