Wild
River Remains a Lovely Film Study
by
Kristin Battestella
I'm so, so pleased to announce that this essay is part of the Montgomery Clift 99th Birthday Blogathon Celebrations!
In support of the new Making Montgomery Clift documentary, The Hollywood Scrapbook is inviting Bloggers to share their admiration and enter for a chance to WIN a digital copy of Making Montgomery Clift. You can Pre-order your own edition on Apple TV here.
This post has been revised to celebrate the new release of the new documentary Making Montgomery Clift, now available on iTunes, YouTube, Amazon as well as on DVD!
Thanks for the opportunity to participate and onto Wild River!
Chuck
Glover (Montgomery Clift) is the third Tennessee Valley Authority
Officer sent to pressure Ella Garth (Jo Van Fleet) to sell her home
as part of the TVA's Depression era relocation project to build a new
dam up river. Mrs. Garth refuses to leave her island homestead, and
Chuck finds himself in a sudden romance with her widowed
granddaughter Carol (Lee Remick) despite his intention to leave
Garthville once the dam is open. While some families welcome the
chance to work and receive modern homes as compensation for their
move, other townsfolk and businessmen object to Chuck's final
construction plans – causing racial tension, mob violence, and
family divides amid the already coming to blows Garth versus
Washington battle of wills.
Elia
Kazan (On the Waterfront)
produced and directed Wild
River, a
sad 1960 story opening
with black and white footage of raging river destruction and
distraught eyewitness testimony hitting home the reasoning behind the
Tennessee Valley Authority's dam and relocation program. The TVA is
buying land soon to be underwater at a fair price and providing homes
for the thousands displaced while taming the flood waters. It's
necessary New Deal progress, but our elderly hold out wishing to live
and die where her loved ones are buried has every right to stay put.
We admire her spirited allegiance to the rugged American way of life
and feel for the TVA's use of force as a last resort. Neither side is
wrong, but someone has to budge in this painful dilemma and nobody is
really going to win. The bureaucratic D.C. committees don't have time
for this refusal making them look bad, and Wild
River has
both the grand nature, water, and government scale as well as the
personal qualms and one on one conflicts. Incredible vistas balance
the intimate car conversations, tender love triangles, and tense
rivalries while the all
around Method mood transcends into bleak realism with fast moving,
natural dialogue. Transition and transportation moments flow smoothly
from one conversation to the next, and there's even humor when some
good ole boys in overalls toss officials into the river for talking
bad about their mama. TVA employees say it's time to let this
stubborn old broad drown, but excellent debates question the taking
away the soul of a land in favor of electricity or of one losing a
small island so thousands more won't die in seasonal floods. Many
arguments are outdoors with two people face to face – there's no
need for camera embellishments, fancy editing, or even much action as
each pleads his or her case, young versus old and man versus woman.
Sadly,
there are of the time racial
slurs and stereotypical African American workers talked down to like
children who need white folk to look after them. However, Wild
River responds
with the radical notion that it's better when any man can look after
himself, and taboo talk
of paying the black worker $5 on par with a white man adds racial
undercurrents to the titular dilemma as opportunistic businessmen
speaking so fine with their racist threats and lynching farmers with
400 acres of cotton living like its the nineteenth century take
advantage of the TVA. Lawyers circumvent with fit to sell or unfit
incompetence declarations, and the intensity is done with men sitting
on opposite sides of a room calmly saying what one is going to take
from the other unless he gets his way – using words to carry the
conflict
rather than today's in your face thrills. Construction
deadlines move fast, and there's not supposed to be any time for
human beings in all this man made harnessing of nature's wrath. The
argument over standing pat in the face of progress never gets old,
and Wild River remains
a time capsule example
of its onscreen era, the behind the scenes mid-century turmoil, and
today's ongoing off the grid defiance. Can the river be tamed or
should nature be left wild? Loyalty and family ties run deep, the
poor wait in line for food, and there's no time left for talking as
progress plows ahead whether you hitch a ride or not.
Wild
River is a rare color
picture for Montgomery Clift (A Place in the Sun) coming
in his difficult post car accident era. Maybe he's not as
pretty as he was the decade before but that just adds to Chuck
Glover's hardened veneer. He's stepping into a messy ongoing case
with this dam opening (the puns just write themselves) all on his
shoulders. Chuck isn't supposed to care, but he doesn't underestimate
Mrs. Garth's spirit or intelligence either. He tries talking to her,
speaking both with confident declarations and hope or try doubts, but
his polite introductions are stonewalled lo though he persists. It's
Chuck's job to ruffle Ella's feathers and pit sons against their
mother – a lightning rod catalyst embodying the changes to come.
