Film Review
After a productive but fraught twelve year stint with Columbia Studios,
Frank Capra teamed up with screenwriter Robert Riskin to found his own
film production company, Frank Capra Productions. The first - and
only - film the company made was
Meet
John Doe, a dark melodrama that ruthlessly satirised the American
political system at the time. This
film was intended primarily to
alert Americans to the threat posed by pro-Fascist forces that were
operating in the country, Nazi sympathisers who sought to profit from widespread
discontent with conventional politicians. Although the film made a
healthy profit, ninety per cent of this was consumed by taxes and Capra
had no choice but to wind the company up soon afterwards.
Capra's reputation was such that, by this stage in his career, he had
no difficulty hiring the best actors, and both of his lead performers
accepted their roles in
Meet John Doe
before seeing the script. Gary Cooper is the perfect casting
choice for the part of John Willoughby, and not only because his
unassuming everyman persona makes him ideal for the role. Cooper
also had a great talent for portraying inner conflict and moral
indignation with sincerity, and this is put to good use in the film's
later, devastatingly poignant sequences. Barbara Stanwyck
is equally impressive as the go-getting journalist who sells her soul
to save her job and then goes through Hell to redeem it. As in
her previous Capra films, Stanwyck gives a convincing and sympathetic
portrayal of a morally flawed character who undergoes a spiritual
transformation by falling in love with a morally superior creature.
Meet John Doe originated as a
film treatment by Richard Connell and Robert Presnell, entitled
The Life and Death of John Doe,
which was based on a story
A
Reputation, first published in Century Magazine in 1922.
The biggest problem that
Capra had with the film was how to end it. He and Riskin were
unable to agree on how the drama should be resolved so five different
endings were shot. Riskin preferred the bleakest ending, in which
Willoughby fell to his death from the tower, but this was rejected by a
preview audience, who preferred the more upbeat ending that was
ultimately selected.
Meet John Doe is one of Capra's
most stirring films, with shades of the Utopian dream depicted in his
earlier masterpiece
Lost Horizon (1937). Yet
it is also an intensely pessimistic film, offering a view of big
business and career politicians that is so deeply cynical that the
director would assuredly have been branded an out-and-out Communist had
the film been made five years later. The film remains an
important piece of social commentary and its underlying political
messages still have a powerful resonance. Its depiction of the
malign influence that low politics and raw capitalism have on the
well-being of individuals and society, not to mention the political
process itself, is just as relevant today as it
was in the 1940s, and parallels with our own time are all too readily apparent.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Frank Capra film:
Arsenic and Old Lace (1944)
Film Synopsis
When Henry Connell takes over as editor-in-chief of the newspaper
The New Bulletin, his first act is
to sack all of the staff on his payroll.. One of his victims is
Ann Mitchell who is so incensed at her dismissal that, in her final
column for the paper, she includes a fake letter from a fictitious John
Doe. In the letter, Doe states that he intends to commit suicide
by jumping from the top of City Hall in protest at all of society's
ills. The public reaction to the article is overwhelmingly
enthusiastic and Ann persuades her employers to rehire her so that she
can continue the John Doe story, writing articles about his life and
his beliefs. To make the story more credible, a penniless vagrant
named John Willoughby is recruited to act the part of John
Doe. Within a matter of weeks, Doe becomes a national hero,
his simple philosophy of good neighbourliness and respect for others
inspiring communities to set up John Doe clubs the length and breadth
of the land. But then Willoughby learns that he and his
loyal followers have been duped. The entire John Doe enterprise
has been secretly funded by newspaper magnate D.B. Norton, who intends
to use it to win the presidency of the United States...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.