The Talk of the Town (1942) | |
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Background
The Talk of the Town (1942) is a classic romantic comedy/drama of the 1940s from producer/director George Stevens and Columbia Pictures. This intelligent film about romance and justice, a blend of the serious and lighthearted, exemplified the trend toward 'social themed' films that arose in the 40s, in such films as How Green Was My Valley (1941), The Grapes of Wrath (1940), Mrs. Miniver (1942), The Lost Weekend (1945), and Gentleman's Agreement (1947). This was the third of three films that Cary Grant made with Stevens, following Gunga Din (1939), and Penny Serenade (1941) (for which Grant received his first of two Best Actor career nominations). The film was also a repeat of the pairing of Grant and Arthur from a few years earlier in Only Angels Have Wings (1939). In the same year as this film, Stevens also directed the classic comedy of the "battle of the sexes," Woman of the Year - a film noted for the first pairing of Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy. And because this was Ronald Colman's first film made for Columbia Studios since his work in Lost Horizon (1937), the role propelled his career forward. In the same year, he also starred in Random Harvest (1942) and received his third Best Actor nomination (he lost the Oscar to James Cagney in Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942)). The far-fetched plot of the film, involving a romantic triangle and its complications between a wrongly-accused worker, a school-teacher, and a law professor, was honored with seven Academy Award nominations, but ended up Oscar-less: Best Picture (it lost to William Wyler's Mrs. Miniver), Best B/W Cinematography (Ted Tetzlaff), Best Editing (Otto Meyer), Best Score (Frederick Hollander), Best Original Story (Sidney Harmon), Best Screenplay (Sidney Buchman - who was blacklisted in the 50s, and novelist Irwin Shaw), and Best B/W Interior Decoration. The screenplay Oscar went to Stevens' other film Woman of the Year. Neither Cary Grant, Ronald Colman, Jean Arthur, or director George Stevens were nominated, although Colman was nominated as Best Actor for another film, Random Harvest. Stevens (his first Best Director nomination!) and Arthur would be nominated the following year for The More the Merrier (1943) - and Arthur made her final film appearance in Stevens' western classic Shane (1953). Plot SynopsisThe opening sequence involves a flaming factory, a missing foreman, and an accused worker. Leopold Dilg (Cary Grant), a factory worker and a self-professed radical and political anarchist is falsely accused (framed on trumped-up charges of arson and murder) in a small New England town by the factory owner Andrew Holmes (Charles Dingle), for setting fire to the Holmes Woolen Mill factory and killing its guard/foreman Clyde Bracken (Tom Tyler). After being arrested, tried, and sentenced to hang, Dilg escapes from prison, goes on the run from the police, and hides out in the secluded country home of high-schoolteacher Nora Shelley (Jean Arthur). She is in the midst of preparing the old farmhouse (Sweetbrook cottage) in which she used to live for summer rental, as the fugitive with a badly injured ankle arrives. They had known each other as schoolmates:
Amusing circumstances arise as she attempts to keep his presence a secret in the attic from the unsuspecting renter who arrives unexpectedly 24 hours early, due to the fault of his secretary. The tenant is a conservative, strict law-and-order, Dean of Commonwealth Law School and legal scholar, Professor Michael Lightcap (Ronald Colman), who is being considered for a Supreme Court appointment. The erudite professor hears Dilg snoring at night, and thinking it's Nora, remarks: "She must have adenoids." Nora is forced to identify Dilg as "Joseph," the gardener to the professor. In a classic scene, she drops the professor's egg breakfast on the newspaper's front page, where Dilg's picture is portrayed with the headline: "DILG ESCAPES TRAP!" Dilg and Lightcap become engaged in long arguments about the law. Dilg maintains that the law is "a gun pointed at someone's head" rather than being created with common sense for what people actually do. Although they disagree at first, Dilg is persuasive. The professor learns Dilg's real identity, but must be careful not to hurt his chances for appointment when he defends and reopens Dilg's case. In the end, Lightcap helps clear Dilg of his crime, defends his rights, and uncovers a frame-up, with a stirring speech in front of the courtroom to an unruly mob:
The studio originally shot two different conclusions to the film -- one where Cary Grant gets the girl, and one where Ronald Colman wins Jean Arthur's affections. The film ends with both Dilg and Nora in Washington, to see Lightcap take his rightful place on the judicial bench. Although Nora winks at the judge, she races after Dilg for a film-ending embrace in the hallway of the US Supreme Court building. |