LOST AND FOUND: The Saga of RAINTREE COUNTY (1957)
It isn’t often a ‘lost’ film gets a lot of apathy from the present generation, except for a handful of ardent admirers, perhaps old enough to recall with fondness a snapshot from their youth, prematurely snuffed out through neglect, or mislaid by the hands of time. Roughly 80% of all movies made during the silent era have been lost to us for all time, either through carelessness or through a seemingly inexplicable lack of interest by the film industry to preserve its own heritage. In the days before the advent of home video, such carelessness was, if not excusable, then, at least marginally comprehended. Indeed, before the creation of non-flammable film stocks, it was not uncommon practice to merely junk original nitrate elements as their state of natural decomposition threatened to incinerate not only what was in the can, but whole warehouses of ‘usable’ elements. Along the road to modern-day film preservation and restoration, several catastrophic fires ravaged what had, until the blaze, otherwise miraculously survived. Even the most keenly curated collections were not immune, as the 1978 devastating blaze inside George Eastman House – one of filmdom’s premiere facilities – attests. That fire consumed approximately 12.6 million feet of original elements from the MGM library. In the mid-1970’s Hollywood needed no help from Mother Nature to discount and decimate its own self-worth. 2oth Century-Fox’s absurdly infamous cannibalization of its own formidable archive, to have junked their entire history of original nitrate and 3-strip Technicolor elements dating all the way back to their inception as a studio, saving only a poorly contrasted, and oft mis-aligned composite for future archival reference, the rest - loaded onto a barge and sunk in the middle of the Pacific ocean, merely to clear out vault space for new product, effectively created its own dearth from disgusting short-sightedness.
The digital age has given us much cause to rejoice,
though occasionally, it too remains myopic in its pursuit of re-evaluating golden
age picture-making. Our subject herein is even more curious at a glance, as it
neither hails from the silent era, nor is it a particularly well-regarded movie
from the age of widescreen wonders, despite a magnificent central performance
from one of Hollywood’s irrefutable and enduring icons. The actress – Elizabeth
Taylor. The movie, MGM’s resplendently mounted super-production, Raintree
County (1957), a movie billed as an ‘event’ and meant to rival Selznick’s Gone
with the Wind (1939). Alas, I would not be the first to suggest that, in
spite of its pedigree, Raintree County is an imperfect entertainment.
And yet, there are many great things in it. One scene in particular has continued
to haunt from the peripheries of my mind’s eye ever since I first saw this
movie, cropped and dumped as late-night filler on a UHF channel in the mid-1980’s.
The scene involves a once vainglorious scallywag, played by the incredible Lee
Marvin, fatally stricken by a rebel’s sniper bullet. As Marvin leans back to
accept his character’s fate, isolated and alone in a darkened forest, he lets
out a primordial blast of fear, declaring with a startling quiver to the unseen
soldier who shot him, “I am from Raintree County”, and then, quite miraculously,
to collect and bottle this perishing disquiet, girded by the last vestiges of
that self-assured Southern pride, as much a casualty, bled dry on the fields of
battle as the man himself. Marvin repeats the aforementioned line of dialogue,
only now, with a grave, sobering, and quietly confident rectitude, drawing one
final breath to utter in a slow, soft fade into the hereafter, “…and I can
lick any man in the county.”
If only the rest of Raintree County lived up to
this penultimate sad-eyed reflection on the unfathomable losses to American
life, the picture might have lived on for the ages. Tragically, and almost
immediately upon its release, it hastened the advancing fiscal malaise afflicting
MGM, putting the final nail in the proverbial coffin of Dore Schary’s tenure as
head of the largest, and one-time, most profitable studio in the picture-making
biz. For years, Raintree County held the dubious distinction of being
the most expensive movie ever produced on American soil. At the outset, it
seemed to have everything going for it: an award-winning novel, by first-time
author, Ross Lockridge Jr., and a vibrant cast to include Montgomery Clift, Elizabeth
Taylor, and, Eva Marie Saint. The first of only two pictures to be photographed
in MGM’s experimental ultra-widescreen process, Camera 65 (the other, 1959’s Ben-Hur),
Raintree County was conceived as the definitive fifties’ road show
spectacular, complete with fanfare, intermission and entr’acte – a huge thing, teeming
in lurid melodrama, exhilarating set pieces, and an intriguing backstory about an
ill-fated/bigoted Southern belle, afflicted with demons from her past.
Schary paid handsomely for the rights to produce Raintree
County - $150,000 in 1947 dollars. Alas, from here the project languished. With
a preliminary budget of $6 million, screenwriter, Carey Wilson assumed the
producer’s reigns, his heart set on casting Lana Turner or Ava Gardner as
Suzanna Drake, the mentally ill beauty, and possibly, Janet Leigh as the
long-suffering Nell Gaither, the thankless part, eventually assumed by Eva
Marie Saint. As John Wickliff Shawnessey, a gentleman of quality, Wilson initially
thought of Robert Walker, whose untimely death in 1951 seemed to cast a pall on
the preliminary plans for Raintree County’s greatness. And Walker’s had not been the first casualty
either. As a novel, Raintree County was very close to Lockridge’s heart,
the Indiana-born/Boston’s Simmons College professor, having spent 6-long-years
to write it, whittling down his 600,000-word manuscript into manageable book
form. Lockridge, in ill physical health in 1948, forced to grapple with even
more rewrites once MGM entered into negotiations, and then, again, once Raintree
County was selected for inclusion into the prestigious ‘book of the month’
club, fell into a stark depression from whence he would never recover. He
committed suicide at the age of 33, putting a period to whatever hopes MGM had
of procuring his participation on the movie.
