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Inherit the Wind
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Inherit the Wind (1960) More at IMDbPro »


0 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-
...And The Wind Cries Jesus, 9 December 2005
7/10
Author: dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California

*** This comment may contain spoilers ***

"He that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind; And the foolish shall be servant to the wise of heart." - Proverbs 11:29

Video stores in Kansas must have burned their copies of "Inherit The Wind". (Those who don't know history are destined to repeat it.)

Back when fundamentalist Christians used to carpet-hymn the streets and gather at grassy knolls to filibuster hellfire (at least, that's how dem ignint folks does it in this movie), the thorny battle of Evolution versus Creation was met in Tennessee at the infamous "Scopes Monkey Trial" of 1925. Based on the fracas of that trial and its attendant sociopolitical shockwaves, "Inherit The Wind" displays a kinetic potential, but falters due to misapprehension of its own subject matter, and characters rendered in hyperbole.

It's amusing to note that all the character names of the principals in the movie resonate rhythmically with their real-world counterparts, hence Spencer Tracy plays lawyer Henry Drummond (read Clarence Darrow), Fredric March is fundamentalist Mathew Harrison Brady (read William Jennings Bryan), Gene Kelly is reporter E.K. Hornbeck (read H.L. Mencken) and Dick York (forever stereotyped as "the original Darrin") is schoolteacher Bertram T. Cates (read John T. Scopes).

Drummond is summoned to a small Tennessee town to defend schoolteacher Cates for teaching outlawed Evolution Theory, facing off against Brady in a trial which embodied a lot more than just a legal infraction. At the time of the real-life trial, nothing less than the future of intelligent thought was at stake.

In an attempt to test the limits of the newly-instated, controversial Butler Act (of March 1925, "…prohibiting the teaching of the Evolution Theory in all the Universities, Normals and all other public schools of Tennessee…and to provide penalties for the violations thereof…"), the American Civil Liberties Union proposed a "willing scapegoat" to undergo prosecution. John T. Scopes stepped forward as that scapegoat, though this aspect was not made clear in the movie, where we are simply shown Cates (the ad hoc Scopes) being arrested during his biology lesson, seemingly for no reason other than the town being a bunch of Jesus freaks.

Though it is sincere in its debunking of Creationist dumbo-jumbo, the movie proves itself more of an entertaining diversion than an historical document whereby, in an artful dodge, the world-girdling, bio-environmental process that it rallies for – Evolution itself – is never explained! By 1960, Evolution was generally accepted as doctrine, so the word "Evolutionist" is used in the movie's context merely to represent Intellectuals, or Forward-Thinkers, whilst the word "Creationists" represents the Close-Minded contingent.

One stuttering schoolboy expounds on an unintelligible version of the process of Evolution, while subpoenaed "experts" are denied their testimony by the court - obviously to avoid bogging the movie with technicalities and esoteric jargon - yet isn't this "dumbing down" omission exactly what this movie is against? To cry out against ignorance and then to pander to it by *not educating* is the height of hypocrisy, at least from an Intellectualist's point of view. Here the movie takes a hit in the Intellectual *cahonnes* – if only the Fundamentalists were smart enough to see it that way. The irony is that they can't, and that even if they *did*, to rail against this movie for "keeping them ignorant" must necessarily grant an admission of ignorance in the first place – a shortcoming which they feel their god has cured them of…

There are no reasons given for being supportive of either camp – you come into this movie as either cognizant of Evolutionary theory or an Ignoramus who believes in talking snakes. And you'll probably go out the same way...

The movie leans so heavily in favor of Evolutionists (rendering Creationists as blathering, Bible-bent fanatics) that in stacking the deck so obviously, it makes for a less convincing argument *for* Evolution! Therefore, any "logic" that Drummond displays in the courtroom is cursory at best, because we know the crazy-eyed Jesus-freak Brady is sure to put his foot in his mouth - because the script will make it so! The smart Evolutionists in the movie will gladden their equivalents in the audience and the exaggerated hellfire-filibustering Creationists in the movie will either gladden the fanatic Bible-thumpers in the audience or cause them to be even more averse to the Evolutionists' message due to the unfair hyperbole.

As usual, we're ALL preaching to our respective choirs.

As every generation must face its own "Scopes Monkey Trial" (Kansas: the lights are on, but the Intelligent Designer ain't home), stupidity will never go out of fashion. Thus, neither will this movie.

Performances by Tracy and March are passionate, if not a tad over-acted, with Gene Kelly scathingly loquacious in one of his rare dramatic roles. While Darrin Stevens perfects that look of a man who has just seen a fruity Uncle Arthur appear in his living room with a bathing suit on.

As in the real Scopes trial, the Evolutionist ultimately loses the case legally, but wins intellectually, promoting the ideal of Scientific Method over blind faith, with Drummond intoning, "An idea is a greater monument than a cathedral, and the advance of man's knowledge is a greater miracle than all the sticks turned to snakes or the parting of the waters."

Tell that to Kansas.

(Movie Maniacs, visit: www.poffysmoviemania.com)



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