Showing posts with label Charlton Heston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charlton Heston. Show all posts

Sunday, December 24, 2023

1959: Ben-Hur.

Messala (Stephen Boyd) and Judah Ben-Hur (Charlton Heston) share one of their last friendly moments.
Messala (Stephen Boyd) and Judah Ben-Hur (Charlton Heston) in one of their last friendly moments.

Release Date: Nov. 18, 1959. Running Time: 222 minutes. Screenplay: Karl Tunberg, Maxwell Anderson (uncredited), S. N. Behrman (uncredited), Gore Vidal (uncredited), Christopher Fry (uncredited). Based on the novel, Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ, by Lew Wallace. Producer: Sam Zimbalist. Director: William Wyler.


THE PLOT:

Judah Ben-Hur (Charlton Heston) is a prince of Judea, and he remains both wealthy and influential despite the Roman occupation of the region. Judah, his mother, and his sister are all overjoyed when his childhood friend, Messala (Stephen Boyd), returns from Rome as second in command of the province.

Their joy is short-lived. Messala is ambitious, determined to build his name by silencing the rebellious murmurs among the conquered Jews. When Judah refuses to help, Messala takes it as a personal betrayal. Not long after, an accident injures Judea's new Roman governor - giving Messala the opportunity to arrest Judah and his family. Judah's mother and sister are imprisoned, while he is sent off as a galley slave.

Three years later, Judah's fortunes shift again when he saves the life of the fleet commander, Quintus Arrius (Jack Hawkins). Arrius frees him, and Judah becomes his champion in the Roman chariot races. With the protection of Arrius's backing, he returns to Judea to search for his mother and sister and to gain revenge on Messala through an entirely legal avenue: by challenging him in the next chariot race!

Years as a galley slave strengthens Judah's thirst for vengeance.
Years as a galley slave strengthens Judah's thirst for vengeance.

CHARLTON HESTON AS JUDAH BEN-HUR:

Heston had delivered one of his best performances for director William Wyler's previous film, The Big Country, and he's almost as good here. His nonverbal reactions are particularly effective, from the openness of his grin when first reunited with Messala, to the glint of hatred in his eyes when he's rowing in the galley.

Even early on, when Judah is wealthy and content, he has a temper. When Messala presses him for names of dissidents, he snaps at him for trying to make him betray his people. Instead of trying to diplomatically deflect Messala, he marks himself as an enemy by proclaiming: "The day Rome falls there will be a shout of freedom such as the world has never heard before!" Never mind the later accident; had he been just an ordinary citizen, it's a near certainty that Messala would have arrested him just for speaking those words.

Heston is excellent whenever he's portraying strong emotions. All of that said, I don't think his performance is as strong as in either The Big Country or 1968's The Planet of the Apes (my single favorite Heston performance). As good as he is in the angry scenes, he's much less successful when called upon to be contemplative. Instead of seeming thoughtful in quiet moments, he mostly comes across as wooden.

Judah's fortunes change when he saves the life of Roman consul Qunitus Arrius (Jack Hawkins).
Judah's fortunes change when he saves the life of Roman consul Qunitus Arrius (Jack Hawkins).

OTHER CHARACTERS:

Messala: He's ecstatic at reuniting with Judah, clearly wanting to pick up their friendship where they left off. But he's also drunk deeply of the Roman Kool-Aid. When Judah observes that he speaks of the Emperor as a God, Messala doesn't hesitate in responding: "He is God. The only God. He is power, real power on Earth!" Thus, when Judah has his outburst, denouncing Rome as evil, Messala sees that as every bit the betrayal he inflicts on his old friend. Yes, he uses Judah as an example to strengthen his position - but I suspect he'd have been less cruel had Judah not first torn so vehemently into one of the core tenets of his identity.

Quintus Arrius: Second-billed Jack Hawkins makes the most of his very limited screen time as Judah's Roman benefactor. Taking command of the fleet, Arrius notices Judah immediately, mainly for the unbroken defiance in his eyes. Arrius commends him on it: "You have the spirit to fight back, but the good sense to control it." A lifelong military man, he lost his son years earlier, presumably in one of Rome's many military campaigns. He comes to see Judah as a surrogate son, championing his innocence to the emperor and even legally adopting him - granting Judah the power of his name to protect him from Messala when he returns to Judea.

Esther: When we first meet her, she's about to be married, but it's apparent that she's as smitten with Judah as he is with her. Since we never see her intended husband and she specifically states that she's barely met him, there's no viewer discomfort in their early interactions. Outside of being Judah's Designated Love Interest, she also acts as his conscience. All of this is pretty stock stuff, but it must be said that Israeli actress Haya Harareet is captivating on film, her eyes wide and expressive as she implores Heston's vengeful Judah not to resort to violence.

