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Anatomy of a Murder
Jimmy Stewart is great in this movie. Some argue it's his best performance, and there's something to be said for that. He has the laconic air and halting speech he's famous for and it works well here as a kind of stategic approach to getting at the truth of things. It catches others off guard. He's a small town lawyer, formerly chief prosecutor (holding the post for ten years). Why he's no longer in the position isn't really explained but you get hints his leaving was under a shadow, or at least troubled somehow. It seems all his character does now is fish, drink and take small, penny-ante cases to pay his bills (which he does badly). Then a big case falls in his lap.
The case he has is this: a woman (Lee Remick) has been raped. Her soldier husband (Ben Gazzara) has gone out and shot the alleged rapist dead. The soldier is now on trial for murder. Stewart's job is to defend the soldier. But as he points out to his client, there is really no defense for him ... except, possibly, one. The murder being deliberate (an hour after hearing from his wife about the rape), he can't argue passion. The time element makes it pre-meditated. Gazzara's only hope is to argue for insanity - an "irrepresible urge." There are various complications along the way, including help for the prosecution via the Attorney General's office in the person of George C. Scott who plays his role with relish, informing it with a kind of conniving smugness. What really sets Anatomy of a Murder in the noir category is its overarching moral ambivalence. If you pay attention as you watch, you realize that there really are no "good guys" here - not even Stewart, though his performance and the direction align the audience's sympathies with him.
In the case of the woman who was raped, the incident seems to have meant little more to her than stubbing a toe. It's as if somewhat had given her a quick kiss, not violently raped her. Of course, her character is a victim in other ways. She's slatternly and flirtatious and you know from certain scenes, and by the way Remick plays her, she is a woman trapped by abusive men. She's lonely and seems to gravitate toward men who treat her badly. Her relationship with her husband, Gazzara, suggests domestic violence, though it's implied and not overtly stated.
Despite a few Hollywood elements to lighten the tone at the end, this is a dark film. The hero, Stewart, at the end is little better than those he has been up against. The movie concludes with a wry look from Jimmy Stewart and a tone of bemused hopelessness as if the director, Otto Preminger, is saying, "That's people for you. What can you do?" © 2003 Piddleville Inc. |
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