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No. 28 -
The Grapes of Wrath (1940)
Darryl F. Zanuck/Nunnally
Johnson, 20th Century-Fox
The Joads step right out of the pages of the novel that has shocked millions!
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The Grapes of Wrath (1940),
DML Rating:
★★★★★★★★★★
- perfect
Director: John Ford;
Screenplay: Nunnally Johnson;
based on the novel by John Steinbeck;
Rated Approved
Starring: Henry Fonda,
Jane Darwell, John Carradine, Charley Grapewin, Dorris Bowdon, Russell
Simpson, John Qualen, Grant Mitchell, Ward Bond
Movie Introduction: During the Great Depression, the Joad
family, held together by Ma
(Darwell) and Pa (Simpson) Joad, are not making it. Tom Joad (Fonda) has
just been released from prison and rejoins his family in
drought-stricken Oklahoma. After their
farm is seized by the bank, they load everything they own onto a beat-up old truck and head
West, hoping for a better life in California. On the road, beset by hardships, and family deaths, the Joads meet
dozens of others making the same trek West, holding onto the same dream.
Once in California, however, the Joads quickly encounter poor camp
conditions and run-ins with "agitators". Along with the many incoming
folks, they are taken
advantage of, yet all they can do is keep moving on down the road.
Defining Moment:
a murder
The desperate Joad family reaches
California expecting a "land of milk and honey". Instead, they encounter
only more starving folks like themselves forced to stay at horrible
migrant camps. Tom Joad learns that migrant workers are planning a
strike due to the terrible conditions, so he attends a secret meeting
in the dark woods to find out more. Suddenly club-wielding agitators
invade the meeting. In the melee, Tom kills a guard to save the life of
his friend Casy. Tom makes it back to his family in the camp, and they
frantically hide him from the searching authorities.
Something subtle you might have missed:
preacher Casey
Some actors just have a look
about them. Once such actor was the legendary John Carradine. He makes
many appearances throughout everyone's movies lists. The prolific
American actor starred in over 300 films, many of them
horror or Western in genre. His gaunt features, and deep, smooth voice
enabled him deliver memorable performances. He is also the father of
acting sons, David (Kung
Fu and the Kill Bill films), Robert, Keith, and the lesser known Bruce.
Memorable Quotes:
"That Casey. He might have been
a preacher but he seen things clear. He was like a lantern. He helped me
to see things clear." – Tom Joad
"That's what makes us tough. Rich fellers come up an' they die an' their
kids ain't no good, an' they die out. But we keep a-comin'. We're the
people that live. They can't wipe us out. They can't lick us. And we'll
go on forever, Pa, 'cause we're the people.” – Ma Joad
Dad's Comments:
John Steinbeck's iconic novel
brought the world the hardships of the Great Depression like no other
work. This film, by famed director John Ford, is based on that American Classic,
and is considered one of the greatest films ever made.
The story follows the Joad
family in the 1930's. Due to the Depression, they lose their farm and
are desperate. They load up a beat-up only truck and head West. There is
word that crops need picking there, and that means work and money. The
journey will not be easy and the family will be forever changed by its
hardships and trials. They will encounter some kindness, but most of the
road is littered with people who detest these "vagabonds" and offer them
no safe haven.
This film has two incredible soliloquies, both occur in intimate
conversations between Tom and his weary mother.
In the first, Tom is trying to decide to
stay and help, or run because he killed a policeman defending
Reverend Casey.
If Tom gets caught it will only hurt his family. Ma Joad can only see
things in their current state. One by one she is losing her
family. Pa is too old and wore out to be of much help. She really needs Tom to stay and help her.
She begins her heart-wrenching
plea... "Tom, there's a whole lot I don't understand. But goin' away ain't
gonna ease us. There was a time we was on the land. There was a
bounty to us then. Old folks died off and little fellers come. We
was always one thing. We was the family. Kind of whole and clear.
But now we ain't clear no more. There ain't nothin' that keeps us
clear. Al - he's a-hankerin' to be off on his own and Uncle John's
just draggin' around. Your Pa's lost his place, he ain't the head no
more. We're crackin' up, Tom. We ain't no family now. And Rosesharon
- she's gonna have her baby, but it won't have no family. I've been
a-tryin' to keep her goin' but... and Winfield, what's he gonna be
this a-way? Grown up wild, and Ruthie too! Just like animals. Got
nothin' to trust. Don't go, Tom. Stay and help! Help me!"
Tom's reply to her is equally
wrenching. He knows that he’s got to go. (this passage is included
in Bruce Springsteen's song aptly titled
The Ghost of Tom Joad.)
Tom, looking into the distance,
into the face of the country that he hopes to someday see, says, "I'll be all around in the
dark. I'll be ever' where - wherever you can look. Wherever there's
a fight so hungry people can eat, I'll be there. Wherever there's a
cop beatin' up a guy, I'll be there. I'll be in the way guys yell
when they're mad - I'll be in the way kids laugh when they're hungry
an' they know supper's ready. An' when the people are eatin' the
stuff they raise, and livin' in the houses they build - I'll be
there, too."
My
deep connection to this film
relates to my family’s experience during the Depression. Most Texas
farmers in those days were dirt poor. Draught and pestilence meant that
crops did not bear, so livestock starved and income simply was not
coming in. They had to get frugal. They raised chickens, killed hogs. They
tended dry gardens and "canned" everything they could. They did without. My
kind Mother, and brutally honest grandmother Lollie Straley, often spoke of those
tough days.
I have many old family photos from that era, and many of cracked and
blurry images look like they are right out of this movie. The background
is sparse, the vegetation withered. No lush green farmland, no green
yards to be mowed... just
dirt, starving dogs, and bleak poverty.
In the photo on the right, the Straley children pose for a picture.
My mother is the stern-faced young girl in the middle.
The interesting thing about their memories, though, is that they
never whined about it. It was just how things were. Yes, they were poor,
but they "got by somehow". Unlike the Joads, my Mom’s family were
able to stay together and keep their land. Eventually, the draughts
ended, the locusts moved on, the dust stopped blowing, the rains
came back and the land’s bounty returned. It also helped that oil was
discovered under Texas land, so that additional income certainly helped.
That's how they survived it.
Onto
No. 29... The Sorcerer of Emerald Land
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