Esther (Haya Harareet), Judah's love interest and conscience.
Esther (Haya Harareet), Judah's love interest and conscience.

THOUGHTS:

Given the proliferation of Biblical epics in the 1950s and '60s, it's somewhat surprising that Ben-Hur is the only such film to win Best Picture. Still, if only one was going to win, at least they picked right. This movie is glorious entertainment, offering up spectacular set pieces in service to a gripping story.

Question: When classic filmmakers are discussed, whey is William Wyler so often overlooked? His movies, even the largest scale ones, were centered around characters, but he blended that character focus with moments of pure cinema: Dana Andrews' haunted war veteran in The Best Years of Our Lives, walking through a graveyard of fighter planes that are no longer of any use, mirroring his own feelings about himself; the fistfight between Gregory Peck and Charlton Heston in The Big Country, shown in longshot to emphasize both the smallness of these men against the land itself and how ultimately meaningless their conflict is; and the set pieces in Ben-Hur, which always return to the characters and who they are.

There are several moments that stand out. Messala, sharing a meal with Judah's family, presents his sister with a gift: a brooch he took from a campaign in Libya. He casually talks about Libya's capital, completely conversational as he describes destroying the city - an early indication of his ruthlessness, and also a warning to Judah. After Judah is sentenced, Quintus Arrius is introduced testing the slaves with a full drill. As he keeps demanding increased speed, some men fall out of rhythm and are beaten. More speed, and a couple of slaves collapse. Arrius sits impassively throughout, his attention firmly on Judah, who keeps every new pace that's set. He's too focused to meet Arrius's gaze - but every time he looks up, his face is set in defiance.

Then there is the greatest of the movie's set pieces...

The chariot race: An iconic Hollywood action scene.
The chariot race: An iconic Hollywood action scene.

THE CHARIOT RACE:

This is still considered to be one of Hollywood's greatest action scenes and with good reason. It's masterfully shot and structured. The setting is established first, as the contestants parade around the loop before the race begins. Few of the shots of the race are from above, and all such shots are during the first, least instense portion. We're mostly kept close to the racers, the camera right behind Judah as he gains on the other contestants while going around the curve, or directly in front of Judah or Messala during the contest.

Just before the most suspenseful portion of the scene, we see Messala knock another racer out of his chariot. The man makes a well-timed jump to evade the horses coming at him - only to almost instantly be trampled by another chariot. It's a brutal moment that makes real the danger we've previously merely been told, and it comes just before the focus narrows to only Judah and Messala, who are now shown on screen together as their battle reaches its endpoint.

The sequence is breathtaking, superb filmmaking even just on a visceral level - but it's also notable for how it returns constantly to the two characters, with the final struggle effectively a stand-in for their entire conflict, their former friendship having devolved into a mutual, raw hatred.

Judah receives a very important cup of water.
Judah receives a very important cup of water.

BEN-HUR AS A RELIGIOUS MOVIE:

Remember when religious movies were made for all audiences to enjoy, rather than deliberately excluding secular viewers? Ben-Hur is a religious movie, based on a book subtitled, "A Tale of the Christ." For most of its running time, the religious elements are a backdrop to the drama of Judah's search for his family and for vengeance, but that element still remains a constant presence.

The prologue doesn't feature or even mention the Ben-Hur family. Instead, we open on the birth of Christ. The filmmakers keep this short, portraying just a couple of key moments through familiar, even pageant-like visuals. The wise men watch and follow the Star of Bethlehem, then present themselves to the infant, with the latter moment staged very like a traditional Nativity scene. Only then does the film cut to the opening titles and begin Judah's story. The result is that, from the outset, Judah's journey is folded into and linked to the larger Christ tale.

The entire narrative is dotted with references. Drusus, the old garrison commander Messala relieves, talks about how the Judeans are "drunk with religion." He mentions John the Baptist, speaking of him with the dismissiveness reserved for crazy cult leaders. Then he mentions "a carpenter's son," noting that he finds some of what this man says "quite profound."

When Judah returns to Judea, he encounters Balthasar (Finlay Currie), one of the wise men from the prologue. Later still, Judah, filled with despair and a thirst for vengeance, passes by The Mount of Beatitudes just before the Sermon on the Mount. Though Esther urges him to stop and listen, he leaves her behind, proceeding instead to a bitter meeting with Pontius Pilate.

