Film Review
After showing up the failings of the American judicial system in
Anatomy of a Murder (1959),
director Otto Preminger devotes himself to a similarly vigorous dissection of the
country's political system, and leaves us in no doubt that politics can
be a very dirty game indeed, especially when personal reputations are
at stake.
Advise and Consent
is based on a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same title by Allen
Drury, although it subverts the strident anti-Communist intent of the
novel and serves more as a critique of the anti-Communist hysteria
that swept through America in the 1950s (in a similar vein to Chaplin's
A King in New York).
As in many of his films of this period, Preminger goes out of his way to attract censure and the
film broke new ground in its portrayal of homosexual persecution (based
on a real life incident).
The film is admirably served by a remarkable ensemble of big name
actors, including Henry Fonda, Walter Pidgeon, Don Murray and Charles
Laughton. In his last screen role (he died from cancer not long
after the film was released), Laughton turns in a delightfully chilling
performance (no actor plays sly villainy so effortlessly) and even if
he does tend to ham things up his presence livens things up no
end. Gene Tierney (
Heaven Can Wait,
The Ghost and Mrs. Muir)
makes a welcome comeback after an absence of
seven years from cinema (during which she battled depression) and
Preminger defied the blacklist by casting Burgess Meredith in a key
supporting role. As you would expect from such a distinguished
cast, the performances are impeccable and add considerable lustre to a
film that, by virtue of its subject, could have been as dull as ditch
water.
A variant on the courtroom drama theme, most of the action takes place
in the United States Senate, principally in a subcommittee to vet the
president's nomination for the post of Secretary of State.
As in
Anatomy of a Murder,
Preminger stages these sequences in such a way that they are utterly
compelling, stretching the abilities of his cinematographer, camera
crew and actors in an attempt to make them as exciting as
possible. (The use of real locations gives the film a greater
sense of immediacy and impact.) The film's other notable sequence
is the one in which an incorruptible young senator (sympathetically
portrayed by Don Murray) is driven to suicide when his homosexual past
comes back to haunt him. Here, Preminger recreates the mood of
his earlier film noir masterpieces and provides a suitably bleak
interlude that serves as a trigger for the film's dramatic
conclusion.
Advise and Consent
may let itself down with a plot that is too contrived to be entirely
credible, but for all that it remains one of Otto Preminger's most
compelling and daring films.
© James Travers 2012
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Next Otto Preminger film:
Bunny Lake Is Missing (1965)
Film Synopsis
Aware that his health and power are ebbing away, the President of the
United States is determined that Robert A. Leffingwell, a liberally
inclined academic, should be appointed Secretary of State. Not
everyone approves of the choice and Leffingwell must appear before a
Senate subcommittee before he can be elected to the role.
Leffingwell's staunchest supporter is Bob Munson, the Majority Leader
of the President's party, but he has a formidable opponent in Seabright
Cooley, the senator from South Carolina who regards the nominee as a
misguided appeaser. Cooley attempts to discredit
Leffingwell by revealing that he once belonged to a Communist cell, but
the President retaliates by sending a key witness out of the
country. When the subcommittee chairman Brigham Anderson moves to
put pressure on the President to withdraw his nomination he begins to
receive anonymous phone calls from someone who threatens to expose his
past indiscretions...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.