The novel’s existential and philosophical debates baffled a slew of
screenwriters assigned to consider the project. Regrettably, the one the studio
finally settled upon - Millard Kaufman – could hardly boast a noble pedigree,
having cut his teeth on the very first Mr. Magoo cartoon, and later to serve as
Dalton Trumbo’s false front during the blacklist. Just prior to Raintree
County, Kaufman had written the Oscar-nominated screenplay for 1953’s Take
the High Ground. Even so, he completely lacked the necessary experience to
adapt such a ‘huge thing’ for the screen, and, even more regrettably, his
shortcomings are frequently revealed in his eagerness to merely hack out whole
portions of Lockridge’s book, relying on the clumsy use of ‘montage’ to accommodate
the picture’s fast-expanding runtime.
Recognizing the lack of impetus in the novel’s nominal
‘hero’, MGM considered the formidable Alec Guinness to play the part of John
Shawnessey before turning to Montgomery Clift.
At this juncture in his career, Clift was already well-established, but one
of filmdom’s most reluctant stars, having forsaken Hollywood for Broadway after
A Place in the Sun (1951). Too bad for Clift, his finances were in a
mess. And thus, he traded his abject contempt for the picture-making biz, and a
story he deemed “a soap opera with elephantiasis” for a solid
paycheck. Prior to Clift’s signing on, Schary
suggested Van Heflin or Gene Kelly for the lead. But Wilson had another idea. Following
Lockridge’s suicide, found dead from carbon monoxide asphyxiation in his garage,
Raintree County might just as easily have died on the vine…or rather, at
the corner of Hollywood and Vine. Lacking Lockridge’s input, Cary Wilson wrote
his widow that Raintree County would go into moratorium for a period of
2 years while he endeavored to do justice to “the quality of the writing”,
and, at an enviable budget of almost $6 million – a princely sum the postwar
MGM had no stomach to expenditure at the present time.
Thus, time passed. Schary replaced Mayer as the de facto
‘head’ of the studio. The stars assigned to the picture were kept ready to
commit at a moment’s notice. Still, nothing happened. Curiously, Raintree
County is not the type of movie one would immediately identify with Dore Schary,
who much preferred darkly intimate B-budgeted noir thrillers and message
pictures to A-list, big and bloated Hollywood costume fare. Nevertheless,
Schary could not ignore the fact Metro’s theatrical reissues of Selznick’s Gone
with the Wind in 1947 and 1954, bought outright from Selznick’s
partner, Jock Whitney for a whopping $2.8 million, had enjoyed even greater
popularity on these subsequent outings, thus dismissing the time-honored
Hollywood fallacy about ‘Civil War pictures’ never making money. The ‘then’
perceived problem with GWTW was it had been shot in the traditional Academy
ratio of 1.33:1, thus to render its reissues as appearing somewhat dated in this
era of bigger than Cinemascope and Cinerama spectacles - a situation Metro
egregiously attempted to ‘rectify’ by optically reformatting Selznick’s
masterpiece to conform to the more acceptable 1.75:1 aperture. But now, Schary wanted his own day for a
Southern dance, and Raintree County, with its obvious similarities,
seemed to neatly fit this bill.
By August 1955, Raintree County had definite commitments
from its new cast and crew: David Lewis, to produce, Millard Kaufman to write
the screenplay, and stars Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Clift, who had made a
memorable ill-fated couple in George Steven’s A Place in the Sun (1950).
Clift had, in fact, just signed a 3-picture deal with Metro. As the particulars
of this arrangement began to take shape, Eva Marie Saint accepted unrewarding supporting
role for an impressive $100,000, with rising newcomer, Rod Taylor actively
campaigning to play the part of boastful and devious entrepreneur, Garwood B.
Jones. Also brought in, Nigel Patrick as the fastidious Professor Jerusalem
Webster Stiles, academic mentor/philosopher and passionate suitor to the
married, Lydia Grey (Myrna Hansen). Alas, a little of the classically-trained
Patrick went an awfully long way. One of the ‘shortcomings’ of the movie, Raintree
County, is that it desires to include much of Lockridge eloquently written,
extensively explored philosophical debate. As cinema has always had a hard time
expressing intangibles on the screen, Professor Stiles becomes the orator of their
thoughtful meditations, the character expanded to allow for these length
recitations.
One of the movie’s sincere flaws is that Patrick,
although seemingly relegated as a tertiary figure in the credits is instead ever-present
and, at intervals, a rather painfully self-inflated bore, repeatedly to delay
the action and provide needling commentary on the actions of the rest of the cast.
This, I suspect, is meant to be clever. But it fails miserably to go beyond the
‘hook and worm’ stage for philosophical debating, in fact, to render Prof.
Stiles as nothing more fascinating than a dogmatic drip. Used far less often,
but to far better effect is the aforementioned Lee Marvin as Orville 'Flash'
Perkins. Marvin is mesmerizing as the shamelessly boastful, hard-drinking
cock-of-the-walk who meet his match during a foot race against the seemingly
innocuous and mild-mannered Johnny, thereafter, to doff his cap with a modicum of
respect each time their paths cross, usually adding, “There goes the fastest
man in Raintree County.” Virtually all of the scenes in which Marvin’s ‘Flash’
appears crackle with a spark of raw animal energy, otherwise absent and sorely
missed.
