Film Review
Marlon Brando made a spectacular film debut in this low-key but highly
effective social drama which broke new ground both in terms of its
subject and, thanks to Brando, the way that actors tackled
screen roles. Producer Stanley Kramer's intention was to draw public attention to the
plight of veterans who, crippled by injuries sustained in the war,
faced a greater battle as they sought to regain their dignity and
self-esteem, not to mention social acceptance, when back on home
soil. It is a film that deserves far wider appreciation than it
currently enjoys, not only because it a quality piece of drama, but
because its themes - a nation's debt to its war veterans, the struggle
against adversity, etc. - are of a timeless character, just as relevant
today as they were in 1950.
At the time, Marlon Brando was a rising stage actor, winning acclaim
for his performance in a Broadway production of Tennessee Williams'
play
A Streetcar Named Desire
(which he would later follow with
Elia Kazan's screen adaptation,
the film that made his name).
He had little respect for Hollywood and was ambivalent about starting a
film career. However, he was persuaded to take the lead role in
The Men as soon as he read the
screenplay. A graduate of the Actors Studio, Brando took his
method approach very seriously and spent a month on a paraplegic
ward in a real veterans' hospital to prepare for the film, which accounts for the extraordinary
realism that he brings to the film. Through Brando's commitment, a
carefully crafted script and Fred Zinnemann's measured direction,
The Men is an authentic piece that tacitly
avoids sentimentality and caricature. Instead, it delivers a genuinely heart-rending and
truthful tale of men struggling to rebuild their lives after Fate has
delivered them a devastating blow.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Fred Zinnemann film:
High Noon (1952)
Film Synopsis
Shot by a German sniper in WWII, a young American soldier, Ken
Wilcheck, suffers a spinal injury that will prevent him from ever
walking again. Despite the tender care of doctors and nurses in
the veterans' paraplegic hospital where he is treated, Ken has
difficulty coming to terms with his condition and cannot see a future
for himself in the outside world. At first, he even refuses to
see his girlfriend Ellen, but she persists and in the end he agrees to
marry her. On their wedding night, Ken realises that it was pity
not love that drove Ellen to marry him. Embittered, he
returns to hospital, the only home he has now...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.