Film Review
For America, the darkest year of World War II was 1943, so it is
perhaps fitting that the two most prominent films of the year to be
made in Hollywood had a strident anti-Fascist theme:
Casablanca
and
Watch on the Rhine.
As examples of wartime propaganda, these two films could hardly be more
different, and whilst
Casablanca
has a timeless quality that has allowed it to become an enduring
classic,
Watch on the Rhine
is rooted very firmly in the here and now and has been all but
forgotten. Yet both films are of interest from a historical
perspective, as they reveal how seriously America faced up to the
threat of Fascism, having adopted an isolationist stance in the early
years of the war. Warner Brothers'
Confessions of a Nazi Spy
(1939) was the first film to alert America to the dangers of home-grown
Fascists, but its message fell mainly on deaf ears. It wasn't
until Japan's attack on Pearl Harbour in December 1941 that America
woke up to the greatest threat western democracy has ever faced,
'shaken out of the magnolias', as
Watch
on the Rhine succinctly puts it.
One prominent writer who was very much aware of the threat posed by Fascism
(having had first hand experience of it during the Spanish Civil War)
was Lillian Hellman, the left-leaning author of the stage play
Watch on the Rhine, which enjoyed
considerable success on Broadway in 1941. Hellman had previously
earned a certain notoriety with her scandalous play
The Children's Hour, which revolved
around two schoolteachers in a suggestively lesbian relationship, and
scored a notable success with
The
Little Foxes. The most politically conscious of the big
Hollywood studios, Warner Brothers saw that
Watch on the Rhine would make a
prestige propaganda film and immediately bought the rights, although
Hellman was under contract to another studio (Goldwyn) at the time and
was unable to work on the screenplay.
The scripting duties were passed to Hellman's partner and mentor,
Dashiell Hammett, the celebrated crime writer who is now best known for
his novel
The Maltese Falcon.
It was Hammett who opened up the one-set play, adding additional scenes
to shed more light on the principal characters and including a coda
which strengthened the film's central propaganda message, namely that
Fascism could not be defeated without sacrifice. An attempt by
the Hays Office to alter the ending (so that the central character was
punished for killing the main villain) was successfully resisted by
Hellman. (A final scene in which Kurt Muller returns to Nazi
Germany, to face certain death, was written and shot, but never used.)
Herman Shumlin, the director of the original stage play, was hired to
direct the film, even though he had had no prior experience of
filmmaking. For Shumlin, this was to prove a very steep learning
curve and it was not long before he fell out with his cinematographer
Merritt B. Gerstad, who was soon replaced by Hal Mohr. There were
also difficulties on the casting front. Paul Lukas, Lucile Watson
and George Coulouris were chosen to reprise the roles they had played
very successfully on stage, but as none of these actors was a bankable
star Warner Brothers was obliged to cast one of the studio's star
actors in what had originally been a supporting role, that of the
central character's stoical wife, Sara Muller. Irene Dunne and
Margaret Sullavan would each have been ideal for the part, but both turned
turned it down. In the end, the part went to Bette Davis, who
gladly agreed to take on what was a secondary role because of her
intensely anti-Fascist views. Unfortunately, Davis was physically
and mentally exhausted after completing filming on
Now,
Voyager and this made her more temperamental than
usual. She had a particularly bad working relationship with
Shumlin, who had an uphill struggle to prevent her from stealing the
focus from the lead actor Paul Lukas. Davis also had a major
falling out with Lucile Watson over their differing political views
(Watson was a staunch Republican, Davis a committed Democrat).
Eager to capitalise on Davis's star status, Warners gave her top billing,
something the actress disapproved of as hers was patently a supporting
character.
Despite its grim subject matter,
Watch
on the Rhine enjoyed considerable commercial success, and
critical reaction was as favourable as it had been to Hellman's
original play. The film was nominated for four Oscars in 1944, in
categories of Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress (Lucile
Watson) and Best Screenplay, and took the award for Best Actor, with
Paul Lukas winning out over Humphrey Bogart in
Casablanca and Gary Cooper in
For Whom the Bell Tolls.
Herman Shumlin would direct only one other film,
Confidential Agent (1945), whilst
Lillian Hellman continued to make a name for herself as a screenwriter,
with such films as
The North Star
(1943), until she fell foul of the anti-Communist hysteria of the
late 1940s, which effectively ended her career in Hollywood.
One of the most effective and intelligently scripted wartime propaganda
pieces to come out of Hollywood in the 1940s,
Watch on the Rhine is distinguished
most by its blisteringly authentic central performance from Paul
Lukas. Even though he was himself apolitical (and had
proven he was just as adept at playing villains as heroes), Lukas is
harrowingly convincing in the part of the dedicated anti-Fascist
Muller, not a fanatic but someone who knows what must be done in order
that future generations may be spared the tyranny of Fascism.
Muller's evil counterpart is played with just as much intensity by
George Coulouris, who is utterly chilling as the amoral Rumanian count
who attempts to blackmail Muller just so that he can buy his passage back
home.
On the supporting front, Lucile Watson has almost as much impact as the
benign mother of the household, a character who is at first completely
oblivious to the evil that Muller is committed to destroy, but who ends
up seeing that she too has a part to play, once she has been shaken out
of the magnolias. Whilst she has a slight tendency to turn her
character into too much of a martyr, Bette Davis gives a solid
performance and finally comes into her own in the final scene,
delivering a speech that appears to come straight from the heart and
which would have had an immediate resonance with every wife and mother
in America. "When the time comes... When it comes... I will
do my best.
© James Travers 2013
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