Review of Mr. Ace

Mr. Ace (1946)
6/10
How Can You Tell When A Politician Is Lying?
5 February 2020
Congresswoman Sylvia Sidney announces her candidacy for governor, and asks political boss George Raft for his support. He wines her and dimes her and tells her she cannot win, because beautiful women shouldn't be in politics. So she goes to another member of his machine and cuts a deal with him for the nomination in the one-party state.

Miss Sidney's character, named Margaret Wyndham Chase, is clearly modeled on Maine senator Margaret Chase Smith. She even wears the hideous hats that Mrs. Smith affected. The political machine, named the Tomahawk Club, is modeled on New York City's Tammany Hall.

One of the issues I have with Mr.Raft's performances in movies is his impenetrable mien. He says things, and they are things that he believes, it there is rarely any hint of what he is actually thinking. Here that actually works to the performance's benefit; he seems a character who is precise, intelligent and impenetrable. This leaves Miss Sidney to carry the emotional weight of this political romantic comedy.

This was a period during which Hollywood was making movies about practical politics and the effects of the machine. With the end of the Second World War, soldiers were coming home and expected changes. Capra tried a couple of movies, and even John Ford got together his non-western stock company for THE LAST HURRAH. By the time that came out, there were stirrings of change in society and politics, and the movies were no longer part of the National conversation. Nowadays, political movies usually have a sour, satirical edge to them.
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