Chuck isn't a bad guy deliberately taking advantage of the situation.
He does his job in the most honest way possible, bluntly speaking his
mind and insisting that the eroding land isn't the problem but when
your passion for living erodes. Chuck wonders why nobody ever thought
of moving just to see the river from the other side, but he knows how
to listen to every aspect of the case. He fights for jobs for local
blacks despite risking white townsfolk ire for – gasp! – paying
all colors the same rate for the same job. Unfortunately, Chuck isn't
very tough and lets enemies take advantage of him, but he doesn't
complain to police about threats he receives, calling them mere bumps
on the road to progress. He desperately asks what Mrs. Garth is
trying to prove yet he understands she is fighting for her dignity
and won't use mentally unfit legalese against her. Of course, nobody
said this relocation would be easy, and Chuck ends up moving in on a
dead man's girl with a ready made family when he is supposed to
leave. When he came to Garthville, Chuck wanted to best anyone
standing in the way of the TVA program. After falling in love with
Carol, however, he realizes he wasn't really a complete human being.
There's more to life than an office or dam statistics – such as a
porch and a river view. Maybe Chuck can't stand up to the man or win
a fight on his own and needs a good woman, but he's going to stick it
out all the same and appreciates how far he has come, arriving to end
a home but finding his instead. Wild River could
be all about Chuck – today the handsome, man pained white guy
earning his morality is ridiculously abundant in Hollywood. However,
rather than dominating every scene, Clift transitions from leading
man to supporting strength. As in Suddenly, Last Summer the
year before and The Misfits after,
he knows how to listen to strong female characters and embraces the
excellent chemistry here for the onscreen equality it is.
Lee
Remick's (Days of Wine and Roses) Carol née
Garth is a lovely young widow, a mother returning to her childhood
home with two kids and some education – as if life is over and now
she's supposed to sit silently beside her grandmother on the porch.
She hears what Mrs. Garth is saying, but she's grown beyond this
backward island and is looking for something more. Carol has to do
what's best for her children and has her own life to think about, but
she's conflicted by her love and fear for her grandmother. She
doesn't really love the new guy she is going to marry, but she won't
let Chuck to use her against Ella, either. Naturally then, she falls
in love with him while objecting to the idea that having a fellow is
the answer to everything. Carol's confused and getting impatient in
her buttoned up white sweater, and Lee's always on the brink of tears
pretty is real, fresh, and unabashedly honest to match the simmering
but innocent innuendo. Carol hasn't “talked” to someone in so
long and asks Chuck to get the key to her boarded up marital house as
she invites him across the threshold wherein she parts the dusty bed
curtains. Talk about electricity! This is a sex scene – and it's
done with nothing but laden conversation and a suggestive camera. The
audience knows what's happening behind closed doors, and that's the
sexiest thing of all. The winking of the time risque is Southern
steamy without being today's vulgar, remaining mature as the interior
camera framing reflects Carol's unsaid feelings. One picturesque
snapshot captures Carol standing on the river bank next to a “Keep
Off” sign – as if she too is untouched thanks to this island's
boundaries and she begs to be taken on the ferry to the mainland
twentieth century. Do you grieve and live in the past or is it time
to move on with the current? Carol becomes strong, staying in her
house alone wearing jeans and pulling her hair back as she takes
charge of her romance. She's going to be on the other side of the
river with a modern kitchen and all the conveniences whether her
grandmother likes it or not. She loves Chuck even if he isn't ready
to marry her but she won't be hurt again. Carol puts on lipstick and
admits she knows what she is doing is perceived as wrong, and she
doesn't care. Nowadays we're lucky if we have cardboard female
characters even talk to each other in one movie, but Carol becomes
independent and progressive thanks to her love, and Remick gives an
excellent, multifaceted performance as a daughter, mother, widow,
lover.
