 Controversial Movies (Song Of The South, JFK, The Green Berets) by Stephen Schochet
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Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 911 (2004) and Mel Gibson's The Passion of
The Christ (2004) continued a long line of controversial films. In 1968
John Wayne decided to counter Vietnam War protests by turning The Green
Berets, a collection of short stories by author Robin Moore about the
superhero like exploits of the US Army Special Forces into a movie.
Eight years before the Cowboy Star had taken a financial bath while
producing The Alamo (1960), he considered The Green Berets an
appropriate freedom-fighting sequel. Wayne, who never served in the
military, hated being called a hero by the press while the young
soldiers he visited in Vietnam were accused of being murderers. The
Green Berets production problems ranged from a lack of cooperation from
the Pentagon to battle scenes repeatedly being ruined when twirling
helicopter blades blew the sixty-one year old actor's toupee off. It
took all of Wayne's persuasive abilities to get Jack Warner to
distribute the film. Upon its release many critics who opposed the war
called The Green Berets vile and boring, but to their great distress it
was a huge box office success. Wayne publicly thanked the East Coast
reviewers who hated the movie for bringing it more attention, and
laughed all the way to the bank.
Controversial movies have been
around since the beginning of the industry. In 1915, frustrated by his
bosses unwillingness to let him make a feature length film, Biograph
Studios Director D.W. Griffith decided to invest his own money to turn
Thomas Dixon's novel The Clansman into a two and half hour, sixty
thousand dollar epic: Birth of a Nation. During filming some of the crew
questioned D.W.s creative choices. They felt that many scenes such as
the assassination of President Lincoln or a white woman leaping to her
death to ward off the advances of a black man were over staged and
melodramatic. They were amazed at the powerful impact the assembled
footage made, especially when accompanied by a full orchestra. One
thrilling sequence featured horses racing toward the camera making
sophisticated audiences duck down in their seats fearing the giant
animals would leap off the screen into their laps. President Wilson
called the Civil War epic "History written with lightning."
Press reports exaggerated the stunning Picture's costs at two million
dollars, and accurately or not Griffith was credited with inventing
modern cinematic techniques such as close-ups, panning and crosscutting.
For the first time movies were considered an art form. But because the
story featured clansmen as heroes and former black slaves as murderous
thugs, the director was branded a racist and the film was banned from
several major cities. Griffith, the son of a confederate soldier from
Kentucky, resented the charges of bigotry and went broke trying to prove
his detractors wrong by financing expensive follow-up films such as
Intolerance (1916). Historians later gave Birth of a Nation credit for
increasing membership in the Ku Klux Klan.
Walt Disney was more
sensitive towards how black characters in his films would be received by
the public. In 1946 he hired old time radio actor James Baskett to play
the wise, kindly Uncle Remus and Oscar winner Hattie McDaniel to be Aunt
Tempy in Song of the South. McDaniel, who had convinced Producer David
O. Selznick not to use the n-word in Gone with the Wind (1939), often
suffered through long bouts of unemployment and depression. Black
activists complained to her prospective employers that her maid-mammy
portrayals reinforced negative stereotypes. Walt Disney appealed to
Walter White, the head of the National Association Of Colored People to
read an early Song of the South script and voice any objections to the
story he might have. Walt was not a racist, he simply wanted to present
Joel Chandler Harris stories in the most tasteful way possible. White
refused to meet with Disney, waited till the movie came out then blasted
him without seeing the film for showing 'happy slaves' on screen.
Despite doing fairly good business and James Baskett winning a special
Oscar, Song of the South became a public relations embarrassment for the
Disney Company and still has not been released on video or DVD in the
USA. Ironically, the movie's story took place after the Civil War and
the black characters were free laborers not slaves.
The biggest
lightning rod in cinema since Birth of a Nation and before Passion and
Fahrenheit was Oliver Stone's JFK (1992). The quasi-documentary film
featured so many characters that Stone felt the only way for an audience
to keep track of them all was to have an all-star recognizable cast.
Critics pilloried the movie's suggestion that Cubans, the Pentagon,
President Johnson and a Gay Mafia had conspired to kill John Kennedy
using Lee Harvey Oswald as a patsy, before they actually saw the film.
They pointed out that Stone misled audiences on a number of issues
including that Kennedy was planning to pull out entirely of Vietnam had
he lived, the actual scheme was a partial reduction of troops with the
hope that the South Vietnamese would strengthen themselves. It was
complete fiction that the film's primary villain Clay Shaw (Tommy Lee
Jones) had ever visited the office of right wing FBI agent Guy Bannister
(Ed Asner). The gay prostitute convict Willie O'Keefe (Kevin Bacon) who
first reveals that there was a conspiracy to kill the President was a
made-up character for the film. New Orleans District Attorney Jim
Garrison (Kevin Costner) was remembered as a wild-eyed conspiracy
theorist that physically intimated witnesses, not the kindly, Jimmy
Stewart type he was portrayed as. Friends of the crazy pilot David
Ferrie (Joe Pesci) felt the film maligned his character, and so on.
Director Stone dismissed the criticisms, pointing out that he was
creating a myth to counter the fabrication that the Warren Commission
had put out when they ruled that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone
assassin. Eighty percent of the film's viewers said they agreed with
Stone there was a conspiracy despite any evidence to the contrary.
Politics can make it difficult for Hollywood Studios to produce
controversial movies. In 1940, Twentieth Century Fox head Daryl Zanuck
assumed he would face internal difficulty in adapting John Steinbeck's
The Grapes of Wrath for the screen. The story of Depression era farmers
migrating from Oklahoma to California in unreliable jalopies to become
fruit pickers was scathing in its depiction of bankers and the US
economic system. The novel been banned from many schools and libraries.
Winthrop Aldrich, the head of the Chase Manhattan Bank was also the most
powerful shareholder at Twentieth Century Fox. Despite his personal
anti-labor politics, Zanuck felt Grapes was a great story and decided
that making it into a picture was a hill he was willing to die on.
Aldrich could block the film and fire him; the Producer was willing to
go forward anyway. In a tense meeting Aldrich questioned Zanuck if he
really planned to make the hot button book into a movie, the determined
Zanuck replied he was. The banker smiled, You know my wife made me read
that. It should make a wonderful movie."
He turned out to be
correct. The Grapes of Wrath starring Henry Fonda was the studio's
biggest hit of 1940. A few years later it was released in the Soviet
Union as an intended piece of propaganda with Communist leaders eager to
show their people the hard life in the USA. But it backfired when many
Russian moviegoers came away with the impression that America was great;
everyone there owned a car!
| | Stephen Schochet is the author of Hollywood Stories: Short, Entertaining Anecdotes About the Stars and Legends of the Movies! (isbn 9780963897275)
Available at Barnes & Noble, Amazon or wherever books are sold.
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