The casting of Montgomery Clift as our heroic ‘good
guy’ – incapable of being unfaithful to his deeply troubled wife with a former
flame, who repeatedly throws herself at his head – is a man, less to be admired
than repeatedly discontented by and disconnected from as his Johnny stumbles into
one unprepossessing plot entanglement, followed by more of the same. Neither
does Clift make his mark as the presumed ‘stud’ of the piece, nor does he distinguish
himself as the very fine actor he was, his performance here, never going beyond
the well-meaning milquetoast. Perhaps, it was the hellish automobile accident
on the evening of May 12, 1956, right in the middle of shooting, that changed
the trajectory of Clift’s interpretation of the part. Indeed, the wreck nearly
cost Clift his life. Rumors have since varied and distorted the particulars from
that fateful night. For certain, Clift left a party given by Elizabeth Taylor
and then hubby, Michael Wilding. Rather inebriated, Clift barely had time to
make it a mile down the road before slamming full-force into a telephone poll.
Discovering the wreck, Taylor reported climbed into the car to coddle Clift’s
semi-conscious and badly bashed-in face, cheek bones shattered, jaw fractured
in three places, and broken nose, at one point, sliding her fingers between his
lips to dislodge several teeth imbedded in his throat. To say the accident was
a life-altering experience for Clift is putting things mildly. Indeed, while production
on Raintree County was suspended for nearly 2 months to accommodate the
actor’s recovery, Clift endured nightmarish reconstructive surgeries. The left
side of his face remained permanently paralyzed from the accident, almost completely
to deprive Clift of his trademarked youthful vigor and good looks, further to
augment and distort his already well-known backstage insecurities as a bisexual
leading man. To adapt, though never entirely conceal the ravages from this
ordeal, cameraman, Robert Surtees shot many of the subsequent scenes involving
Clift from the left side – where the lesser damage had been sustained. Even so,
those with morbid curiosity left unsatisfied crowded in to view Raintree Country
from the vantage of challenging themselves to discern scenes shot before the smashup
from those immediately following it: a perverse blood sport. Regrettably, it
isn’t hard to spot Clift’s post-surgery performance, so wooden and frightfully
fragile, one can almost see the actor’s ego crumbling before our very eyes. Worse, Clift’s boyish good looks seem to have
evaporated into an instant facsimile and middle-aged wax works from Madame Tussaud’s.
Raintree County is perhaps one of the last ‘unhappy’
accidents to hail from those retro-gala days in Hollywood when stars could – and
did – behave badly, but were to be repeatedly forgiven for their
indiscretions as their star power preceded even the iron-fisted common sense of
the moguls, usually able to better manage their talent behind the scenes. Upon
his return to the production, Montgomery Clift alcoholism began to get the
better of him, indulging in a dangerous cocktail of prescription drugs to stave
off his pain, but further to deplete his resilience, while leaving him somewhat
bug-eyed, looking haggard and listing to one side. When Clift failed to show up for work one
day, director, Edward Dmytryk hurried to his star’s hotel room, discovering the
actor passed out with a cigarette burned clear down to his fingertips. On the
bureau, Dmytryk also found a handsome leather-bound case, bursting with drug paraphernalia,
pills, potions, and, syringes. From this disturbing revelation, Clift’s behavior
on set only became more erratic and bizarre. He reportedly ate raw meat, soaked
in butter and pepper with his fingers, and, on more than one occasion, stripped
naked, streaking through town, forcing Dmytryk to place a guard on his hotel
room to prevent further such spontaneous outbursts. Meanwhile, Elizabeth Taylor
held up production when her desire to be cinched into period costumes to show
off her already tiny waist resulted in her collapse from hyperventilation,
treated with a bottle of Clift's Demerol. Regrettably, the incident also resulted
in tachycardia (a potentially dangerous arrhythmia), to delay production by yet
another week, and this, on a shoot that was already heartily behind its preset
schedule. In addition, Taylor frequently arrived late to the set after a night
of carousing with her latest fling, producer, Michael Todd – soon to become the
third Mr. Elizabeth Taylor! More than a bit of a vulgarian, but a masterful
showbiz promoter besides, Todd was well-known to lavish Taylor with expensive gifts
throughout the shoot, his private plane making frequent trips to Danville to
surprise her with his latest baubles and beads.