Then there are the moments in which Christ makes direct appearances. These are handled artfully. Opera singer Claude Heater was cast in the role, but his face is never shown. Judah encounters him during the long march to the galleys, when Christ gives the parched man water. We mainly just see his hand, holding the cup to Judah, and Judah's reaction (as elsewhere in the film, Heston's nonverbal performance is superb). He appears once more in the epilogue, centered around his trial and execution. Again, he is shown from the back, with the focus on Judah's reactions when he recognizes him.

The way the religious tale is woven in and out of Judah's story lends the main narrative a broader context, while also making the religious story more immediately relatable. The religious references and scenes are an important part of the movie's fabric, but they are never allowed to get in the way of the main plot. Each thread ends up strengthening the other.

Judah stands at the periphery of The Sermon on the Mount.
Judah stands at the periphery of The Sermon on the Mount.

AN EXTENDED EPILOGUE:

For more than three hours, Ben-Hur sustains its running time remarkably well. The Judah/Messala conflict is spellbinding, and the spell holds even after their battle is resolved. At the 190-minute mark, after the chariot race, Judah meets with Pontius Pilate. Judah's defeat of Messala has not satisfied his thirst for revenge, and follow-up scenes have left him filled with despair. Their confrontation is soft-spoken, with no raised voices, but it bristles with tension.

Critically, Pilate is no Straw Roman. He speaks with intelligence. He urges Judah not to fall prey to his resentment. He acknowledges the injustices done to him, stating: "Where there is greatness - great government or power, even great feeling or compassion - error also is great. We progress and mature by fault." He extends an offer of friendship, even in the face of bitterness, and he allows Judah to leave in peace. Even as he does so, however, he issues a stern warning: "I cross this floor in spoken friendship... but when I go up those stairs, I become the hand of Caesar, ready to crush those who challenge his authority."

The spell finally breaks not long after, however, with the final thirty minutes proving to be a little too much epilogue. The structure here is fine, with Judah saved from his own rage by one last intersection with the Christ story. But just about every scene is suddenly allowed to overrun, and the pace becomes sluggish for the first time the entire movie. I think the movie would have been better served had about ten minutes been shaved off - not really with any scenes removed, but with some general tightening.

It's not enough to cost the movie full marks. But it does represent a flaw in an otherwise wonderfully engrossing, beautifully made motion picture.

Judah is victorious, but still unsatisfied.
Judah is victorious, but still unsatisfied.

REMAKES AND RETELLINGS:

The 1959 movie is easily the best remembered version of Ben-Hur, but there have been several others, dating back to the silent era:

Ben-Hur (1907): The first film version of Lew Wallace's novel, a 15-minute silent film that dramatizes some of the book's highlights. More of a film history curio than something to be watched for entertainment.

Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925): This silent epic was a mammoth production, one beset by cost overruns and production difficulties. Had it failed at the box office, it might well have bankrupted MGM. Instead, its success cemented the studio as one of Hollywood's major players. Notably, a young William Wyler was one of the film's assistant directors.

Ben-Hur (2003): An animated version, with Charlton Heston returning to voice the title role. From the same producers as the Greatest Heroes and Legends of the Bible animated series, it's unsurprising that it's reputed to be more overtly religious than previous versions (and presumably a lot less violent).

Ben-Hur (2016): Directed by Timur Bekmambetov, the man behind such titles as Wanted and Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, this opened to negative reviews, with complaints about over-edited action scenes and distracting CGI. Audiences mostly steered clear, and the film ended up being regarded as one of 2016's biggest financial follies.


OVERALL:

My reservations about the epilogue aside, 1959's Ben-Hur is an excellent motion picture. The set pieces remain spectacular, and director William Wyler makes sure that even the grandest moments always return to the characters, which helps the story to sustain its extremely long running time.

A few trims in the final stretch wouldn't have gone amiss - but this is still one of Hollywood's true classics, and it lives up to its reputation.


Rating: 10/10.

Best Motion Picture - 1958: Gigi
Best Motion Picture - 1960: The Apartment

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Saturday, April 22, 2023

1952: The Greatest Show on Earth.

Rival trapeze artists (Betty Hutton, Cornel Wilde) compete to be the top act, flirting all the while.
Rival trapeze artists (Betty Hutton, Cornel Wilde)
compete to be the top act, flirting all the while.

Release Date: Jan. 10, 1952. Running Time: 152 minutes. Screenplay: Fredric M. Frank, Theodore St. John, Barré Lyndon. Producer: Cecil B. DeMille. Director: Cecil B. DeMille.


THE PLOT:

The board of directors of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus wants to protect profits by running a meager 10-week season, playing only the big cities. General manager Brad Braden (Charlton Heston) disagrees, and he manages to sway the board with two conditions: First, that the circus will complete the full season only if it manages to stay in the black; and second, that he will bring in a star act to draw the crowds.

