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The Human Comedy (film)

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1943 film

The Human Comedy
Film poster
Directed byClarence Brown
Screenplay byHoward Estabrook
Based onThe Human Comedy
1943 novel
byWilliam Saroyan
Produced byClarence Brown
StarringMickey Rooney
Frank Morgan
CinematographyHarry Stradling
Edited byConrad A. Nervig
Music byHerbert Stothart
Production
company
Distributed byLoew's, Inc
Release date
  • March 2, 1943 (1943-03-02)
Running time
118 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1.0 million[1][2]
Box office$3.9 million[1][2]

The Human Comedy is a 1943 Americancomedy-drama film directed byClarence Brown.[3] It began as a screenplay byWilliam Saroyan, who was expected to direct. After Saroyan left the project, he wrote thenovel of the same name and published it just before the film was released.[4]Howard Estabrook was brought in to reduce the run time to two hours. The picture starsMickey Rooney,Frank Morgan,James Craig,Marsha Hunt,Fay Bainter,Ray Collins,Van Johnson,Donna Reed andJackie "Butch" Jenkins.Barry Nelson,Robert Mitchum andDon DeFore appear together as boisterous soldiers in uncredited supporting roles.

Plot

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The film is the story of a teenaged Homer Macauley in high school, working part-time as atelegram delivery boy for thePostal Telegraph Company, in the fictional town of Ithaca, California, during World War II.[5] The effects of the war on the "Home Front" over a year in Homer's life are depicted in a series of perceptive vignettes—some amusing, some grave, some ugly, some touching, some sentimental—involving himself, his family, friends and neighbors in his California hometown, and his brother Marcus, a private in the U.S. Army. The storyline is introduced and narrated by Homer's father, who has been dead for two years.

Cast

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The AFI catalog lists 75 actors, including the 21 principals given credit on screen.[6]

Robert Mitchum (as Horse) andDon DeFore (as Texas) appear in small roles as soldiers who, with their buddy Fat, have a night off from training. Trying to meet girls and take in a movie, they meet Bess and Mary. Although they have character names and lines in the script (Mitchum portrays "Quentin"), both are uncredited.Carl Switzer, best known as "Alfalfa" in theOur Gang shorts, appears uncredited as Auggie, a friend of Ulysses.

Production

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Saroyan wrote a film treatment and a screenplay that he expected to direct. He left the project when his 240-page script proved to be too long—approximately 4 hours long—and he was removed as director.[7][8] Saroyan went home and turned his original script into a novel, which was published just before the film was released and became an instant best-seller.[4]

Saroyan was not at all happy with the film as completed by Brown. Among the noticeable differences between the film and the novel are a more vivid characterization of the four-year-old Ulysses, stronger social criticism and far fewer sentimental scenes than were incorporated into the film by Estabrook and Brown.[citation needed]

Several sources indicate thatThe Human Comedy was the favorite film of MGM studio chief,Louis B. Mayer.[8]

According to theAFI catalog, music credited in the film included "All the World Will Be Jealous of Me", by Ernest R. Ball and Al Dubin, and "Leaning on the Everlasting Arms", words by E. A. Hoffman, music by A. J. Showalter,[6] but they are not credited on screen. Music is important to the Macauley family and to those around them, including Marcus's Army buddies. The score is full of allusive phrases and songs, that were familiar to 1943 audiences, from the strains of the "Star-Spangled Banner" that open and close the film, to little Ulysses' fascination with "My Old Kentucky Home", to a long, rousing rendition of "Leaning on the Everlasting Arms", sung by the soldiers on the train, where one shot breaks thefourth wall and invites the audience to sing along to the last chorus. Alcoholic Mr. Grogan copes with the despair caused by the relentless stream of telegrams from theWar Department by turning to songs—"Rock of Ages" and "Church in the Wildwood" among them—as well as cold water in the face and black coffee. Mrs. Sandoval rocks and croons "Cielito lindo" to the memory of the son she has just lost. Other pieces woven into the score are: "Where the River Shannon Flows", "When Irish Eyes Are Smiling", "Now the Day Is Over", "My Country 'Tis of Thee", "You're in the Army Now", "Git Along Little Dogies", "The Happy Farmer", "Polly Wolly Doodle", "Onward Christian Soldiers", "The Caissons Go Rolling Along", "Christ the Lord is Risen Today" and "A Dream", an old love song sung by Mary and Bess as Tobey and Homer approach the house with news of Marcus's death. In the scene where Tom and Diana Spangler drive through the Valley Festival, he points out the people wearing traditional costume, playing traditional music and dancing folk dances: "Greeks, Serbs, Russians, Poles, Spanish, Mexicans, Armenians, Swedes and all the rest".

