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Inherit the Wind

  • 1960
  • Approved
  • 2h 8m
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
34K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,486
4,167
Gene Kelly, Spencer Tracy, Donna Anderson, Fredric March, and Dick York in Inherit the Wind (1960)
A powerful and provocative re-creation of the most titanic courtroom battle of the 20th Century, starring Spencer Tracy...

Described by Steven Spielberg as "one of our great filmmakers, not just for the art and passion he put on screen, but for the impact he has made on the conscience of the world", the films of producer and director Stanley Kramer (The Defiant Ones, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner) frequently confronted social issues considered too controversial for the major studios. In INHERIT THE WIND he tackled the creationism vs. evolution debate.
 
When a teacher in a small Tennessee town is brought to trial for teaching Darwinism, attorney Henry Drummond (Spencer Tracy, Bad Day at Black Rock) faces off against fundamentalist leader Matthew Harrison Brady (Frederic March, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde) in an explosive battle of beliefs.
 
Also operating as a searing critique of McCarthyism, INHERIT THE WIND was nominated for multiple Academy Awards, and is rightfully recognised as one of the most entertaining, and provocative films of its era. Eureka Classics is proud to present INHERIT THE WIND for the first time on Blu-ray in the UK in a special Dual Format edition.
Play trailer2:17
1 Video
75 Photos
Legal DramaPeriod DramaBiographyDramaHistory

Based on a real-life case in 1925; two great lawyers argue the case for, and against, a Tennessee science teacher accused of the crime of teaching Darwin's theory of evolution.Based on a real-life case in 1925; two great lawyers argue the case for, and against, a Tennessee science teacher accused of the crime of teaching Darwin's theory of evolution.Based on a real-life case in 1925; two great lawyers argue the case for, and against, a Tennessee science teacher accused of the crime of teaching Darwin's theory of evolution.

  • Director
    • Stanley Kramer
  • Writers
    • Nedrick Young
    • Harold Jacob Smith
    • Jerome Lawrence
  • Stars
    • Spencer Tracy
    • Fredric March
    • Gene Kelly
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.1/10
    34K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,486
    4,167
    • Director
      • Stanley Kramer
    • Writers
      • Nedrick Young
      • Harold Jacob Smith
      • Jerome Lawrence
    • Stars
      • Spencer Tracy
      • Fredric March
      • Gene Kelly
    • 239User reviews
    • 59Critic reviews
    • 75Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 4 Oscars
      • 3 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos1

    INHERIT THE WIND (Eureka Classics) New & Exclusive HD Trailer
    Trailer 2:17
    INHERIT THE WIND (Eureka Classics) New & Exclusive HD Trailer

    Photos75

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    Top cast87

    Edit
    Spencer Tracy
    Spencer Tracy
    • Henry Drummond
    Fredric March
    Fredric March
    • Matthew Harrison Brady
    Gene Kelly
    Gene Kelly
    • E. K. Hornbeck
    Dick York
    Dick York
    • Bertram T. Cates
    Donna Anderson
    Donna Anderson
    • Rachel Brown
    Harry Morgan
    Harry Morgan
    • Judge Mel Coffey
    Claude Akins
    Claude Akins
    • Rev. Jeremiah Brown
    Elliott Reid
    Elliott Reid
    • Prosecutor Tom Davenport
    Paul Hartman
    Paul Hartman
    • Bailiff Mort Meeker
    Philip Coolidge
    Philip Coolidge
    • Mayor Jason Carter
    Jimmy Boyd
    Jimmy Boyd
    • Howard
    Noah Beery Jr.
    Noah Beery Jr.
    • John Stebbins
    Norman Fell
    Norman Fell
    • WGN Radio Technician
    Gordon Polk
    Gordon Polk
    • George Sillers
    Hope Summers
    Hope Summers
    • Mrs. Krebs - Righteous Townswoman
    Ray Teal
    Ray Teal
    • Jessie H. Dunlap
    Renee Godfrey
    Renee Godfrey
    • Mrs. Stebbins
    Florence Eldridge
    Florence Eldridge
    • Sarah Brady
    • Director
      • Stanley Kramer
    • Writers
      • Nedrick Young
      • Harold Jacob Smith
      • Jerome Lawrence
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      To heighten the tension of Spencer Tracy's final summation to the jury, the scene was filmed in a single take.
    • Goofs
      During the voir dire phase of the trial concerning jury selection, Henry Drummond is forced to use his limited number of peremptory challenges to disallow prospective jurors who are obviously not interested in being impartial in any way to the point where one likens Prosecutor Matthew Brady to God. In that situation, Drummond should have called for such obviously biased prospective jurors to be struck for cause, a motion that can used an unlimited number of times with the permission of the court. If the court, which itself has obvious signs of partiality itself in the story, had rejected such a motion, Drummond could have resorted to using his peremptory challenges.
    • Quotes

      Matthew Harrison Brady: We must not abandon faith! Faith is the most important thing!

      Henry Drummond: Then why did God plague us with the capacity to think? Mr. Brady, why do you deny the one faculty of man that raises him above the other creatures of the earth, the power of his brain to reason? What other merit have we? The elephant is larger, the horse is swifter and stronger, the butterfly is far more beautiful, the mosquito is more prolific. Even the simple sponge is more durable. But does a sponge think?

      Matthew Harrison Brady: I don't know. I'm a man, not a sponge!

      Henry Drummond: But do you think a sponge thinks?

      Matthew Harrison Brady: If the Lord wishes a sponge to think, it thinks!

