Thursday, May 19, 2016

MOVIE WEEKEND: TRUMBO

Gentle Readers . . . and Maxwell,

If it's possible to make you forget that Bryan Cranston played Hal on Malcolm In the Middle and Walter White on Breaking Bad, then the part that will do it for you is Cranston's Best Actor Academy Award nominated performance as Trumbo (2015, Rated R, Available on DVD).

I

I discovered Dalton Trumbo when I was in junior high and read his novel, Johnny Got His Gun. It expressed the anger and dismay many of us felt about the war in Vietnam.

still have my copy
I didn't realize that in 1939, the novel won the precursor to The National Book Award (Trumbo insisted that his publisher recall copies of the anti-war book during World War II). I also had no idea that Trumbo was then the highest paid screen writer in Hollywood.

Trumbo focuses on Dalton Trumbo's fall from grace. He becomes one of the "Hollywood 10" who are blacklisted by the movie industry. Their writing days, over.

But Trumbo doesn't hide his head in shame. He moves his family, including wife Cleo (Diane Lane), to Mexico, where his friends alcohol and benzedrine join him in a bathtub to write, and write, and write. His children suffer from his absence, but he's determined to support them:

Niki Trumbo: We're having birthday cake.
Dalton Trumbo: When you hear me working, you don't knock.
Niki Trumbo: But it's my birthday.
Dalton Trumbo: You don't knock. Ever.
Niki Trumbo: So the house is on fire, you don't wanna know?
Dalton Trumbo: I work in a bathtub, surrounded by water. So I'm fairly certain that even if the whole goddamn country was on fire, that I can still function as this family's personal slave. And all I ask is not to be interrupted for every little slice of fucking birthday cake. What? It's ridiculous!

Using pseudonyms, Dalton Trumbo writes his way to two Academy Awards and then to the end of the Blacklist.

Cranston stands out as the prickly Trumbo. He's surrounded by a strong cast, which includes Helen Mirren as gossip columnist Hedda Hopper––quite the menace to the Reds; John Goodman as studio owner Frank King, who accepts Trumbo's writing for his B pictures; and Louis C.K. as Arlen Hird, a sympathetic character who stands in for various blacklisted writers.



Trumbo is a triumph that earns The Janie Junebug Seal of Highest Approval.

This movie is not for children. If older children watch with you, be prepared to explain the witch hunt against Communists. Trumbo and the rest of the Hollywood 10 were sentenced, fined, and denied work because they refused to answer questions from the House Un-American Activities Commitee.

I watched Trumbo when my mail carrier delivered its red Netflix envelope.



Infinities of love,

Janie Junebug


the real Dalton Trumbo


From the Internet Movie Database:

Dalton Trumbo won two "Best Writing, Motion Picture Story" Academy Awards during the 1950s but was unable to accept either of them, since both movies' credits had used "fronts" (real people who agreed to take credit for the scripts while Trumbo was blacklisted). The first movie for which Trumbo won an Oscar was the Audrey Hepburn-Gregory Peck romantic comedy Roman Holiday (1953). For this movie, Trumbo's front was Ian McLellan Hunter (who actually was also a screenwriter in his own right); Hunter was also later blacklisted. In 1993, after both Trumbo and Hunter were both dead, the Academy attempted to retrieve the Oscar that had been presented to Hunter and present it instead to Trumbo's widow, but Hunter's son, Tim, himself a director (River's Edge, 1986), (Tex, 1982), refused to relinquish it, so the Academy instead presented Mrs. Trumbo with a new statuette. On Roman Holiday's 2003 DVD release, Trumbo was credited in place of Hunter. The second movie for which Trumbo won an Oscar was the family drama The Brave One (1956). For this film, Trumbo's front was named Robert Rich; unlike Ian McLellan Hunter, Rich was not actually a screenwriter himself but just a nephew of the movie's producers. The Academy re-presented that Oscar statuette to Trumbo in May 1975, roughly a year and a half before Trumbo's death.

23 comments:

  1. I've got this one in my queue and had heard it was good. With your endorsement, now I know it will be fascinating! :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's even more fun if you read up on him. I think it's especially funny that Steve Martin (long ago) dated one of his daughters and thought they had a strange family. He didn't know who Dalton Trumbo was.

      Delete
  2. Hi Janie - I didn't have the background to the film you've given us here ... but I did enjoy the learning and the movie in its own right .. and the acting was really strong. I'd definitely see it again ...

    Cheers Hilary

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wow! This sounds like a fabulous 'must watch' film. I do like Bryan Cranston - fabulous actor and Dame Helen Mirren is one of my all times favourites! I did giggle at your short script between Niki and Dalton - so there is some humour in it too ? Thank you for the super post. Have a lovely week.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I thought parts of it were funny because Trumbo was such an unusual person--kind of a grouchy s.o.b. but worked his ass off to take care of his family. A man of principles.

      Delete
  4. We enjoyed this movie too! And "Johnny Got His Gun" also made a huge impact on me when I was a teenager. The Blacklist was a terrible thing. Oh, and I liked the actor who played Kirk Douglas -- didn't he capture his mannerisms wonderfully?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That actor is Dean O'Gorman. He's from New Zealand.

      Delete
  5. Haven't seen this yet, but I look forward to doing so.

    Did you see The Front with Woody Allen and Zero Mostel?

    ReplyDelete
  6. Well, if it has your seal of approval it must be good!! This looks like a movie that Den would love. I'll tell him you said to watch it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If he doesn't like it, then I'll deny that I recommended it.

      Delete
  7. Dang, I didn't know any of this. Roman Holiday is such an innocent movie, and who could be threatened by a man who lounges in his bathtub and won't be disturbed for the sake of birthday cake? Come to think of it, that's sorta wrong.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. He was quite a character, but when I think back to X not coming home for our son's fifth birthday party and it was because he couldn't be bothered . . . at least Trumbo was at home and his family knew where he was.

      Delete
  8. That sounds really good! I'll have to watch it ASAP. I love Bryan Cranston.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I didn't know if Cranston could pull off this one, but he was great.

      Delete
  9. Craston seems to be the perfect choice to play Trumbo. Thanks for your most excellent review!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your most excellent response.

      Delete
  10. Bryan Cranston is becoming one of my favorite actors. Haven't seen a dud from him in a long time and this movie was no exception.

    All the bathtub scenes cracked me up; I kept thinking, "Aren't his papers gonna get wet?" See, I'm dumb like dat...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I used to read in the bathtub. Now I take showers. Can't take a book in the shower.

      Delete
  11. Sounds like one I'd like to see. Thank you, Janie.

    ReplyDelete
  12. This is on my extensive list to see since I do know so much about this man and the Communist witch hunts of the 1950's. It was such a sad time in that era for any person in the entertainment industry never mind the general public. Fingers were being pointed at just about anyone who questioned the right....meaning Republican right and extremely opposed to anything they think of as leftist because they certainly were not right.

    ReplyDelete

Got your panties in a bunch? Dig 'em out, get comfortable, and let's chat.