“ARTHUR
MILLER ANGSTâ€
By
Raymond Benson
The
Academy Awards certainly overlooked this well made and superbly acted drama
when it was released in 1948. All My Sons is tightly-adapted from the
1947 stage play by Arthur Miller, and it deserved some recognition, especially
for some of the actors and perhaps the screenplay by Chester Erskine, who also
produced the movie. It was directed by Irving Reis, who had earlier in the
decade come into his own in Hollywood with the first few “Falcon†detective
pictures starring George Sanders.
All
My Sons
was Arthur Miller’s first significant hit play, his second produced on Broadway
(the first one flopped), and it won the playwright a Tony award. Erskine and
Universal Pictures quickly secured the rights and got the movie into production,
streamlining the three-act play into a roughly 90-minute movie. It works
extremely well.
Joe
Keller (Edward G. Robinson) runs a steel manufacturing business in a small town
in the Midwest. His son, Chris (Burt Lancaster), is his right-hand man. Joe’s
wife, Kate (Mady Christians), suffers from depression—she holds on to the hope
that her other son, Larry, who disappeared three years earlier during World War
II, is still alive. Kate also does not approve of Chris’s intention to marry
Ann (Louisa Horton), who was originally Larry’s fiancée. Both Joe and Chris
believe Larry to be dead. Ann, too, has moved on and has redirected her
affections to Chris. The bigger elephant in the room, though, is that Keller
and his company came under criminal scrutiny when some airplane fuselages they
built proved to be faulty, causing the deaths of many soldiers overseas during
the war. Keller’s business partner, Herb (Frank Conroy), took the fall and went
to prison. Herb happens to be Ann’s father! Ann, Chris, Joe, and Kate have
accepted the sad truth that Herb was responsible for the disaster, but Ann’s
brother, George (Howard Duff), has not, and he wants to blow the lid off some
well-kept secrets. Has Joe been lying all this time about his role in the
manufacturing mishap? Is he not the father that Chris has placed on a pedestal for
his entire life?
It’s
very typical Arthur Miller angst, the kind of family drama that the playwright
would explore often. And here, in All My Sons, the Miller angst is faithfully
represented.
Edward
G. Robinson delivers a powerful performance as Joe Keller. It is Oscar worthy,
and the sad thing is that Robinson was never nominated for an Academy Award
throughout his long career. He did receive an honorary Oscar in 1973, but he
died two months before it was presented. This is one of those “shame on youâ€
footnotes in the history of the Oscars, for Robinson always approached his
roles with professionalism and skill. His Joe Keller in All My Sons is a
pivotal piece of the film’s success.
Burt
Lancaster, still fairly new to the industry, is also quite effective as the Good
Son who is ready to leave his career at the factory for the girl he loves if
his parents don’t accept the union. Louisa Horton is also very good, and All
My Sons is her debut film performance. Horton didn’t make many movies, but
she did a lot of television and was then married to filmmaker George Roy Hill
for a couple of decades. Mady Christians, a longtime veteran of films since the
silent days, holds her own, too. Unfortunately, Christians became a victim of
HUAC—the House Un-American Activities Committee—shortly after the release of
the movie and her career ended after four decades. HUAC certainly had its
tentacles on several elements of the movie. Robinson had some unpleasant
dealings with them, Elia Kazan (original director of the Broadway play and
co-producer of the film) was a major figure in the investigations into
“Communist infiltration†of Hollywood, and, most of all, Arthur Miller himself
was an outspoken adversary of the committee.
Kino
Lorber’s new Blu-ray release presents a high definition transfer that shows off
Russell Metty’s black and white cinematography quite well. It comes with an
informative audio commentary by film historian Kat Ellinger and author/film
historian Lee Gambin. The only supplements are the theatrical trailer and other
Kino Lorber trailers.
All
My Sons is
highly recommended for fans of Arthur Miller, Edward G. Robinson, Burt
Lancaster, and for late 1940s Hollywood fare. Just be ready for the angst.
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