Raintree County was extensively shot on location
in Dunleith and Elms Court antebellum mansions, Windsor Ruins, in Natchez, Mississippi,
Reelfoot Lake in northwest Tennessee near the Kentucky border, the Liberty Hall
Historic Site on Wilkinson Street in Frankfort and other settings in and around
Danville. For the more elaborate set pieces, MGM relied on a tried-and-true
maxim – shoot it on the backlot – with various free-standing sets given a
once-over re-dressing by art directors, William A. Horning and Urie McCleary, and, set decorators, Hugh
Hunt and Edwin B. Willis. If anything, these sets, easily identifiable to
anyone who has seen more than three or four MGM movies in their lifetime,
herein are too pristine and clash with the more earthy splendor of the actual
locations. In their desire to resurrect and reconcile the pre-war atmosphere of
moonlight and magnolia with its post-war rot and decay, Raintree County’s
artistic merits are a queer amalgam of the old, and the more recent, attempting
to turn back the clock to fit in. Given
the expense and presumed ‘prestige’ of the production, Dore Schary was
determined Raintree County should be unlike any other MGM movie produced
to date. To this end, he had a ‘new’ widescreen process, MGM Camera-65 developed,
running a 65-millimeter film negative through an anamorphic widescreen lens. The
process would later be re-christened as Ultra Panavision 70, and was notable
for yielding a 2.76:1 image imbued with remarkable clarity. Regrettably, the
plans to distribute an actual 70mm print of Raintree County were streamlined
as Todd’s own production of Around the World in 80 Days, had managed to
monopolize all of the 70mm projectors in existence at the time. Thus, a
reduction print on standard 35mm film stocks was created for Raintree County’s
theatrical release – including the road show. And therein lies a confusion that
has since dogged the memory of many a theater-goer from the 1950’s, ardently to
attest to have seen Raintree County in 70mm at their local Bijou, a misrepresentation
to be further compounded by the fact the initial 188-minute roadshow, to have
had the briefest run, contained a main title credit, attributing the picture’s
presentation to MGM Camera 65, “a window of the world”.
In its earliest days, Panavision created a system of
presentation with a camera negative that virtually mimicked Todd-AO with the
addition of an anamorphic squeeze of 1.33:1. With the recommended projector
aperture of 2.21:1, MGM’s rechristened Camera 65 could ostensibly produce a thoroughly
impressive 2.94:1 image on the screen. Distinctly, Ultra Panavision 70 later adopted
anamorphic squeezes of 1.25:1 for an image in the 2.76:1 ratio. For MGM, the
plan had always been to debut their remake of Ben-Hur (1959) in this new
widescreen process to put all others to shame. That Raintree County
would become the first movie to be photographed (if not shown) in Camera 65, therefore
served as something of a ‘dry run’ for Ben-Hur’s big launch. While MGM
had embraced Darryl F. Zanuck’s Cinemascope throughout the 1950’s, they were
never altogether satisfied with the results, chiefly, the horrendous
distortions it created in close-ups. And while Todd-AO had corrected these
anomalies, it also photographed 30fps, yielding ultra-clarity in its image, but
making it virtually incompatible for reduction printing. Hence, MGM’s technical
advisor, Douglas Shearer (brother of retired screen siren, Norma Shearer), approached
the President of Panavision, Robert Gottschalk with a proposal for a new 65mm
process that would set a standard in the industry. Shearer was adamant the new
process eliminate Cinemascope’s curvatures and distortions and yield a superior
quality in 70mm – projected at 3:1 without a soundtrack or 2.7:1 with 6-tracks
of stereo. But he also wanted Camera 65 to be compatible with 3-strip Cinerama,
and, with limited modifications to also be able to produce a high-quality 35mm
reduction print, thereby covering virtually all of the varying methods of motion
picture presentation then in existence.
Gottschalk went to work, MGM throwing open its gates in
1954 with the full formidable resources of their backlot and lab at Panavision’s
disposal. The results were successful at achieving everything the studio had
hoped. Despite this, MGM, due to their contractual agreements with 2oth
Century-Fox, continued to advertise Panavision anamorphic films as “in CinemaScope”
for several years thereafter. As Ben-Hur was not ready to begin
production, it was decided Raintree County would be the first movie to
be photographed and promoted in the new Camera 65 process. MGM actually
trumpeted Camera 65 nearly a decade before its ‘faux’ debut in Raintree
County. Given all the effort poured into its creation, and the mass
marketing hype surrounding Camera 65’s ‘debut’, it is more than a little disheartening
to learn Raintree County eventually hit theaters only in Cinemascope-friendly
reduction prints, the inclusion of its Magoptical 6-track stereo reducing the
actual frame size to the standard 2.35:1 ‘scope’ ratio.
Another of Raintree County’s oddities is its
subject matter. Those expecting a Civil War epic were likely disillusioned to
discover the war itself is given short shrift as the movie’s third act, the bulk
of the tale concentrated on the intimate struggles of husband and wife. We
first meet idealist, John Wickliff Shawnessey in the Spring of 1859, an
introspective resident of Raintree County, Indiana. John rather naively admires
Prof. Jerusalem Webster Stiles whose academic principles serve as the guiding
force in this young man’s as yet unformed aspirations for what will follow his
graduating class. Stiles speaks of ‘the raintree’ – a sort of mythical ‘fruit
of knowledge’, presumed to grow only in their county, and to yield eternal
happiness for the true seeker of life. John is motivated to go in search of the
tree, venturing deep into the swamps, much to the dismay of Nell Gaither, the
girl who shamelessly adores him. At present, Nell is being courted by fellow
student, Garwood B. Jones, who cuts a robustly masculine figure in contrast to
Johnny’s slight physical presence, but lacks the good sense God gave a lemon to
keep his ego in check. Nell does not favor Garwood’s braggadocio, rather using
it in the hopes to lure John back to her side. The two exchange heartfelt
graduation gifts. Alas, Nell is thwarted in her romantic pursuit when John
encounters Susanna Drake, a wealthy daughter of New Orleans. The two embark
upon a passionate tryst after their first ‘cute meet’ at a photographic studio.
