Tuesday 2 August 2011

Matt's Big Oscar Challenge Day 140: Political Corruption gone Mad

I know I've said this already but it does bear repeating that I haven't really dealt with many winners of the 1950s but the primary reason for this is that most of them lie on LoveFilm and are yet to be delivered. The third and final one of the winners that I can watch was declared Best Picture at the first ceremony of the decade that film being All The King's Men. The film also had an Oscar winning performance from Broderick Crawford as Willie Stark a man who goes from becoming a rural politician to state governer. The film is told from the point-of-view of Jack Burden, oscar-nominated John Ireland, who is first sent to cover Stark's story in his role as a journalist. After Stark's campaign gains momentum he hires the strong willed Sadie to be his aide her straight-talk helps him get on the first rung of the ladder. But after fighting corruption at the start of the film Stark becomes corrupt himself as he has the local police in his pocket and tries to buy off a judge and blackmail a doctor by building a brand new hospital. The relationship between Stark and Burden sours after the former begins a romantic liaison with the latter's girlfriend. But everything unravels when Stark's son kills a girl in a drunk-driving accident and ends paralysed along the way, Willie is empeached and then assassinated when he is found not guilty. The final scene involves him telling Jack to carry on his work before he finally succombs to his gunshot.

First off I do feel that All The King's Men is a film that deserves a Best Picture Oscar, it has a good subject matter and a great cast however at the same time it does have some issues. The first being pace, the film starts slow enough following Willie's life as a smalltown campaigner and his first meeting with Jack. But once he starts to become a big fish the film speeds up and Willie goes from berating the corrupt from being corrupt himself in a short period of time. I also feel like some of the supporting characters were a bit weak especially Jack and Willie's romantic partner Anne played by Joanne Dru. However Mercedes McCambridge's Sadie is everything Anne is not strong-willed but fragile, straight-talking but vulnerable and she makes a great partner for Crawford in their scenes together. And Crawford himself is skillfully cast in the lead, rather than a good looking film star as the politcian, Crawford looks like an everyman so it is a surprise when he gets corrupted. Also due for praise are the film's set direction and costume, the sets are beautifully drawn - the political rallies, the country mansions and the newsrooms all feel authentic while the change of costumes throughout the film reflect Willie's political standing. Director Robert Rossen obviously understood the nature of film-making and the use of space and thats one of All The King's Men's great points which do outnumber the weaker elements of the picture. Indeed it did deserve best picture but as I am yet to watch any of the nominees whether it deserved best picture that year is yet to be decided.

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