      Henry Drummond: Do you think a man should have the same privilege as a sponge?

      Matthew Harrison Brady: Of course!

      Henry Drummond: [Gesturing towards the defendant, Bertram Cates] Then this man wishes to have the same privilege of a sponge, he wishes to think!

    • Alternate versions
      Different versions of the opening credits exist with slightly different fonts. In general the film uses a copperplate-type font, but the early MGM widescreen DVD substitutes a different, rounder one on the three stars' names before the title, and has proportionally taller capitals throughout the rest. The Twilight Time Blu-ray uses the copperplate throughout with less pronounced size differences.
    • Connections
      Featured in Viewpoint: Can We Bury the Hatchet? (1960)
    • Soundtracks
      (Gimme Dat) Old Time Religion
      (uncredited)

      Traditional spiritual

      Sung by Leslie Uggams at the start of the movie

      Reprised often by the Townfolks

      Variations included often in the score

    User reviews239

    Featured review
    8/10

    A puff for a good film

    It's a rare American film that takes the grand clash of ideas as almost its entire central subject matter, and Inherit The Wind has for that reason alone for long been a personal favourite. It's also a film that features some outstanding, larger than life acting, notably from the leads, whether it is Tracy, playing the crusty liberal for whom "an idea is more important than a monument" or the superb March, his performance full of facial tics and movement, and whose fundamentalist character does "not think about what I do not think about." Director Kramer clearly places his sympathies in the former camp, although he does not bludgeon the audience with preconceptions. In fact as a filmmaker he had a reputation for making movies that held opinions and took stands, with a particular weakness for courtroom scenarios. Inherit The Wind came after the post-apocalyptic On The Beach, and just before the sombre Judgement At Nuremberg (also with Tracy). In the mid-1970s the director also made three 'judgement' films for TV based on other real trials.

    Whilst On The Beach offers a verdict of its own on humanity's military foolishness, and Judgement At Nuremberg is a just as sombre account of another judicial milestone of different significance, arguably Inherit The Wind falls neatly between the two in ways other than just the order of production. Like On The Beach, it makes its judgement too: not on a worldwide disaster visited by man upon himself, but on the perils of stifling free thought. And, as in Judgement At Nuremberg, it's a trial of ideas here too. But whereas the evil ideology of the Nazis ultimately brought millions to their deaths and stands condemned with its architects, it is enough in Hillsboro that "That if you take a law like evolution and you make it a crime to teach it... tomorrow you may make it a crime to read about it. And soon you may ban books... because fanaticism and ignorance is forever busy, and needs feeding." In fact Tracy and March, with Kelly's able help, hold the centre stage for so much of the time that despite their best efforts the supporting cast seem a little enervated. The romantic subplot between Cates and his girlfriend (ostracised by her father for straying into the wrong camp) is occasionally a little cloying and, upon reflection is too much of a reflection from the main event. More damagingly, the character of the Rev. Jeremiah Brown, as portrayed by a miscast Claude Akins, is so fervent and cold hearted in the cause of the righteous that it occasionally wonders too close to self parody. An improvement to historical events is made by the introduction of a, for the most part, even-handed trial Judge Mel. It is he who provides an anchor for the audience in court as the two heavy weights slug it over points of order and procedural objections. Judge Mel also provides one of the trials more memorable, quiet moments when, just as it did in the real case, he finds the increasingly frustrated Drummond in contempt of court - only to see the fine which he levies paid for by the parents of a drowned child condemned by the fundamentalist lobby.

    In the light of today's religious debates in the US, Inherit The Wind seems braver than ever, and Tracy's character is allowed several hard hitting outbursts which, one wonders, would remain as so powerfully expressed if rewritten for a modern retelling. When he says, "I don't swear for the hell of it. Language is a poor enough means of communication. We've got to use all the words we've got. Besides, there are damn few words anybody understands" we all know what he means. And when he campaigns for a man to have the same right to think "as a sponge" it's a moment that remains starkly memorable. Curiously, a less emotional Darrow variant was essayed a year earlier by Orson Welles in Compulsion (1959), a version of another famous criminal trial. Inherit The Wind has been remade thrice more to good, but ultimately less memorable, effect (including once with Kirk Douglas) but the Kramer version remains ahead.

    Dramatic variances aside, inevitably any presentation of the Scopes trial, and such controversial material as it contains, will never please everyone. The source play upon which Kramer's film is based simplifies matters a little too readily and other criticisms can be made: for instance the original textbook from which the schoolteacher was convicted of teaching illegally evidently contained an advocacy of racist policies and eugenics unacceptable today while it also accepted the notorious Piltdown forgery as genuine proof of a 'missing link' and so on. Again, the relationship between Bryan and Darrow was more complicated in real life than the film has time or care to show - although ultimately one is so caught up in the fairground of judicial combat as the case progresses that one forgives such accommodations with the truth.

    Inherit The Wind stands badly in need of a decent special edition, a golden opportunity perhaps being offered by the widely followed 2005 debate that took place in Pennsylvania. The current disc offers little more than the film, although the widescreen presentation does justice to the splendid black-and-white cinematography of Ernest Laszlo, which effectively conveys the sweaty claustrophobia of small town, Bible-belt America. Whether or not the hesitation in bringing out such a potentially controversial, expanded package is a matter of intelligent design or just random selection, the public will have to judge for itself.
    • FilmFlaneur
    • May 30, 2006
    • Permalink

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 30, 1960 (West Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Heredarás el viento
    • Filming locations
      • Courthouse Square, Backlot, Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Stanley Kramer Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $2,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 8 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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