That star is "The Great Sebastian" (Cornel Wilde), a trapeze artist who is incredible in the air... and incredibly difficult on the ground. A serial womanizer, Sebastian has two former lovers already with this circus. He quickly sets his sights on a new target: Holly (Betty Hutton), an aerialist whose act his arrival pushed from the top spot at center ring.

Holly resents the demotion. She resolves to get her spot back, vowing that she'll make sure the public's eyes are on her instead of Sebastian. This leads to a direct and public competition, with the two engaging in increasingly spectacular and dangerous stunts. Brad initially goes along with it, as the rivalry proves to be a boon for ticket sales - but as the contest goes on, he begins to worry that it might end in tragedy!

Holly is torn between fellow aerialist Sebastian
and circus manager Brad (Charlton Heston).
Holly is torn between fellow aerialist Sebastian
and circus manager Brad (Charlton Heston).

CHARACTERS:

Holly: Betty Hutton spent six months training for her role, enabling her to do many of her own stunts. This pays off in the Big Top set pieces, as she swings upside down on the trapeze in one scene and performs flips on it in another. As the story opens, she's in a relationship with Brad that's a little too unspoken. Everyone in the circus agrees that they're a couple, but she is frustrated at the thought that he cares more about the business than her - making her extremely vulnerable to the charms of Sebastian, a fellow aerialist who understands exactly what it's like in the air and how much it means to her.

Sebastian: Director Cecil B. DeMille originally wanted Burt Lancaster (an actor with an actual circus background) to play Sebastian. After Lancaster passed, the role eventually went to Cornel Wilde... which I think is for the best, as Wilde's screen presence is a much better fit for the egotistical, womanizing showman. He's the last of the principles to make his entrance, arriving just as the circus is getting ready to depart - speeding in a sports car, with police sirens in his wake and a $100 traffic ticket (in early 1950s money) passed directly to circus billing on his behalf.

Sebastian's womanizing past leaves the viewer uncertain whether his amorous pursuit of Holly is serious. On the one hand, he stands up for her to Brad when he has the clowns comically pull her down from a dangerous stunt, fully comprehending her feelings in a way that Brad simply can't; on the other, their first romantic scene together consists of him using lines that she later learns were recycled from previous conquests. One thing he's serious about, however, is besting Holly's challenge, with him refusing to drop the rivalry even when Brad insists on it.

Brad: Though he's only third billed, Charlton Heston's Brad is very much the film's anchor. The opening scenes that establish the circus life follow him as he moves from one act or animal to the next, solving problems with practically every breath. He's honest and tough, but he's much better at dealing with logistics than with emotion. His inability to actually tell Holly how he feels about her threatens their relationship, with her being drawn more and more to Sebastian. He can see this, but he can't seem to make himself say the words or take the actions that will hold her - even though he consistently acts quickly and decisively in matters of circus logistics. This was Heston's breakthrough role, and the earnest, tough-as-nails Brad could more or less be considered the template for much of the career that followed.

Buttons the Clown: The head clown, who is never seen without his makeup and who is tight-lipped about his past. James Stewart plays the entire role in clownface. Remarkably, this doesn't hamper his performance at all. We see immediately, as he deals with an upset Holly, that he is compassionate and perceptive. He shows loyalty to her and Brad on multiple occasions, but he gives only the scantest of hints about his life before the circus. Eventually, we learn that he's on the run from police, though this subplot remains in the background until the final Act.

Buttons (James Stewart), the clown with a mysterious past,
is easily the most interesting character in the movie.
Buttons (James Stewart), the clown with a mysterious past,
is easily the most interesting character in the movie.

THOUGHTS:

Though he's best remembered for his Biblical epics, producer/director Cecil B. DeMille was nothing if not a showman, which made a film about the circus a natural fit. In a way, this movie is a snapshot of the last moments of the old-style circus. The film opens with execs arguing to cut back, tour less, and stick to the big cities. Just a few years later, Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey would do exactly that, restricting performances to air-conditioned venues (which, in the 1950s, pretty much meant big cities). In essence, DeMille is chronicling a way of life that was already about to change, making it almost a nostalgia piece even though it was set in the (then) present day.

The Greatest Show on Earth is by no means a great movie. The story consists of soap opera antics that were hackneyed when it was released, and the characters are shallow. Still, it is entertaining, and the set pieces hold up well.

