Movie Stats:
Released 1937 (USA)
American, in English
Director – William Dieterle
Stars – Paul Muni, Joseph Schildkraut, Gale Sondergaard
Plot Summary:
Pretty much as advertised by the title. The story follows
the famous French author Emile Zola (Paul Muni) from his early days as a
starving artist with his buddy, the painter Paul Cezanne (Vladimir Sokoloff),
through his successes and excesses, and finally into his involvement with the
Dreyfus Affair and his untimely death a few years after his criminal libel trial in 1898. Joseph Schildkraut stars as the wrongly-accused
Capt. Alfred Dreyfus and Gale Sondergaard is his wife, Lucie.
Bad Stuff:
If you don’t know anything about Emile Zola (as I did not)
or the Dreyfus Affair (which I very dimly recalled from history class), you
might want to brush up before watching, because the movie assumes your familiarity with both topics.
Melodrama. Lots of melodrama.
It drags a bit once it gets to Zola’s 1898 trial. Up until
that point, it zips along at a rather admirable pace.
Good Stuff:
Paul Muni was excellent as Zola. I compared pictures; he
even looked a lot like him. I read later that Muni was well known in
his day for “inhabiting” his characters.
It did a good job of making both Zola and Dreyfus sympathetic,
even though they were frequently reviled in their time. I found myself feeling
angry on their behalf. You know a movie is good when it makes you feel
something for its characters, whether that something is good or bad.
The female characters were pretty tolerable. Of course, they
don’t have a whole heck of a lot to do for most of the movie (except for Lucie,
towards the end), but I’ll take it as a victory.
The Verdict:
Honestly, I really enjoyed
this one, almost in spite of myself. I’d dreaded seeing it for so long because
it sounded boring. On the contrary, until it got to the trial, I thought it was
very engaging and even kind of fun. The slowness of the trial scene didn’t drag
it too far down in my estimation, though. If I were going to recommend Oscar
winners, this one would probably end up in my top 15.I give it 3.5 stars.
You are one step ahead of me because you dimly recall the Dreyfus Affair.
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