Film Review
For Elia Kazan, the making of
Wild
River was the fulfilment of a 25-year long dream. Ever
since he visited the Tennessee Valley in the early 1930s, he had longed
to make a film depicting what he saw: landowners being driven from the
area to make way for a massive dam construction project. The
film Kazan ultimately made in 1960, adapted from two novels (William
Bradford Huie's
Mud on the Stars
and Borden Deal
Dunbar's Cove)
is one of his greatest achievements, a potent mix of melodrama and
socio-economic study that is both informative and emotionally
engaging. It is also a thought-provoking work, since it questions
the wisdom and morality of government schemes that irreversibly
transform the landscape for socio-economic reasons. The film also
touches on racial issues, specifically the appalling way in which black
workers were discriminated against in the southern states in the
1930s.
Kazan was a director who is renowned for the authenticity and realism
he brought to his films - most notably in his 1954 masterpiece
On the Waterfront, which
starred one of his
Actors Studio protégés, Marlon Brando.
Wild
River is just as noteworthy for its realism, but it has also an
alluring lyrical quality which the location (Lake Chickamauga and the
Hiwassee River), beautifully shot in crisp autumnal hues, naturally
provides. Kazan's use of non-professional actors for extras
strengthens the film's naturalism and lends an almost documentary-style
feel in places, setting it apart from most American films of this
period.
What makes
Wild River
particularly memorable are the outstanding contributions from its lead
actors. The chemistry between Montgomery Clift and Lee
Remick is remarkable in that it conveys undercurrents of desire and
emotional turbulence without explicit love scenes and overly dramatic
confrontations. At this time, Clift had begun his tragic downward
slide that would soon result in a terrible facial disfigurement and an
early death from combined drug and alcohol abuse. In the last
week of the shoot, he broke his promise to Kazan to stay away from hard
liquor and very nearly put the kybosh on the film.
Despite his increasing personal crises, Montgomery Clift remained a
first rate actor (of the Actors Studio "method" school) right to
the end of his career and in
Wild
River he gives what is arguably his best performance. Just as
laudable is Jo Van Fleet who, although she was a mere 41 at the time,
is extraordinarily convincing in her sympathetic portrayal of an
octogenarian matriarch. It may not have been a commercial success
when it was first released, but
Wild
River is now held in great esteem and is considered one of the
highpoints of Elia Kazan's distinguished career as a filmmaker.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Elia Kazan film:
Boomerang! (1947)
Film Synopsis
In the wake of devastating floods in the early 1930s, the Federal
Government decides to embark on a programme of dam building on the
Tennessee River that will not only preserve the region but will also
generate huge quantities of electricity. Before the scheme can go
ahead, the land surrounding the river has to be cleared and
levelled. Federal administrator Chuck Glover is given the
unenviable task of persuading an 80-year-old matriarch, Ella Garth, to
leave the home she has lived in for the past fifty years on a small
island in the river. The old woman stubbornly refuses to move and
Chuck encounters further local hostility when he hires her black
labourers to work at the same rate of pay as their white
counterparts. Chuck's life is complicated further when he falls
in love with Mrs Garth's beautiful granddaughter, Carol...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.