John Ford - Judge Priest (1934) [DVDrip]
English | Subtitles: FR/ENG/ESP (optional) | 1:20:31 | 592x432 | 23.97fps | XviD | Audio: MP3 - 128kbps | 973 MB
English | Subtitles: FR/ENG/ESP (optional) | 1:20:31 | 592x432 | 23.97fps | XviD | Audio: MP3 - 128kbps | 973 MB
Will Rogers stars as Judge William "Billy" Priest, the common-sense Kentucky jurist created by humorist Irvin S. Cobb. The Judge's easygoing manner bothers many of the self-righteous good citizens of his small 19th-century hometown, imperiling his chances for re-election.
“In some ways,” Dave Kehr has written, “Judge Priest marks the birth of the poet in Ford.” There’s certainly no other Ford movie that I know that comes closer to celebrating the idyllic 19th century America of Mark Twain, expressing nostalgia for the snug, leisurely life in closely interknit small-town communities. But for me the real triumphs of this laid-back masterpiece are the performances—especially those of Will Rogers, Stepin Fetchit, and, in the film’s courtroom climax, Henry B. Walthall (the “”Little Colonel” of The Birth of a Nation, almost 20 years later.) Rogers, who was something of a national sage when he made this movie, tends to be underrated or at least taken for granted these days, but listen to the amazing job he does in one scene of imitating Stepin Fetchit, and notice how he pulls off the impossible task in another of talking to his dead wife without resorting to the sort of sentimentality you’d expect. Jonathan Rosenbaum
While they were both under contract to Fox Studios, the actor Will Rogers and the director John Ford worked together on three films: Doctor Bull (1933), Judge Priest (1934), and Steamboat ‘Round the Bend (1935). (The latter film was actually released after Rogers' tragic plane crash in Alaska.) During this time, Rogers was the top-grossing star in Hollywood, and it seemed only natural that he and Ford should work together, given their mutual affinity for folksy Americana. In fact, one could argue that specific plot and character elements from Judge Priest later found their way into Ford's 1939 masterpiece, Young Mr. Lincoln, his ultimate statement on the American spirit. James Steffen
John Ford and Will Rogers' working relationship was not without tensions. Rogers had a penchant for ad-libbing, which created difficulties for the other actors. At one point Ford declared to another crew member, "Better consult Mr. Rogers. He does most of the directing in this picture." Still, he held his Will Rogers films in high regard, especially Judge Priest. Years later, Ford stated in a 1964 interview for Cosmopolitan: "The men of the West were like Will Rogers." James Steffen
The source material for Judge Priest was an extremely popular series of stories by Irvin S. Cobb (1876-1944), who was among the most popular writers of his day. Born in Paducah, Kentucky, he drew heavily upon his childhood years in the South for his literary inspiration. Although he initially planned to study law as a young man, family troubles forced him to find a permanent job. He first worked as a reporter for the Paducah Evening News, then worked for a brief stint in Louisville before moving to New York in 1904, where he eventually worked as a staff reporter for a Pulitzer newspaper. At this time he also began publishing short stories; the first collection featuring Judge Priest was Back Home (1912). Cobb's real-life model for the character of Judge William Pitman Priest was a certain Judge William Pitman Bishop–the kind of straightforward real-life borrowing that would generate sternly worded legal memos today. According to the American Film Institute Catalog, Cobb objected to Twentieth-Century Fox's title credit "Based on the Judge Priest stories by Irvin S. Cobb," maintaining that the wording might affect sales of future Judge Priest stories, and that the screenplay "practically created a new and different story from the material." James Steffen
Judge Priest is also noteworthy for the significant roles it gives to two African-American character actors, Stepin Fetchit and Hattie McDaniels. While their film personas undeniably play into dated racial stereotypes against Will Rogers' "paternalism," to use the wording of biographer Ray Robinson, there is considerably more going on in the film. In fact, it is very characteristic of John Ford as a director to use typecasting and stereotypes–however uncomfortable such stereotypes make us today–as a kind of shorthand upon which he embellishes characters and subsequently deepens our understanding of them. How this operates becomes clear viewing Will Roger's onscreen interactions with the Stepin Fetchit and Hattie McDaniels characters. At a crucial turning point in the narrative, the Judge joins in a call-and-response with Aunt Dilsey (Hattie McDaniels). And after some bantering between Judge Priest and the defendant Jeff Poindexter (Stepin Fetchit) fishing bait in the opening courtroom scene, we see, in the next scene, the evident pleasure the two take in a fishing outing together, strolling side by side down the road. Stepin Fetchit later said of the film, "When people saw me and Will Rogers like brothers, that said something to them." James Steffen
Originally, John Ford intended to make the film a sharper and more direct commentary on race by including an attempted lynching of the Stepin Fetchit character and an impassioned anti-lynching speech by Judge Priest, but the studio executives cut the footage from the final release version, claiming that the scenes clashed with the lighter tone of the film as a whole. Ford returned to the Judge Priest stories almost two decades later with The Sun Shines Bright (1953), this time with the lynching subplot intact and Stepin Fetchit returning in a supporting role. Ford himself regarded The Sun Shines Bright as the finest work of his career. Whether or not one shares his judgment, it indicates how much the two Judge Priest films meant to the director personally. James Steffen
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