Shocking to see Fredric March…
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puirt-a-beul — 11 years ago(July 10, 2014 05:19 PM)
Doghouse, I've really enjoyed reading your posts in this thread. They're perceptive and entertaining, and very well written. I do appreciate hearing your point of view, which rings true also for my own impression of the film. Thanks!
My one misgiving of the film is that I feel Kramer (who I greatly admire) hammers his points home a little too fiercely and with too broad-headed a mallet. The drama tends to become something of a shadow-play, despite scenes that add layers to Brady's character, such as the scene where he moderates the preacher's anger or the moving scene towards the end where his wife professes her faith in his honesty and inherent goodness. Much of the rest seems a little too blunt and thickly laid-on for my tastes, and I admire March's skill in keeping it nonetheless emotionally credible.
I have to agree with your comments on Tracy. He's a favourite of mine from the period, but I'm aware it's largely because I find his screen persona so likeable. I think the difference is that Tracy is a personality, while March is what I consider a "real" actor. Though I absolutely enjoy both in this film, I do feel that March had the steeper hill to climb.
You might very well think that. I couldn't possibly comment. -
Doghouse-6 — 11 years ago(August 22, 2014 03:03 PM)
First off, I hope you'll forgive me for being so late in thanking you for your remarks and their generous kindness.
And in turn, may I say that I find your evaluation of both Kramer's and March's work in the film bang on (as the Brits say).
In one of my earlier comments, I volunteered that I wasn't such a fan of March's pre-war work, but since then, I've had the opportunity to catch some of it that I'd missed, as well as to take a second look at some others of his films I'd already seen. Those opportunities have brought about something of a reevaluation; I detected skillful nuances to which I'd not been exposed earlier, or that had escaped me initially.
Although I remain most appreciative of his work from, say,
The Best Years Of Our Lives
on, my regard for his craftsmanship overall has only grown since I first jumped onto this thread.
Poe! You areavenged! -
bebop63-1 — 15 years ago(August 03, 2010 02:12 AM)
It looked to me more like a make-up job to make him closely resemble William Jennings Bryan, the real life person on whom March's character was based on. Check out the photograph of Bryan with Clarence Darrow (who was the defending lawyer in the case) in Scopes Monkey Trial entry in wikipedia.org and see for yourself.
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Edward_de_Vere — 14 years ago(August 24, 2011 08:32 AM)
Those used to March's youthful leading man roles would be even more surprised at his last film appearance, as the senile, drunken barkeep Harry Hope in Lumet's adaptation of Eugene O'Neill's
The Iceman Cometh
.
March is the one wearing the hat:
http://www.fandor.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/iceman-cometh-ma rch-ryan.jpeg