Reception

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The New York Times criticBosley Crowther praised the film's performances, especially Rooney's, saying that "There is a tenderness and restraint in his characterization." But he chided the film for excessive sentimentality, saying it featured "some most charming bits of fine motion-picture expression and some most maudlin gobs of cinematic goo."[4]

Variety commented that Saroyan's "initial original screenplay is a brilliant sketch of the basic fundamentals of the American way of life, transferred to the screen with exceptional fidelity."[7]

Writing in The Nation in 1943, criticJames Agee stated, "The picture is mainly a mess ... Many of its faults, and most of its virtues, are those of its author ... in nearly every respect the treatment it gets wobbles between that stultifying kind of slick-paper competence which is worse than no competence at all and unforgivable errors of taste and judgment. The best one can say of it ... is that it tries on the whole to be "faithful" to Saroyan; not invariably a good idea. The worst, in my opinion, lies less in its active failures of taste or of plain sense than in its easygoing, self-pleased, Mortimer Snerdish neglect of some magnificent opportunities."[9]

According toTCM's Notes on the production, the reviewer forThe Hollywood Reporter wrote: "the best picture this reviewer has ever seen,"Daily Variety predicted it would be "one of the screen's immortals.” The Motion Picture Research Bureau gave it the best audience ratings. TheCanadian Department of National Defence named it the best film of 1943.[8]

The film made $2,824,000 in the US and Canada and $1,034,000 million elsewhere resulting in a profit of $1,531,000.[1][2][10]

Leonard Maltin gives the picture 3 1/2 out of 4 stars, describing it as: “Memorable Americana, faithfully adapted... Unfolds like a novel, with many lovely vignettes, and one of Rooney's best performances...”[11]

In 2010, Dennis Schwartz wrote that the film: "outdoes Capra in cornball melodrama, but does it well...(It) gets the close-knit community mood right of small town America during World War II, and keeps it from becoming bloated with sentimentality (though it’s unquestionably sugary) ... (reminding) Americans of an innocent time when they believed they were warm-hearted decent people who cared about their country, community and others ... where one could advance by getting a good public education and the people in the country felt they could safely leave their house doors unlocked. It’s an America that probably no longer exists, which makes this film relic a memorable look back."[12]

Rotten Tomatoes rates it 80 percent fresh.[13]

Awards

[edit]

It won theOscar forBest Story and was nominated forBest Actor in a Leading Role (Mickey Rooney),Best Cinematography, Black-and-White,Best Director andBest Picture.[14]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcThe Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
  2. ^abcScott Eyman,Lion of Hollywood: The Life and Legend of Louis B. Mayer, Robson, 2005 p 349
  3. ^"The Human Comedy".catalog.afi.com. RetrievedJune 4, 2020.
  4. ^abcCrowther, Bosley (2007)."Movie Review: The Human Comedy". Movies & TV Dept.The New York Times. Archived fromthe original on October 24, 2007. RetrievedAugust 19, 2008.
  5. ^AFI Catalog.The Human Comedy (1943).
  6. ^ab"The Human Comedy - Credits".catalog.afi.com. RetrievedJune 4, 2020.
  7. ^ab"The Human Comedy".Variety. December 31, 1942. RetrievedSeptember 23, 2024.
  8. ^abc"The Human Comedy (1943) - Notes - TCM.com".Turner Classic Movies. RetrievedSeptember 23, 2024.
  9. ^Agee, James -Agee on Film Vol.1 © 1958 by The James Agee Trust.
  10. ^"Top Grossers of the Season",Variety, 5 January 1944 p 54
  11. ^"The Human Comedy (1943) - Overview - TCM.com".Turner Classic Movies. RetrievedJune 4, 2020.
  12. ^"HUMAN COMEDY, THE – Dennis Schwartz Reviews". RetrievedJune 4, 2020.
  13. ^The Human Comedy (1943), retrievedJune 4, 2020
  14. ^"The 16th Academy Awards (1944) Nominees and Winners".oscars.org.Archived from the original on October 14, 2013. RetrievedOctober 4, 2013.

External links

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Wikiquote has quotations related toThe Human Comedy (film).
Wikimedia Commons has media related toThe Human Comedy (film).
Films directed byClarence Brown
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