'Mockingbird' On The Big Screen
âMockingbirdâ On The Big Screen
By Shannon Hicks
Calling To Kill A Mockingbird âone of the greatest books in terms of sales and the impact on our children and ourselves,â professor emeritus Jack Leopold welcomed about 125 people to a special screening of To Kill a Mockingbird last week.
On March 29, Edmond Town Hall hosted two screenings of the 1962 film. The screenings were part of the two-month NewtownREADS series of special programs focused on Harper Leeâs monumental novel of the same name. The evening screening was introduced by film historian Jack Leopold, who also led a short discussion after the show.
The film is an American film classic, still shown in schools across the country usually as part of a middle school curriculum that teaches American history and tolerance. Loosely, the story follows two children, Scout (played in the film by Mary Badham) and Jem (Phillip Alford), as they watch their principled father, Atticus (Gregory Peck), defend a black man on trial, charged with raping a white woman. The setting is rural southern America during the Depression.
The casting is perfect, from Gregory Peck in a role that he often called his all-time favorite, to Mary Badham and Phillip Alford â who many people felt looked enough alike to truly be brother and sister. Robert Duvall puts in a wordless, yet spooky and emotion-filled performance (his first in a feature film) as Boo Radley, and James Anderson looks mean as Robert E. Lee (âBobâ) Ewell even before he starts spouting the N-word.
Even the Elmer Bernsteinâs soundtrack was intelligent, written primarily from the point of view of a child. Songs like âRemember Mama,â âAtticus Accepts The Case/Roll In The Tire,â âCreepy Caper/Peek-A-Boo,â âJemâs Discovery,â and âTree Treasureâ⦠they all recall things that were happening on screen to and by the children of the film, not the adults, who seem to carry much of the backstory.
In 1963 the film won three of the eight Academy Awards it had been nominated for â Best Actor in a Leading Role, Best Art Direction-Set Decoration (Black and White) and Best Writing-Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium. Before the film began rolling Thursday evening, Mr Leopold reminded those in attendance of these wins, and encouraged them to look at the film with those awards in mind.
Horton Footeâs award for Best Writing was one topic that was quickly touched upon prior to the screening.
âHe was dealing with so many different ideas and themes when he sat down to write that screenplay,â Mr Leopold said before the film rolled Thursday night. âWhen he started writing he had to decide what to include and what to exclude from the film.
âDid he do a good job?â he challenged. âWell yes, of course he did â he won an Academy Award for that work. But what would you have liked to see from the book in the film?â
The Oscar Awards were far from the only ones the film earned, of course. It received three Golden Globes, and one award each during the 1963 award season at Cannes Film Festival, David di Donatello Awards, Laurel Awards, and Writers Guild of America. The movie continued to bring notice to itself more than three decades after its release, as it was placed on the National Film Registry by the National Film Preservation Board USA in 1995, and put into the Producers Guild of America Hall of Fame in 1999.
Mr Leopold called the film âa beautiful look at a young girl growing up in an idealistic family,â but cautioned that it was certainly about much more than that once a viewer looks below the surface.
âIs it proto-feminist? Some women have looked at it that way,â he pointed out. âItâs told from the point of view of Scout, a heroine dealing with racism in the United States.â
The Civil Rights movement started right after the war, said Mr Leopold, who also said that Harper Lee used her story line to compare the way Jews were treated during the war with the way blacks were treated in Monroeville (her hometown) and elsewhere cross the south. Monroeville was used loosely as the setting for Leeâs book, which takes place in the fictitious town of Maycomb, Ala. He recalled the scene in Leeâs book (which was not written into the movie) when the schoolteacher was challenged on why it was OK for white people to treat blacks differently than they treated each other.
âThat was a parallel, certainly,â Mr Leopold said.
He also pointed out that by 1961, when the film was being made, color films were being produced.
âLook at the lighting,â he said. âHow did it affect the story? Why did they choose to shoot this in black and white?â
Mockingbird was nominated for, but didnât win, Best Picture.
âIt lost to Lawrence of Arabia, a brilliant Technicolor film,â Mr Leopold said. âDid the choice to shoot in black and white have anything to do with that?â
In less than five minutes, Mr Leopold gave the audience much to think about as the lights dimmed and the familiar opening credits began rolling. The tinkle-tinkle of piano keys and a young girlâs humming as she alternately drew with crayons and explored through a box of treasures were familiar for some in the theater last Thursday, but also new to others.
CarolLee Berlin and Carole Angus had decided to attend the film together, and it was the first time either woman had seen the film.
âThis was just wonderful,â Ms Berlin said. âOf course this was different from the book, and the book is best, of course, but this is a great movie.â
Ms Angus agreed with her friendâs assessment of the movie, and planned on watching it again soon. She couldnât wait, she said, to watch a DVD of the film âand look for the nuances that had been discussed earlier.â
Kim Weber, a librarian with C.H. Booth Library, has seen the movie a number of times.
âBefore tonight, the most recent time was probably last summer,â she said Thursday night. âWe see it frequently but itâs funny how many times you can see it and still not pick up all the subtleties. Even tonight, I had an âaha!â moment.â
Mr Leopold had alluded to that idea a minutes few earlier, during his post-screening discussion.
âWhen you think of a movie and all the people involved, itâs genius how everything comes together,â he said. âWhen you watch a movie like this, you need to see it two or three times to catch everything. Itâs all so carefully planned out.â
Others who turned up for the screening also seemed happy with their decision.
John Manoni had last seen the film âprobably in the 60s,â he said, but had also recently read the book while on a trip in Italy.
âI found a copy of the book in a thrift shop, and kept waiting to see the movie again,â he said. âThis was a thrill.â
Town Hall administrator Tom Mahoney was able to locate one of the few remaining prints of To Kill a Mockingbird for last weekâs event. It was charming to watch that film on the big screen, with its occasional pops and skips. The sound was far from todayâs digital surround sound, but again â the event was a throwback to a much earlier time, long before digital files and synchronized sound effects.
âThe film was in mono, not digital,â he said. âWhen youâre using mono, the only speaker being utilized is the center speaker behind the screen. Thereâs no surround information, which is how it was done in the 1960s when this film was put together.â
The tough part of finding a copy of the film was finding a decent version.
âThis was a standard 35 mm print, and this print, from the looks of it, was probably at least from the 1980s, but we did the best we could with it,â said Mr Mahoney, who was able to catch Thursdayâs matinee.
âThe injustice of that film still resonates,â he said.
Remaining NewtownREADS 2007 events include a book discussion led by Gordon Williams on Tuesday, April 10, at 1 pm, at the senior center, 14 Riverside Road; a book discussion led by Joanne Rochman on Tuesday, April 24, at 7:30 pm, at C.H. Booth Library; a program by Charles Shields, the author of Mockingbird: A portrait of Harper Lee, on Thursday, April 26, at 7:30, in the lecture hall at Newtown High School; and a mock trial theatrical performance produced and directed by Doug MacHugh at Newtown Meeting House, suitable for ages 12 and up, on Saturday, April 28.
The mock trial performances will be at 2 and 7 pm, with tickets priced at $5 for the matinee and $10 for the evening performance (which will include a reception). Advance ticket purchase is required; call or visit the library for details.