The Human Comedy a Home Front Of Our Dreams
Firstly, what a title. Sounds like would-be majestic literature,
importance writ all over it. Suppose someone may have suggested Andy Hardy
Delivers Telegrams? Didn’t matter, The Human Comedy was a hit, a large one, as
in $1.5 million profit. Here was absolutest proof of Mickey Rooney stardom. What a
tumble he took after the war. No wonder Mick got a little cracked, redefining
truculent at late-in-life autograph shows. Beg pardon, we’re about The Human
Comedy here, and it’s about much more than Mickey, in fact it was all-caps
Celebration Of American Life circa 1943, when outcome of a World War was by no
means assured. Worry came with fun of showgoing then. Is that what
makes movies of the time seem a little manic now? The Human Comedy ducks that,
in fact aims for subdued, pastoral, thoughtful, all of things Hollywood came at
reluctantly, if at all. Reason Metro made exception was prestige of Human
writer, William Saroyan, a biggest literary noise of the day who was said to
stack even with Hemingway, Steinbeck, and Faulkner, names we know better
today than Saroyan’s. For MGM to score him as a screenwriter for hire was
lassoing the moon, and they would bow deep in appreciation of it. The Human Comedy
was Saroyan written for the screen, not a translation from text, though the
author did what amounted to a novelization which flew up Best Seller lists just
in time to be a Book-Of-The-Month selection with The Human Comedy movie at eve of release.
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If I Can't Go Back and Attend the Astor, At Least I Can Keep On Posting Images Of It Here at Greenbriar |
The home front was never so inviting, The Human Comedy’s small-town a
nearest Heaven to be had this side of the Veil. Had anyone in uniform known
life like this? And yet The Human Comedy proposes that they all did. Setting
here is like a Carvel with no need of a Judge Hardy because there’d be no
crime nor conflicts to resolve. Police are there mostly to bring lost little
boys home to Mother. The Human Comedy held that we must protect such way of
life with all the fight we had. Postwar noir would supply bitter antidote, that a possible reason why The Human Comedy won’t be revived
outside TCM broadcast. Had you told folks in 1943 that this Greatest Of All
Motion Pictures would become so obscure, they would have reacted like devil
horns were sprouting from your head. The Human Comedy had as much
to do with wartime reality as Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs, and there was
its strength --- this is what we wanted the struggle and surely-to-God outcome
to be. So what if it is as remote as pyramids now? The Human Comedy needed a
nationwide suspension of disbelief in 1943, and presumably got it. None but
Metro could have woven such reassuring tapestry, and no matter the fantasy, a
need was met. Of course there are bathos, emotion like syrup out of Vermont
trees, but there is magic too that can overcome barrier of our most cynical
selves. Save your view of The Human Comedy until a next Up With People moment.
Surely we still have those, if not in such abundance as audiences in 1943.
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Director Clarence Brown with Author William Saroyan |
Army camp scenes, focused on Van Johnson as Marcus Macauley, the brother
sent to serve, are all kinds of ludicrous, and I wonder if soldiers of the time
mocked, or went tender, for them. This is a doting mother’s idealized notion of
what military life is like, being a time of heightened emotion, as in lives
at stake, many lives, so let's surrender to The Human Comedy
and films like it (but wait, there were no films quite like this one). Johnson
serenades canteen pals with homey tunes, as well because there’s not a
juke box in sight. In fact, The Human Comedy shuns swing in any capacity, its
pristine setting devoid of taint modern fashion would impose. There is also
song aboard the troop train, church songs, which all of personnel enter into.
Marcus has a buddy named Toby George whose orphan status makes him an almost
Holy Man, or Boy, in search of family he might call his own. Toward that, he
co-opts the Macauley’s to disturbing extent, his decision to love and
eventually marry Bess Macauley (Donna Reed) based on a photo in Marcus’ wallet.
Creepiest element is Marcus accepting the plan on face value. Long memories
could evoke Henry B. Walthall swoon over Lilian Gish posed on a daguerreotype
from The Birth of a Nation. At least Walthall kept the crush to himself, Toby
doing an opposite in blabbing that he’ll go home with Marcus and take his seat
at the family table. Even the loss of Marcus in combat won’t deter Tobey, who heads right to the Macauley's for a finish, expecting to enter and be
embraced, which he does/is at Homer’s invite. Worse still is Homer carrying the
telegram reporting his brother’s death, which he now wads up and throws away
(Is he not going to inform his family?). I wonder if 1943
viewership was as nonplussed by this as me. Of all things in The Human Comedy,
it sits most uneasily now.
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Book and Film Go Hand-In-Hand |
Hometown girls are right and virtuous, on-leave soldiers their
counterpart for gallantry. A “pick-up” of Bess and her neighbor friend by a
trio of G.I’s amounts to nothing but a shared trip to see Mrs. Miniver, frisson
not apparent in 1943 supplied by Robert Mitchum as one of the guys (others are
Barry Nelson and Don DeFore). There is no thought of improprieties beyond a
chaste kiss the boys get when they part from girls they’ll have no access to
again. Far from frustrated, they leapfrog (yes, leapfrog) down the sidewalk and back to camp. All this Eden is overseen by those who’ve departed, not just to war, but to
eternal reward, which in this case amounts to coming back home and monitoring
progress survivors make. Here was reassurance for those who
had lost dear ones. Wartime’s benign ghost cycle could fill a dissertation,
perhaps already has. In this instance, it is Ray Collins as father Macauley,
materializing for us, but not family members he visits. The dead are not gone
in The Human Comedy, maybe not even dead for all of participation they enjoy. If it all seems formless, be advised that this was intent, from a start and
throughout making. Director Clarence Brown and staff writers had pared down
Saroyan’s script, but kept essence to avoid pic-formula. The Human Comedy
was a lofty venture that did a colossal click, and when had that happened
before? I think a lot of Meet Me in St. Louis’ uncluttered story and tempo were
enabled by success The Human Comedy had.
Maybe Metro needed trimming for excess hubris (review ads gushing
praise), because here came James Agee and critic elites who pooped The Human
Comedy for every valid reason, but their notices read like sour milk (“Most of
my friends detest it,” said bubble-resident JA). Agee could love-hate a movie to insensibility,
ours, that is, for following him. I still enjoy Agee, his a prose to aspire to,
but he can sure knock foundation from under a favorite. Just remind yourself
that he was seeing all this stuff new and not yet absorbed into sacred canons.
Agee admits to fright of tearjerkers, aware that the rest of us are “too eager
to be seduced.” That there are “unforgivable lapses of taste and judgment” is a
given ---possibly even remotest hicks sensed that. Agee said the only sound
performance came from Jack Jenkins, the five-year-old who plays Ulysses
Macauley. Agee adored movies, but was always frustrated that they couldn’t be
his idea of better. He was sorry to see “unfortunate young man” Mickey Rooney
cast in the leading role, but took all actors to task for representing a
tradition that was “worse than dead.” So how could studios be expected to fix a
problem vast as that? “Why did they bother to make the film at all,” he asks.
“Why, for that matter, do they bother to make any?” You could ask why pic personnel would even bother coming to work if they followed Agee. Cash register attendants fortunately did, as note crowds to the Astor; word was they lined up even in driving snow. We have it
easier (but less vivid) what with The Human Comedy on TCM in HD, and there is a
DVD from Warner Archive.