The circus performances are interesting in how they are shot. When the focus is on the characters, DeMille goes close-up so that we share the emotion and feel the sense of danger. This is particularly true when Holly and Sebastian are competing, though it's also seen during an elephant act in which a jealous trainer (Lyle Bettger) uses the animal and his control over it as a threat to a performer (Gloria Grahame) who doesn't return his affections. When we're meant to feel the drama, DeMille goes in close.

The rest of the time, we're put in the bleachers with the audience. We view the performances from a particularly good seat, but we still see the action from a distance, over the heads of other spectators seated in front of us. DeMille wants the viewer to feel like a circus spectator as he documents the spectacle, and this works quite well.

The movie has its faults, the biggest of which is that it's overlong. The moments showing the rivalry between Sebastian and Holly are strong, but the other circus acts are allowed to run on and on. About 45 minutes in, there's a parade around the Big Top featuring popular characters of the day. This goes on for a good seven minutes, with the parade only briefly broken up by about thirty seconds of story material involving James Stewart's fugitive clown. If the scene was cut in half, it wouldn't hurt the spectacle; it would just help the pacing.

Padding isn't restricted to set pieces. The love triangle between Brad, Holly, and Sebastian isn't particularly complex, and the scenes portraying it become repetitive. Holly tries to get Brad to commit emotionally; he ignores her; she and Sebastian flirt. Reheat and reapply as necessary. In addition, there are two supporting female characters, Phyllis (Dorothy Lamour) and Angel (Gloria Grahame), both of whom were previously involved with Sebastian. Their roles are so similar that I often became confused about which was which. Had they been combined into a single person, the film would have lost nothing but a few minutes of extra running time.

Finally, there are a few bizarre technical flaws. Not in the scenes where you'd expect a 1950s film to feature bad edits or obvious greenscreen - as noted, the set pieces look great - but rather in scenes that seem less complicated. An early exposition scene with a low-level gangster (Lawrence Tierney) and his henchman features a horribly jagged cut, despite it being a fairly short conversation that could have played out in a single take. A late parade through a small town features some appalling greenscreen, even though a film of this budget surely had no need to do any of that sequence in studio. These moments stand out all the more given how good everything around them looks.

Workers stretch out the canvas of the Big Top before raising it at their latest location.
Workers stretch out the canvas of the Big Top
before raising it at their latest location.

OSCAR CONTROVERSY:

The Greatest Show on Earth is often regarded as one of the worst Best Picture winners. Its primary competitor at the Oscars was High Noon, which is widely agreed to be the better movie, and which is often seen as an allegory about the Hollywood blacklist. This has led some to speculate that the award had less to do with quality than with politics.

This is a complex topic, and I don't want to deviate from the focus on The Greatest Show on Earth as a movie, so I'll examine it in a supplemental post. Suffice it to say: I agree that Greatest Show didn't deserve to win, but I wouldn't rank it as anywhere near the worst Best Picture winner. It may occupy shallow waters, and it's probably a good twenty minutes too long... but it is enjoyable, even today, which puts it far above a few other winners that I can think of.


REMAKES AND RETELLINGS:

The Greatest Show on Earth was rebooted as a television series by Desilu Productions, running for thirty episodes from 1963 to 1964 and starring Jack Palance in the Charlton Heston role. Like the movie, it was made with the assistance of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus. It featured big name guest stars including the movie's Betty Hutton and also Don Ameche, Lucille Ball, James Coburn, Buster Keaton, and many, many others. But facing stiff competition from CBS comedies and NBC celebrity talk shows, it just couldn't justify its own expense and was canceled after a single season.

Anecdotally, director Steven Spielberg has credited the movie and specifically its train derailment sequence for igniting his passion for filmmaking. This was dramatized in Spielberg's recent autobiographical film, The Fabelmans.

A train derailment forms the movie's Third Act crisis,
bringing the various subplots to a head.
A train derailment forms the movie's Third Act crisis,
bringing the various subplots to a head.

OVERALL:

It's big. It's corny. It's overlong. It has all the depth of a puddle. I really can't argue with the most common criticisms levied against The Greatest Show on Earth.

For all of that, I found it entertaining. It didn't deserve the win. It probably didn't even deserve the nomination. But taken on its own terms, it's a good example of classic Hollywood hokum. The actors are likable, the set pieces hold up well, and the spectacle is well-shot (even if some other moments bizarrely aren't).

I wouldn't necessarily call it "good." But I enjoyed watching it - and with this type of film, what more can one really ask?


Overall Rating: 7/10.

Related Post: The Greatest Show on Earth versus High Noon - Politics, Popularity, and the Academy Award for Best Motion Picture of 1952.

Best Motion Picture - 1951: An American in Paris
Best Motion Picture - 1953: From Here to Eternity

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