John’s decision to forsake the more temperate Nell is wholeheartedly supported
by Prof. Stiles, who is carrying on a notorious affair with Lydia Grey, the much
younger wife of one of the town’s more prominent businessmen.
John is tempted by the boastful muckraking of Orville
'Flash' Perkins to partake of a foot race to prove his own masculine prowess.
Indeed, this has been impugned by Garwood’s retelling of how John, in search of
the raintree, was nearly drowned in the swamp and rescued – a bedraggled mess –
by him along the roadside. Prof. Stiles prevents the race to propose another
display of physical endurance, one for which he wagers a handsome endowment of
50 gold pieces, matched by Flash’s ill-gotten gains, and raised by Garwood and
the rest of the men, eager to get in on the bet. Susanna proudly proposes to be
the girl waiting at the finish line. And, true to form, and his passion to
prove Garwood wrong, John wins the race, leaving Flash full of admiration for
the man he only previously judged as a pathetic little upstart. After their
blissful summer together, Susanna departs for home. Alas, in a short while she
returns to Raintree, informing John she is going to have his child. More from a
sense of duty than love, John weds Susanna, leaving Nell devastated. The
newlyweds make their pilgrimage South to visit Susanna’s family. She takes John
for a buggy ride to the old plantation, her ancestral home, long-since
destroyed by fire. John begins to piece together the mystery surrounding this
blaze. Susanna’s cousin, Bobby (Tom Drake) informs John that Susanna’s claim,
she was only a baby at the time of the fire, is a lie. Susanna was nine-years-old.
Furthermore, Susanna’s father and the slave, Henrietta, whom Susanna loved
dearly as her mammy, were suspected of being sexually involved – their
exposure, causing Susanna’s mother to go insane and quite possibly, to have set
the blaze that killed them all.
Unnerved by these findings, John desires to take
Susanna back to Raintree. He is also quite aware his abolitionist views are
unfashionable with her family. Susanna, however, is quite comfortable in New
Orleans, surrounding herself with a collection of dolls, one of which is
charred, but otherwise survived the plantation fire. Susanna initially refuses
to return with John to Raintree. However, after confessing that she lied about
her pregnancy because she desperately wanted to marry him, he confides he has
since grown to love her deeply and will never leave her side. Imbued with this
confidence, Susanna agrees to ‘go home’ with John. But she keeps a watchful eye
on Nell, goading her into keeping her distance. Meanwhile, descension between
the North and South ferments. John finds work as an educator. Prof. Stiles is
found out in his affair with Lydia and narrowly saved from a mob lynching by
John, who escorts him to the train depot. Susanna, pregnant for real this time,
gives birth to their only son, Jimmy (first played by Donald Losby, then Mickey
Maga). Although John has pledged not to leave his wife to enlist in the war, by
its third year, Susanna’s severe paranoia, wild delusions, and panicked bouts
of forgetfulness have driven John to distraction. Even Susanna’s attempt to
free her slave girls, keeping them on for wages at John’s insistence, is ruined
when Garwood and other guests attending the surprise party in John’s honor,
find Susanna’s gesture, amusing at best. Returning home one afternoon, John is
informed by his mother, Ellen (Agnes Moorehead), Susanna has fled to her family’s
plantation in Georgia with Jimmy.
Determined to bring his family home, John enlists in
the Union Army where he is reunited with Flash and the Professor, each having
previously joined the fight. Flash and John capture a Confederate officer (DeForest
Kelley). John also stumbles upon the decaying remnants of Susanna’s family
home, seemingly deserted. After discovering a dying slave in the upstairs
bedroom, John also realizes one of Susanna’s slave girls, Parthenia (Ruth
Attaway) is hiding in the attic with Jimmy. Father and son reunited, John –
along with Flash – begin the arduous journey back to the relative safety of
their army base camp. Alas, they are ambushed in the dark. Flash is mortally
wounded, nobly to act as a decoy for the advancing rebels while John, with
Jimmy on his back, sprints to base camp. Learning of Susanna’s institutionalization
in an asylum, John locates his wife in a squalid little hospital cell and
coaxes her into believing he will take care of her from now on. At this
juncture, Lincoln is assassinated. As the train cortege carrying the President’s
remains passes through Raintree County, Prof. Stiles encourages John to seek public
office. Garwood infers he will also run, leading John to denounce him once and
for all as a rank opportunist who would do nothing to selfishly crave the
spotlight. Although Nell, John’s father (Walter Abel) and the Professor implore
John to reconsider his future, John staunchly refuses. Realizing his sacrifices
are because of her, Susanna sets out in the dead of night to find the raintree
from long ago, believing this will satisfy and liberate John to pursue his
destiny. Unable to sleep, Jimmy follows his mother into the swamp. A search
party is organized, only to discover Susanna’s lifeless body near the edge of
the property, apparently drowned, early the next morning. Jimmy, however, has fallen
asleep under the raintree. A grateful John and Nell find the boy and take him
home, presumably to begin their lives together at long last, leaving the whereabouts
of the raintree, prominently glinting in the sunshine, a mystery for all time.