Jo
Van Fleet – Best Supporting Actress winner for Kazan's East of
Eden and just as deserving here
– didn't have
to be made up so old to play the small but standing tall Mrs. Ella
Garth, but she did it anyway because this grandma has that kind of
over her dead body Method grit. Mrs. Garth's sad little exterior
belies her holding out against the man power, for big men don't want
to hear anything spoken against this feared matriarch and when she
speaks, the crowd listens. Why is she resisting this move when there
is such flood danger? Is she senile or sentimental and not
understanding? Hardly! Ella sees this New Deal project is for making
the White House look good just as much as it is about the dam. She
doesn't like to be used or blamed for an ulterior motive despite good
that could come from the move. You are either with her on the island
or on relief with the government – there is no in between but
anybody is free to do either. Mrs. Garth speaks plainly with superb
analogies regarding who has the right to make one sell anything dear
to them, such as a dog or a home. Her headstone is already waiting in
the island's high point cemetery, and Ella's proud to tell of the
blood, sweat, and tears that turned this swampland into workable
fields. She's harnessed this land, but refuses to recognize man's
attempt to tame nature by going against it. Neither she nor the river
is going to crawl just because government says so. Mrs. Garth does
however make her son apologize for throwing Chuck into the river
before chastising the scandalous Carol by calling her a cat in heat.
She considers those so easily convinced by the TVA as betraying her,
yet stubborn Ella respects those who would stay with her by telling
them to get while the getting is good. Mrs. Garth's stance is layered
with generational attitudes, and kids today perhaps won't relate to
such notions of my generation's grandparents with ice boxes, butter
churns, and gas to electric lamps – much less the idea of hard work
and tilling hand to mouth as a pioneer reward rather than desperate
circumstance. Fortunately, anyone who has worked their own land can
understand Ella's point of view, reaping and sowing success that
isn't owed to anybody else yet passes on to your future kin. Mrs.
Garth chops down the ferry pole herself, and those fields soon to be
underwater are going to get plowed nonetheless. Her porch is going to
be swept, but that new rocking chair won't do. Here's Ella's sixteen
cents she owes for two pounds of sugar, and she'll carry her own bag
thankyouverymuch.
Wild
River is crisp, colorful,
and even more breathtaking on blu-ray – Lee Remick's eyes alone, my
word! Sad brass notes and bittersweet strings accompany the aerial
location footage capturing the Tennessee Valley rustic and its
earlier Southern rural way of life made poorer by the Great
Depression. Plain fashions, fedoras, retro glasses, oil lanterns,
wood stoves, and a lone radio where everyone gathers round match the
little white house above the river simplicity and rocking chair on
the porch quiet sense of stillness. Vintage vehicles only take one so
far before one must walk the dusty dirty roads amid wagons, work
songs, hymns, humming, and evocative natural sound effects. Our
titular water is a beautiful divide between its deserted island only
accessible by a rickety ferry and the budding main street
infrastructure – smoke, burned brush, and timber clearings sell the
man power construction. Wild River begins in a late blue
summer before changing to fallen Autumn leaves, bare trees, and a
rusted patina. Mrs. Garth's homestead is made of worn, seasoned wood
matching its overgrown surroundings and looking ready to come down
itself in favor of refreshed white homes and seeded green lawns.
Likewise, office candlestick phones, paperwork piles, pictures of FDR
on the TVA wall, and a burning home with the American flag waving in
the foreground symbolically contrast the government ready versus the
innocent laughter of switching a light on and off in a new home with
electricity. We don't have to stay in the stubborn past like Mrs.
Garth, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't appreciate how far we've
come. Of course, I must shout out to my favorite ye old contraction
“oughtn't,” and hello $1.44 to fill up the entire gas tank.
Remember when it that was
cheap per gallon?
Although
some audiences may find this a slow, Southern potboiler with no real
doubt on how it ends, Wild River layers
its resilience, emotion, and sadness into a complex us versus them
and then versus now interplay. Thanks to decades toiling on
VHS only before its recent blu-ray release, Wild River is also
somewhat obscure – unjustly ignored between Kazan's controversial
Baby Doll and his Splendor
in the Grass glory. The
cast and crew spoke fondly of the picture, but its post-McCarthyism
release perhaps contributed to the lack of awards recognition, adding
an intriguing side study on how Kazan's career was impacted and if
his legacy is totally forgiven now. Fortunately, Wild River stands
on its own as a beautiful little piece about people against nature,
the nature of bureaucracy, and the unavoidable tide of both –
literally, figuratively, and maybe ironically considering that HUAC
history. Wild River succeeds as a drama and a romance in all
the right ways with character subtext, social strata, and all the
ills in between continuing to
provide new relevance with every viewing.
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