Film Review
The title says it all. A sprawling blockbuster epic spanning
twenty-five years and two generations,
Giant is the definitive Texan soap
opera. It was director George Stevens's most ambitious film and
Warner Brothers' biggest ever money maker. Despite its languorous
pace, self-indulgent artistry and unsubtle politics, this is compulsive
viewing, thanks mainly to the faultless performances of the three lead
actors who were all - remarkably - in their twenties when they made the
film.
This is the film that convinced the doubters that Rock Hudson could
act. Hudson had already shown his potential in his films for
Douglas Sirk -
Magnificent Obsession (1954)
and
All That Heaven Allows (1955) -
but, under George Stevens' guiding hand, he surpasses himself and gives
the performance of his career as the flawed cattle baron Bick
Benedict. Elizabeth Taylor is also on fine form
and is particularly impressive in the second half of the film as her
character moves into middle-age.
The third acting legend in this ensemble of talent is James Dean who,
whilst appearing in only a handful of scenes, makes a lasting
impression. It is reported that George Stevens did not have a
particularly warm relationship with Dean and would deliberately create
fiction between him and his co-star Rock Hudson to sharpen their
perfomances. The contrast between Dean's and Hudson's style of
acting - the former a graduate of the Actors' Studio, the latter a
traditional polished Hollywood performer - is striking in their two
main scenes together - the one where Benedict attempts to buy the land
that Jett has inherited, the other where Jett taunts his former
employer after having struck oil.
In every scene in which he appears, Dean grabs our attention and
compels us to identify with him, even after his character has become
the villain of the piece. Having given two equally impressive
performances in his previous films,
East
of Eden (1955),
Rebel Without a Cause (1955),
Dean was set to become one of the most important actors of his
generation. It was not to be. Two weeks before
shooting on
Giant was
completed at Warner Brothers' studios, James Dean was dead - killed in
a head-on collision with another car whilst driving his Porsche 550
Spyder down a California highway. The sudden death of the
24-year-old actor came as a severe blow to George Stevens, his cast and
crew and made completion of the film a painful experience. It is
possible that Dean's demise is what made
Giant such a success. By the
time of the film's release, he had become an immense cultural icon.
For its time,
Giant was a
daring film as it deals with two problematic social taboos - racial
discrimination and female emancipation. Even as late as the
mid-1950s, women and non-whites had a raw deal in America, particularly
in the southern states, and, to its credit, the film tackles both of
these issues with blistering sincerity. The sequence in which
Rock Hudson takes on a bigoted restaurateur after the latter refuses to
serve a Mexican family is almost absurd in its crudeness but it is
searingly effective in showing what an ugly and inhuman thing racism
is. It is impossible to watch this scene and not be deeply
affected by what is shown, for all its painful lack of subtlety.
In spite of its daunting runtime (almost three and a half hours) and
controversial politics,
Giant
proved to be an enormous box office hit, grossing thirty-five million
dollars and garnering ten Academy Award nominations. George
Stevens picked up his second Best Director Oscar (the first was for his
1951 film
A Place in the Sun,
which also featured Elizabeth Taylor in a career-defining role).
For a film that cost over five million dollars and took four years to
make, this was a result that exceeded even Warner Brothers'
expectations.
Giant
may not be George Stevens' greatest film, but it is a compelling mix of
western, melodrama and social conscience, with some touches of artistic brilliance.
The shot of the Benedicts' vast Gothic mansion set in a vast ocean of
desert remains cinema's most enduring visual metaphor for the stark
hollowness and sterility of raw capitalism.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next George Stevens film:
Swing Time (1936)
Film Synopsis
In the 1930s, Bick Benedict is the owner of a mammoth Texan cattle
ranch which has made him one of the wealthiest men in the state.
On a visit to Maryland to buy a horse, he meets a beautiful young
socialite, Leslie, and asks her to marry him. After the wedding,
the couple settle at Bick's ranch but it isn't long before the
arguments begin. Leslie is moved by the plight of the poor
Mexican workers and insists that they receive proper medical attention,
to the disgust of Bick who regards the Mexicans as a lower caste.
Their marriage is strained further when one of Bick's cattlemen, Jett
Rink, begins to take an interest in Leslie. When Bick's sister,
Luz, dies after being thrown from the horse that Bick recently bought,
she bequeaths a patch of land to Jett. Bick is incensed and tries
to buy the land off Jett, unsuccessfully. Jett's decision to keep
the land soon pays dividends when he finds that it is rich in
oil. Jett's oil drilling company makes the former ranch hand
incredibly wealthy and J.R. (as he is now known) is soon at the head of
a business empire the like of which Texas has never seen.
Realising that his son has set his sights on becoming a doctor
rather than taking over his ranch as he had hoped, Bick has no choice
but to follow Jett's example. The former rivalry between the two
men comes to a head when Jett begins dating Bick's daughter...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.