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Face in the Crowd (1957)
In Elia Kazan's powerful political film about a demagogue:
- the early scene in which KGRK radio reporter/producer
Marcia Jeffries (Patricia Neal) conducted her local radio show
("A Face in the Crowd") from a jail-cell in rural Clay
County, in the fictional town of Pickett, in northeast Arkansas;
one of the inmates had been taken in the previous night for being "drunk
and disorderly" - smiling, cornpone-spouting, back country
Arkansas hobo Larry "Lonesome"
Rhodes (Andy Griffith in his film debut); he spoke about his love
for his guitar: "Ain't Mama a beauty? Oh, a guitar beats a woman
every time! You know, I never have seen a woman I could trust like
this old guitar. I love my Mama guitar. She's always there waitin'
for me to pick her up and hold her. Never asks me for money or goes
cheatin' around when I ain't lookin'. And if she gets a little sour,
why, I just give her a little twist like so, and we're right back
in tune together"; then, he was urged
to sing "Free Man in the Mornin'" - it would mark the beginning
of the discovery of his musical talent, bringing him from down-and-out
drunkenness and obscurity to popular fame
- the brief early sequence of Rhodes and Marcia boarding
a train to leave Pickett - and Marcia's dismay when she realized
Rhodes' hypocrisy when he waved at the adoring crowds, and then turned
away and muttered to himself:
"Boy, I'm glad to shake that dump!"
- Rhodes was brought to Memphis, Tennessee to appear
on TV, and introduced to bookish, well-educated staff writer Mel
Miller (Walter Matthau), Marcia's friend and confidant
- moving on to New York, Rhodes' clever commercial pitch
for a product known as Vitajex - a dietary supplement promoted to
increase energy and sexual virility
- Rhodes' infatuation and elopement with a teenaged,
17 year-old baton twirler Betty Lou Fleckum (Lee Remick in her screen
debut)
- Rhodes' bold-faced statement
about how he could be a political influencer: "I'm not just
an entertainer. I'm an influence, a wielder of opinion, a force -
a force!"
- the bedroom scene with Marcia, in which Rhodes revealed
his power-hunger in his quest to help Senator Worthington Fuller
with his presidential campaign ("Fighters for Fuller");
he delivered a disturbing, arrogant power-trip confession that his
audience would sheepishly follow him anywhere, and be directed to
wherever he wished: ("Oh, honey. If I ask 'em, they gotta come.
Baby, they'd be afraid not to come. I could murder 'em like this:
(he guffawed loudly) ..... This whole country's just like my flock
of sheep....Rednecks, crackers, hillbillies, hausfraus, shut-ins,
pea-pickers. Everybody that's got to jump when somebody else blows
the whistle. They don't know it yet, but they're all gonna be 'Fighters
For Fuller.' They're mine. I own 'em. They think like I do. Only
they're even more stupid than I am, so I gotta think for 'em. Marcia,
you just wait and see. (he grabbed both sides of her face with his
two hands) I'm gonna be the power behind the President, and you'll
be the power behind me. You made me, Marcia. You made me. I always
say that. I owe it all to you. I owe it all to you. All to you.")
"They're mine, I own 'em. They think like
I do"
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- the shocking scene in which the fraudulent megalomaniac
and demagogue celebrity concluded his national TV show ("Cracker
Barrel"), thinking that his microphone had been cut off (although
Marcia deliberately turned it back on), and expressing his utter
contempt for his mass audience by personally and nastily insulting
them as stupid morons: ("I'm glad that's over. I'm gonna start
shootin' people instead of ducks....To those morons out there?
Shucks, I can take chicken fertilizer and sell it to 'em for caviar.
I can make 'em eat dog food, and they'll think it's steak. Sure,
I got 'em like this. You know what the public's like? A cage full
of guinea pigs. Good night, you stupid idiots. Good night, you
miserable slobs. They're a lot of trained seals. I toss 'em a dead
fish, and they'll flap their flippers")
- the scene of rabble-rouser Rhodes, who was drunk and
delusional in his top floor New York City hotel-penthouse, preparing
for a fancy dinner party of political elites so that he could advance
his own political fortunes, where he found an empty room attended
only by black butlers and servants (whom he begged to love him);
he was bolstered by an 'applause machine' manned by his old pal Beanie
(Rod Brasfield), but he began to realize that he was suffering a
major and spectacular downfall after being exposed as a fraud ("All
of a sudden, I'm - I'm poison") - although he later claimed: "You
think I'm washed up, don't ya? The same way I lost them, I'll get
'em back again. I'm gonna make 'em love me" and "I'll have
'em eatin' out of my hands again just like old times"
- on the telephone speaking to Marcia in the TV studio
(and at first not knowing that she was the one who turned his microphone
on), he threatened to suicidally jump from the penthouse, and she
encouraged him - with a scream of desperate hurt at being betrayed
and duped: "Jump! Jump! Get out of my life! Get out of everybody's
life - jump! Jump! Jump!"
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On the Phone With Marcia, Who Encouraged: "Jump!
Jump!"
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Mel's Prediction of Rhodes' Comeback
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Rhodes' Final Rant: "Because the people
listen to Lonesome Rhodes..."
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- in the film's final moments, Rhodes ranted on about
himself: "Because the people listen to Lonesome Rhodes. Because
the people love Lonesome Rhodes. Lonesome Rhodes is the people.
The people is Lonesome Rhodes."
- the devastating conclusion in which Mel Miller predicted
that Rhodes would have a comeback, of sorts: ("Suppose I tell
you exactly what's gonna happen to you. You're gonna be back in television.
Only it won't be quite the same as it was before. There'll be a reasonable
cooling-off period, and then somebody will say, 'Why don't we try
him again in an inexpensive format? People's memories aren't too
long.' And you know, in a way, he'll be right. Some of the people
forget, and some of them won't. Oh, you'll have a show. Maybe not
the best hour or, you know, top ten. Maybe not even in the top 35.
But you'll have a show. It just won't be quite the same as it was
before. Then a couple of new fellas will come along. And pretty soon,
a lot of your fans will be flockin' around them. And then one day,
somebody will ask: 'Whatever happened to what's-his-name?
You know, the one who was so big. The number-one fella a couple of
years ago. He was famous. How can we forget a name like that? Oh,
by the way, have you seen, uh, Barry Mills? I think he's the greatest
thing since Will Rogers.'")
- in the conclusion, as Mel and Marcia entered a taxi
on the street below, they looked up to the penthouse where they could
still hear Rhodes as he pitifully called out to her on the street
below: ("Marcia!... Don't leave me!... Marcia!...Come back,
Marcia!...Marcia! Come back! Don't leave me! Don't leave me! Don't
leave me! Marcia! Don't leave me! Come back! Come back! Come back!");
Mel commented that they both could now admit that they had been duped,
but had become wiser and stronger: "I don't figure him for a
suicide....You were taken in, just like we were all taken in. But
we get wise to 'em and that's our strength. We get wise to 'em.")
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"A guitar beats a woman every time!"
Marcia's Discovery of "Lonesome" Rhodes' Talent
Departure From Pickett - His Growing Popularity and Hypocrisy: "Boy
I'm glad to shake that dump!"
"Free Man in the Mornin'" Public Performance
Vitajex Commercial Pitch
Rhodes' Elopement with Baton-Twirling Majorette
Betty Lou Fleckum
"I'm a Force!"
Utter Contempt - Revealed with Microphone On
Leaving in a taxi with Mel: "We get wise to
'em"
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