To suggest MGM had some very high hopes riding on Raintree
County is putting things mildly. Indeed, Dore Schary’s entire future rested
squarely on its success. Throughout the 1950’s, despite some very fine movies
still being made under his auspices, the studio was embroiled in a slow, but
steady downward spiral. Bad timing, and Schary’s executive decision to
gradually prune Mayer’s galvanized star system, breaking it down to bedrock by
the end of the decade, resulted in costlier projects being produced on a
picture-by-picture basis. From this vantage, Raintree County can be
perceived as both a throwback to that lush Mayer/Thalberg era for which Metro
was justly celebrated, but also, a great opportunity for Schary to truly show
off the technological advances that had evolved since the era of Gone with
the Wind – making his Southern epic the preeminent leader of the pack. Alas,
this was not to be. For although an early assembled 3hr./6 min. roadshow rough
cut, shown in Santa Barbara as a ‘sneak peek’ prevue, and, attended by Dmytryk,
Lewis, Joseph Vogel, and various ‘yes’ men at the studio, received favorable
feedback from 1,100 spectators, almost immediately, the decision was made to
reshoot various scenes and add a few new ones to crystalize and smooth out the
transitions in the plot. The news was less encouraging when Raintree County
had its official premiere in Kentucky in Oct. 1957. In a whirlwind gala, designed
to outdo Selznick’s original Atlanta premiere for Gone with the Wind,
Schary’s climax of cotillions, parades and parties, including a costume ball at
Freedom Hall, culminated in a rather tepid, to downright frosty, reception of
the picture. Immediately thereafter, Raintree County lost 15 minutes of
exposition for its wide release, the real/reel beginning of the end for its
screen immortality.
Decried as a historical soap opera, and generally
savaged by the nation’s top critics as beginning in abject tedium, only to
conclude on 168-minutes of leaden apathy, Raintree County entered the annals
of film history as a weighty tome to that bygone era in picture-making,
seemingly already dead, if not as yet quite buried by Schary’s thinly veiled
and elephantine forced march to make it the greatest Civil War epic of all time.
Yet, in hindsight, what seems to have left most of this aristocracy of pundits mildly
miffed to thoroughly perturbed is not that Schary dared to emulate and compete
with the success of Selznick’s Southern super-colossus, rather, that in pitch and
personality, his offering failed to reflect or even bask in the afterglow of
that irrefutably grand and justly celebrated marathon of yore. Herein, Johnny
Green’s underscoring for the picture served as a reminder Raintree County
was not GWTW – from the outset of its proud and lustful overture, seems
to herald an experience quite ‘un-Wind’ like, and furthermore, to
firmly anchor the picture in its own time capsule of fading fifties’ ‘contemporary’
film scores – introduced by a pop tune, interpolated thereafter as the underlying
anthem, with rarely a whiff of the ‘old South’ about it. From its unusually
succinct main title sequence, set to Green’s explosive flourish of resplendent
brass under Leo the Lion, almost immediately to retreat into an intimate ballad,
romantically warbled with bittersweet passion by Nat King Cole, Raintree
County offered no illusion or misdirection for the audience that the next 2
½ hours were an excursion into the heart of lost opportunities, tinged in a sincerely
flawed, if valiantly expressed sentimental yearning for the regality of that
land of ‘cavaliers and cotton fields’, mythologized out of proportion in Gone
with the Wind, yet queerly counterbalanced in Raintree County by its
underlying dissention towards slavery, as expressed by the film’s protagonist,
John Shawnessey.
From the outset, Montgomery Clift’s character is
uncomfortably situated into this culture, curiously to have split its
self-professed pride between the mannered stature of opining Southern gentlemen,
as depicted by Rod Taylor’s Garwood, and the more crudely hewn rough-houser, best
embodied herein by Lee Marvin, whose entire stature is built upon his physical
ability to outfox, outrun, and out-perform the competition. Clift’s Johnny thus
remains the anomaly – an introspective fellow, benignly attracted and made
attractive to Elizabeth Taylor’s mentally failing belle, and yet, completely
incapable of adapting into the world from whence she derives. Hence, Johnny’s determination
to make his wife accept the fast-advancing obsolescence of her decaying Southern
gentility only serves to hasten her steep emotional decline. A daughter of that
stately and structured vintage, there is no place for Susanna in the ‘new’
South. And yet, with or without her, there appears to be nowhere Clift’s Johnny
could ever unearth the sort of blind-sighted optimism that would thoroughly
satisfy his simplest desire, merely to live contented in his beloved Raintree
County. Johnny’s initial pursuit of the mythical ‘raintree’ – left undiscovered
in the end – speaks to his present, and ongoing dissatisfaction with life as he
knows it, thus addressing one of life’s enduring apothegm; that, in a world full
of men driven by their ambitions, the man who is dictated to by his own code of
honor is doomed to remain an island unto himself. Indeed, the finale to Raintree County
bears this out, with Johnny, mournful over the loss of his wife, almost
immediately reconciled with gratitude his young son has survived. Johnny will
be contented now to rear the boy, perhaps, with Nell’s doting complicity as the
embodiment of that rather passionless and doe-eyed innocence he only thought he
had left behind.
Arguably, the cinematic Raintree County, having
veered considerably from Lockridge’s authorship, was never meant to be a sprawling
epic, rather, an intimate tale of love and loss, regrettably tricked out in all
the finery MGM could muster at the tail end of their picture-making supremacy.
