All the King's Men (Robert Rossen, 1949)
Based on Robert Penn Warren's Pulitzer-Prize-winning novel, All the
King's Men (Robert Rossen, 1949) won the Best Picture Oscar at the 22nd
Academy Awards. A barely veiled account of Huey Long's rise to
demagoguery, it inches above typical middlebrow fare mostly via the
hothouse, Oscar-winning performances of Broderick Crawford as the Long
figure Willie Stark and the sui generis Mercedes McCambridge in her
first film role! John Ireland adds some of the heat he'd later apply up
against a different Crawford (Joan!) in Queen Bee. And a
twenty-two-year-old John Derek is around lookin' all pretty as Stark's
football player son. But as usual, if I'm praising the acting, then you
know something's wrong. Like countless such topical films, All the
King's Men makes you wonder why it had to be a *film* and not an
informative long read. Solid, welcome, even enjoyable, but I'll forget
it by December just like I did that Boston investigative journalism Best
Picture winner from a few years back. Grade: B+, the dispassionate fate
of so much Oscar fare. P. S. Never saw the 2006 remake which looks
awful.
Labels: Oscars
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