| THE WINNER:
Mrs. Miniver (Directed by William Wyler)
The Nominees: 49th Parallel, King's Row, The Magnificent Ambersons, The Pied Piper, Pride of the Yankees, Random Harvest, Talk of the Town, Wake Island, Yankee Doodle Dandy

MY CHOICE:
To Be or Not to Be (Directed by Ernst Lubitsch)
My Nominees: Bambi (David Hand), The Magnificent Ambersons (Orson Welles), Pride of the Yankees (Sam Wood), Sullivan's Travels (Preston Sturgis)
By the time Mrs. Miniver became the fifteenth film to be named Best Picture, it had so moved the American population that even FDR was calling it some kind of a masterpiece. He was so moved by its closing dialogue that he ordered it to be written onto leaflets and air-dropped over German-occupied territory. Later it was broadcast over the Voice of America, and printed in several magazines. Dialogue aside, this movie, as stirring as it may have been at the time, seems today a bit over-melodramatic. Sure, it is difficult to watch the story of a family suffering the bulldozing machinery of the Nazi expansion and not feel something but for me, it wasn't worthy of an Oscar for Best Picture.
I guess, given the tensions of the time, I can see how the public would have been stirred by this film, it is an emotional film but, now, out of those tense times the drama comes off a bit overcooked. The impact it may have once had is long gone. |
|
My favorite film of Nineteen Forty-Two was not a million miles removed from Mrs. Miniver but I think the effort was a little tougher. To Be or Not to Be also features Europeans suffering the tyranny of Adolf Hitler but I think this film did a brilliant job of handling the tricky task of turning it into a comedy. While it is true that turning the Nazis into a gaggle of cartoonish buffoons at the very moment that they were goose stepping their way across Europe might have seemed somewhat insensitive, I think it proves that sometimes the best way to outwit evil is the laugh in it's face.
Brilliantly written by Edwin Justus Mayer and directed by Ernst Lubitsch (who was a German Jew who had his citizenship revoked by the Reich), the movie involves a small theater group in Warsaw at the time when Hitler's thugs are strong-arming their way into the country. The actors are led by husband and wife Joseph and Maria Tura (Jack Benny and Carol Lombard respectively). Joseph Tura is a self-baked ham who believes that his greatest triumph is himself. He believes his acting chops are flawless but he isn't fond of being continually interrupted during his "To be or not to be" speech by a man in the second row excuses himself down the aisle presumably to make his way to the toilet. The man is a pilot named Soebinsky (Robert Stack) who is sneaking backstage to make time with Tura's wife Maria. Joseph is unaware of the affair but is irritated that this interruption goes on every night.
We meet these actors at the moment when they are about to open their latest project, a Hitler-inspired satire called "Gestapo" which they are told has been disallowed for fear that it might offend The Feurer. This would be a bad move since Poland has been invaded by the Nazis. As a response to the invasion, a small underground movement is formed and the names of those in the movement become a high priority to the Reich. The names reside within this small group of actors who discover that in their midst is a traitor, Professor Joseph Selitzski (Stanley Ridges), who plans to turn over the names to the Fuehrer personally. It is up to the actors to use their considerable skills to stay just one step ahead of him.
That is only the surface plot. What gives To Be or Not To Be it’s flavoring are the minor details and supporting characters. For example, there is Bronsky who resembles Hitler and was all set to play him in “Gestapo” but is saddened it is shut down. And Greenberg, who has spent his time in the backgrounds and dreams of the moment when he can play Shylock's beautiful "Tickle us do we not laugh" speech, he ends up getting his chance later before a real troop of Nazis.
There are moments that are perfectly modulated, like the scene in which Tura disguises himself as Commandant Erhardt and meets with Solitski. Tura doesn’t know a thing about ad-libbing and continually returns to the ice breaker: "So they call me Concentration Camp Erhardt?!" The line is repeated again and again but the punchline comes later when the real Erhardt says the same thing.
The point of To Be or Not to Be is not just that art imitates life but that the whole Nazi organization was full of overstuffed, blind loyalties and needless pageantry. The opening passages take place within the rehearsal of the play suggesting that a hint of disloyalty can be cleared by declaring "Heil Hitler!" with a bolt of enthusiasm. It also suggests that anyone, at anytime can be made to turn on anyone else such as a moment when Joseph, playing a Nazi commandant bribes a child with a toy tank into spilling a secret about his own parents. It is funny to watch the satire being rehearsed but very clever that, when the real Nazis show up, their machinations seem just as silly and fruitless as the satire. What is the message here? That Nazism was it’s own parody? Notice how easily Joseph is able to imitate Commandant Erhardt and how blindly everyone buys the deception.
|