For certain, the lion’s share of criticism must reside with screen writer,
Millard Kaufman’s brutal inability to find a more engaging way of transferring Lockridge’s
intellectual reflections to this proscenium in more cinematic terms. Blame
should also go to director, Edward Dmytryk, who – despite an enviable career in
pictures – spectacularly fails to bring cohesion to the latter half of this
movie. Instead, and with very few scenes devoted expressly to ‘show’ rather
than ‘tell’, Raintree County quickly devolves into a series of talkative
mediations, debates and contemplations, ferociously devoted to extolling the
virtues in Lockridge’s prose, yet curiously unwilling to concede that in order
to maintain a precise level of fidelity to that work, movies more readily, and
far more successfully executed than Raintree County must endeavor to
depart along their own artistic line of inquiry, ironically to reach their happy
symbiosis somewhere in the middle between these disparate artistic mediums. Regrettably,
this synergy is never brokered in the picture. Nevertheless, Raintree County
endures as a landmark in film-scoring, thanks to Johnny Green’s invested perquisite
to will an unabashedly sentimental and sweeping orchestral magnum opus from its
ashes, ironically with its orchestral bridges tethered to the human dynamics of
its love triangle rather than the historical trappings which serve as its
framework. Green’s extraordinary musicianship is a deviation from the reigning blockbuster
mentality of the period. Instead, his score preps the first-time viewer for a
psychologically complex melodrama, never to evolve dramatically on the screen,
but with a rare sophistication that melds the full breadth of MGM’s classically-trained
studio orchestra with less likely atmospheric tomes that serve as musical
counterpoints to the action on the screen. When all else fails, these subtler
investments continue to haunt from the peripheries of the screen for almost the
picture’s entire runtime, illustrating Green’s remarkable command of the
material.
Upon its release, Raintree County was met with
considerable interest from the public. Yet, despite this, the movie’s crippling
budget practically ensured its inability to turn a profit. Instead, Raintree
County would go on MGM’s ledgers as a shameful box office bomb. So, why did
Dore Schary elect to make Raintree County? Very near the start of his
tenure at Metro, Schary had backed another movie about the war between the
states, John Huston’s The Red Badge of Courage (1951) against L.B. Mayer’s
strenuous objections to kill the project. Foreshadowing Raintree’s
implosion at the box office, The Red Badge of Courage also lost money
for the studio – barely earning $1,080,000 on its $1,673,000 outlay. And even
though the losses on Raintree County were no more catastrophic – the picture
fell short by $484,000 – what really sounded the death knell for Schary’s tenure
at MGM was the absence of a viable scapegoat on which to either pin, or merely
explain away the hemorrhaging of badly needed capital. In 1951, Mayer’s then
relatively recent ousting precluded the New York offices from pointing the
finger for The Red Badge of Courage’s failure squarely at Schary,
despite the fact Mayer had vehemently fought both Huston and Schary’s verve to
produce the picture. With no one else to blame, Raintree County was distinctly
Schary’s mistake – unforgivable and worthy of another palace coup. In the wake
of Schary’s departure, bean-counter, Benny Thau assumed the reigns of MGM – a disaster
for the studio, best left to another time and another discussion to fully
comprehend. As for Schary, one-time
studio alumni, Esther Williams would later glibly assess, that despite his many
failings, and her distinct dislike of the man, it was rather cruel of MGM’s
parent company, Loews Incorporated to fire him on Thanksgiving Day since, by
Williams’ own assessment, he was ‘the turkey’. Somewhat prophetically,
L.B. Mayer died of leukemia on Oct. 29th, 1957, just 25 days after Raintree
County’s gallant premiere, and almost a year to the day of Schary’s dismissal
from the studio. Interestingly, the last 3 movies Schary personally supervised
for MGM – 1956’s The Swan, and, The Last Hunt, and 1957’s Designing
Woman, all lost money – an unlucky streak, later remedied when Schary
proved he still had a showman’s eye for popular entertainment, producing
several smash hits on Broadway, including Sunrise at Campobello (1958-59)
and The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1960), each, later turned into highly
successful movies – the latter, at MGM. In reflecting on this turbulent time, studio
contract player, June Allyson suggested that when Mayer died “he took the
studio with him…so he didn’t really lose in the end.”
As for Raintree County, since its theatrical
release, the movie has remained curiously inconspicuous on television and home
video. While it did receive two ‘deluxe’ home video debuts, the first as a double-VHS
cassette offering in 1984, followed by a 2-disc LaserDisc the following year, both
under a licensing agreement with Ted Turner, then, the custodian of the MGM
library, and released under the MGM/UA banner, for decades now, the only way to
see Raintree County has been on cable television, usually in its
truncated form. Turner Classic Movies (TCM), a bastion for movie lovers everywhere, has
long-since made Raintree County a main staple of its programming schedule.
But Warner Home Video, the current keepers of the flame, have been rather
remiss in committing to a release either on standard DVD or Blu-ray. Usually,
such delays and/or absences of time-honored motion pictures on home video are
attributed to the issue of rights, as in Otto Preminger’s 1946 production of Centennial
Summer, inveigled in a dispute with the estate of composer, Jerome Kern, or
Preminger’s 1959, 70mm adaptation of Porgy and Bess, rather idiotically
held up by the fact, producer, Samuel Goldwyn’s lease expired 15 years after
the picture was made, with all rights reverting to the Gershwin and Heyward
estates, who have repeated refused licensing it to home video, marking it as
one of the most prestigious ‘lost films’ from the 1950’s. No such copyright has delayed Raintree
County – the property, along with the rest of the MGM library, acquired by
Warner Media from Ted Turner’s holdings in the late-1990’s. The official response
to any and all queries for Raintree County to have its official debut in
hi-def are met with arguments the original camera negatives are in a perilous
state of decomposition, further afflicted by vinegar syndrome, from whence no
proper video master can be struck of the complete 188-min. roadshow, but arguably,
also, the foreshortened 166-min. theatrical cut, without incurring considerable
expense to perform a full-on restoration.
