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Message from Dean - May 8th 2007
I am currently testing out a new version of the APF Bridge Component - If you notice any errors within this demo store please drop me a line.
List Price: $14.95Price: $7.00 You Save: $7.95 (53%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 9786302120622
Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, NTSC
ISBN: 6302120624
Label: MGM / UA
Languages: EnglishOriginal LanguageAnalog
Manufacturer: MGM / UA
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: MGM / UA
Release Date: February 11, 1997
Running Time: 128 minutes
Studio: MGM / UA
Theatrical Release Date: November 01, 1960
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Editorial Review:
Amazon.com essential video: Two of the juiciest roles in the American theater fall at the feet of Spencer Tracy and Fredric March, and both men make a meal of it. Inherit the Wind, based on the play by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee, is a slightly fictionalized account of the Scopes Monkey Trial, that galvanizing legal drama of the 1920s. When a young Tennessee teacher is prosecuted for teaching the theory of evolution in a public school, he receives unwanted public attention as well as the legal advice of a giant. Tracy plays the role based on Clarence Darrow, the eloquent defense attorney, and March storms his way through a part based on Williams Jennings Bryan, the failed presidential candidate (and famed orator) who prosecuted the case. Gene Kelly plays a character based on the acid-penned H.L. Mencken, reporting on the trial and caustically commenting on the absurdity of the human animal. Stanley (Judgment at Nuremberg) Kramer's direction is not especially subtle, but the verbal fireworks unleashed during the trial sequences are still stirring. Even the different styles of the actors are intriguing: March is all mannerism and false padding around the belly, while Tracy does his patented naturalistic grumbling. It would be nice if this story were a quaint period piece, but its issues and arguments keep reemerging in the headlines with each new generation. --Robert Horton
Average Rating: 
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The Bottom Line:
Inherit the Wind has interesting scenes, but consistently undermines them by piling on so much drama and excess that by the end it merely seems to consist of people yelling at each other; the film isn't terrible, but it doesn't make the most of a promising cast or subject.
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The cast is incomparable; when Gene Kelly is only a supporting actor, you know that something special is in store for you. The camera work is wonderful. The dialogue is truly memorable. One can quote Tracy from any one of a number of scenes.
And the theme is VERY much current and provocative. Let this movie prod your thoughts about what happens when Biblical texts are misused as scientific material for science classes in school instead of as shapers of faith in an OT class in a seminary.
This movie can be watched over and over; fresh truth will rise up from it every time.
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This is the second in my "series" of films for which I am truly thankful, the problem with that being that it is the first one that most of you will be reading. Such is life. In my first review, which was actually more of a thumbnail appreciation of the original production of THE THING (a film that literally shaped the rest of my life), I mentioned that there was another film that had taught me an important lesson at the age of 12, one that I hope I will carry with me for the rest of my life. Well, INHERIT THE WIND is that film.
Directed by Stanley Kramer, INHERIT THE WIND gives us a very fictionalized account of the infamous Scopes Monkey Trial in which a man was tried and convicted for teaching Darwin's theory of evolution in a Tennessee school. Virtually all of the names and locations have been changed as have many of the pertinent facts because this was never intended to be anything more than a work of historical fiction through which the director and the screenwriters ... Read More
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This is an excellent adaption of a great American play, although a bit over-acted, especially by Fredric March. There is absolutely nothing subtle about his performance. I also found Gene Kelly's performance to be quite good. I think his character should be found to be just as annoying as March's, just as self-righteous in his own way. The ending of the movie is one of my favorites... with Drummond slapping the 2 books together as 1 when he walks out. That to me is the most important message of the movie, that science and religion can work together.
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I've been watching a number of Spencer Tracy films recently, having become friendly with someone who knew him. His warm yet laconic style brings something special to every part, and this great movie is no exception. Court dramas have a special appeal of their own and for some reason this reminds me of A Few Good Men - maybe because the action centres around the unexpected performance of a key witness. I especially like the informal style of the 1920s courthouse, with bias on view throughout the whole proceedings. Tracy retains his cool, helped by a brilliant cast who create one those memorable moments in cinema when Frederic March cracks under pressure. Watch for a great piece of work from Gene Kelly and Harry Morgan as the oh-so plausible judge. It's just over $7 on Amazon - much cheaper than a movie ticket.
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