Four Score And Seven Years Ago Time-With
Frank Capra’s Mister Smith Goes To Washington (1939) In Mind
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
Mister Smith Goes To Washington,
starring Jimmy Stewart, Jean Arthur, Claude Rains, directed by Frank Capra,
1939
Recently I wrote a short review of a
Cary Grant and Jean Arthur film, Talk of
the Town, where I argued that while the film could certainly be held without
any ado as a good example of a romantic comedy from the golden age of such
films. I argued though that the film had more merit as a social drama since
while there were plenty of light-hearted moments the theme of the virtue of the
rule of law trumped the obvious romantic interest between the two stars (and
add in a third player Ronald Colman as well). I am in a similar quandary on the
film under review, Frank Capra’s Mister
Smith Goes To Washington. In that previous review I noted that Frank Capra
along with Preston Sturgis and George Stevens (I left
the question of Howard Hawks to the reader’s choice) was one of the great
directors of romantic comedy during the golden age of the genre in the later
1930s and early 1940s when anybody who had any sense knew the general
population needed a little escapist humor with the onslaught of the Great
Depression and the World War grinding them down. But I also argued that the
subject matter-the threat to the rule of law which underscored the plot line
made that film a vehicle for social drama as well.
I want to argue for a similar
conclusion on this on. Here’s the play. A U.S. Senator, in an unnamed state but
presumed to be out in the heartland where people overall were not as jaded as
elsewhere and still believed in some of the old truths even in the late 1930s
when America was going to hell in a handbasket, had died. The “bosses” who ran
the state and ran the governor couldn’t decide on a suitable candidate and so
one so-called apolitical do-gooder, one Jefferson Smith (already we can get the
flags out with that name), played by Jimmy Stewart, got the nod. The assumption
was that he would do the bidding of the organization while it was stealing
everything that was not nailed down, specifically a big boondoggle dam project
where everybody who was in on the deal would get well, including the senior
Senator, Joe Paine, from the state, played by Claude Rains last seen in this
space walking arm and arm with Humphrey Bogart in the fog after giving the
Germans the “what for” in the classic film, Casablanca.
Of course old Jeff was the classic
believer in good government, believed in the whole nine yards, probably
believed that George Washington actually did chop down that cherry tree just
like Parsons Weems said. Naïve, a babe in the woods, he got to Washington and
was ready to serve with pride. Except he had this idea, this national boys’
camp idea that he planned to run through Congress as a way to instill true
democratic values in future generations. (Girls, I guess, were just supposed to
sit around and look pretty.) Problem, big problem in the end; the boys’ camp
idea ran smack against the big dam boondoggle. The fight was on.
I mentioned that this film could be a
romantic comedy at some level. That idea would come into play when Jefferson brought
his wised-up to the ways of Washington super- secretary Clarissa, played by
heartland wised up Jean Arthur, into his orbit, got her on his side in the
fight for the boys’ camp despite her cynicism after having been around the town
a little too long. But get this, or rather get two things. This Jeff was not
built to be a good old boy, to carry some boss’s water, he had fighting for
lost causes in his bones, grabbed a few such genes from his father, a
newspaperman shot when he got too close to the dark side of politics and
couldn’t be bought. The other thing is that while Jeff had more illusions than
anybody should be allowed to have and still be allowed within fifty miles of
the Washington zip codes he was not a quitter. Stood up to the bosses and their
stooges, including that Joe Paine who had been a friend of his father’s but who
was being held up in this film as the consummate sell-out to the big interests.
Here is the really funny part. The way
old Jeff won his battle was through an old-fashioned filibuster, you know he took
and kept the floor until exhaustion set in to prove his point. Now since the
time of the film, 1939, the filibuster has been used for less worthy fights
like against civil rights legislation in the 1950s and 1960s and now to
basically try to close down the government. So a filibuster seems an odd way now
to make his point but there you have it. That pluck and Clarissa pulling for
him from the sidelines. I mentioned in that The
Talk of the Town review that that film was more of a social drama than a
romantic comedy now that I have given you the “skinny” on this one I think this
one follows that same path. You decide, okay.
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