Rather valiantly, Warner’s genuine commitment to its
vintage catalog has yielded an admirable spate of hand-selected titles,
restored and remastered from the ground up before marking their home video
release in hi-def. Many of these titles were
properly curated throughout the infancy of the home video revolution, with a
considerable investment to time and money, but also chronic tinkering as new
restoration and preservation techniques beyond the photochemical became
available, resulting in a gradual outlay of capital to get the job done. As Raintree
County has not seen a video upgrade since the mid-1980’s, in these
forty-plus years since to have passed, whatever assets the studio is holding
must, indeed, be considered of a delicate and inferior quality, and hopelessly
outdated by now, undeniably due for a prestigious complete overhaul. As Raintree
County’s ‘reputation’ has continued to morph and mature over this same timeline,
the movie that fell out of favor with critics in 1957, and failed to maintain its
popularity in the years to immediately follow its release, in more recent times
has begun to grow in stature, thanks to a select and ardent group of admirers. Perhaps,
even more than Elizabeth Taylor’s later colossus from the sixties – Cleopatra
(1963) – a movie, also to have been deciphered by the critics as a stinker,
despite its sell-out crowds and formidable box office take, the cultural renaissance
for Raintree County may indeed be just around the corner. Will the
picture ever see the light of day in hi-def? While fans continue to flood online
message and discussion boards with memories and requests, Warner Home Video,
and its ‘archive’ appendage, remain circumspect about what the future may bring.
Whatever awaits on the horizon, few can deny the picture’s fascinating, if
sincerely troubled past.
Comments
I think the worst performances in the picture are owed Clift, perhaps, not entirely by choice, and Eva Marie Saint, who really sulks for much too much runtime and pines for Clift for an interminable period. Her doe-eyed ingenue is weak, but again, the part is rather thankless and dull. Totally agree about Lee Marvin - what a marvelous talent. I don't think I've ever seen him give a bad performance, but this one is Raintree's standout for sure!
I think Rod Taylor is overlooked. His Garwood is wonderfully cynical and slick - the epitome of the 'ugly American' for sure. My first viewing of Raintree was long ago. I was either ten or eleven - an impressionable age when just about everything seems to settle into the 'good' category because you really haven't formed any genuine taste and have little experience to compare with others. I saw it again in a second year university film class and was wholly unimpressed.
But then, suffering from a virulent bout of the flu, I caught it on TCM in 2001. It was February, and snowing heavily and I felt awful. And the movie, not only held my interest, but it made me forget for its duration that I was feeling so low. I grew to appreciate the picture then, not as fine film making, but ambitiously mounted, thoroughly flawed studio product in which, despite all the pistons firing in unison, the results never came together as they should. I suppose I am a bit of a sucker for lost opportunities, and with so much on tap here, the failure of the picture to gel as it ought seems even more the grand tragedy than the machinations taking place on the screen.
I find the backstory to Raintree fascinating as well, as it was made under the most uncertain times MGM had faced since the death of Irving Thalberg in 1936. Dore Schary's decision to make one of the studios most lavishly appointed spectacles in an era prone to them, but also from a producer who generally despised this sort of ostentatiousness, is its own curiosity. Could L.B. Mayer have done it better? We'll never know.
I've also read the novel, Raintree County several times from cover to cover and still think that with the right screenwriter and cast it would make a very fine epic, or a wonderful miniseries in the grand tradition of John Jakes' North and South. Will some producer deign to tackle such a project in the future. Given the current climate in America where anything to even hint of the Civil War and slavery is seen as racist at a glance (thoroughly disagree with this assessment), the likelihood that Raintree County will be remade anytime soon is even less promising than anticipating the original will ever be considered 'a classic' in the truest sense of the word.
While I don't love the movie, and don't ever expect to in the future, I do have a soft spot for it and continue to watch it occasionally whenever TCM airs it on a night when I'm not otherwise engaged. It's a good B-movie for a cold winter's night, with zero expectations to ever even think of comparing it to Selznick's 1939 masterpiece. Don't, and you may find nuggets of joy to be gleaned from Raintree County, even if they never sparkle with the luster of true gold. Just thoughts, my friend. Take them for what they're worth.
The roadshow edition of Raintree is in a perilous state of disrepair. So, good luck ever seeing the full cut in hi-def. Although, I would have said as much about The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm and lookie/lookie. A Blu-ray, restored and in Smile-box no less has emerged. Important to note, although Raintree was photographed in MGM Camera 65, it appears all theatrical prints were dumbed down to standard anamorphic 35mm film stock.
Original elements do survive. But they look like hell and need major consideration. I'm sure if there is a home video God somewhere, then he presides over the Warner Archive. So, perhaps, Raintree will make its debut on Blu one day. I just wouldn't aim for it in the near future. Regrets.