

TWO LONG-WINDED, SELF-IMPORTANT BEST PICTURES FROM DECADES AGO: GENTLEMAN’S AGREEMENT, ALL THE KING’S MEN
It makes perfect sense that I watched Gentleman’s Agreement and All the King’s Men back-to-back on a cold December night, despite the fact that both pictures were made and first released in the first half of the twentieth century and that makes them both officially older than ‘boomer,’ a phrase sure to replace older than dirt in the lexicon.
Gentleman’s Agreement and All the King’s Men keep a certain relevance at this particular junction in time because their main issues — racism (Gentleman’s Agreement) and demagoguery (All the King’s Men) — have been major concerns throughout a turbulent 2020, once we get beyond the fact that we’re trying to get out of the year alive more than any other year.
Gentleman’s Agreement is one of those movies where the plot summary undoubtedly causes immediate discomfort in many of our fellow humans, “A reporter pretends to be Jewish in order to cover a story on anti-Semitism, and personally discovers the true depths of bigotry and hatred.” Boring, old hat subject matter, right? I am already sensing audible moans and groans from people who believe that racism does not exist or more precisely if racism does exist, it’s ultimately marginal and distorted beyond all reason by evil liberal media and evil liberal politicians setting their ultimate agenda — all-out Race War. Hoax — a humorous or malicious deception — made a huge comeback in 2020 for, let’s see here, at least approximately 75 million Americans, who have been seen and heard (rather quite clearly) blasting this, blasting that as hoax this, hoax that, especially anything and everything related to COVID-19. If it’s not hoax, it’s conspiracy and it’s reached a point where I don’t even want to even come across the latter word any longer. Once is all that I will aid and abet it writing this piece.
During Gentleman’s Agreement, I flashed back on Lester Bangs’ White Noise Supremacists from Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung, particularly the moment in the article when Bangs gets to the contradictory, sometimes nasty gist of a human being, “Whereas you don’t have to try at all to be a racist. It’s a little coiled clot of venom lurking there in all of us, white and black, goy and Jew, ready to strike out when we feel embattled, belittled, brutalized. Which is why it has to be monitored, made taboo and restrained, by society and the individual.” With the availability of social (antisocial) media, broadcasting thoughts and feelings potentially to a mass audience with one click of the mouse, it certainly does feel like there’s never been a more venomous year in history than 2020.
Gentleman’s Agreement, based on the Laura Z. Hobson novel of the same name and the same year as the prestigious motion picture adaptation, nearly talks itself (and its audience) to death. Of all the thousands and thousands of words spoken during Gentleman’s Agreement, I’d like to hone in on Gregory Peck’s dialogue late in the picture, “I’ve come to see lots of nice people who hate it and deplore it and protest their own innocence, then help it along and wonder why it grows. People who would never beat up a Jew. People who think anti-Semitism is far away in some dark place with low-class morons. That’s the biggest discovery I’ve made. The good people. The nice people.”
Then again, maybe we’re not so good, not so nice.
Over the last dozen years, it’s been disturbing to see and hear not only the return but the prominence of poisonous ideas and emotions. I first noticed it back in August 2008, returning to Southeast Kansas from a two-week vacation in Oregon to be gobsmacked by a phenomenon. Keep in mind this was a couple weeks before Barack Obama formally received the nomination for President, but “Death to Obama” graffiti started cropping up in Southeast Kansas and Southwest Missouri. IN BIG LETTERS, just to get the point across ever more forcefully. Obama being half-Black proved to be more than enough and his undoing for many, even before our 44th President took office.
Growing up, I remember the Ku Klux Klan and Neo-Nazis being routinely made the butts of jokes on talk shows and in motion picture entertainments. They had considerably lost their power. They became tools in ridiculous outfits with philosophies and practices long past their sell date. We had dispelled their poison from our collective hearts and minds, or so many of us wrongly thought.
After the election of first Obama and then Donald Trump, extremist organizations came back louder and nastier than ever before. Obama gave them a target and Trump a platform for their poison, although other individuals and groups use Trump for their target. They’re mad as hell about this and that and they’re not going to take it anymore. They also seem to be here to stay, unfortunately, and proud and loud, even more unfortunately, because they seem bent on drowning out and even silencing alternative voices by any means possible. They want the world, and they want it now.
At this point, before I forget and get tangled in a tangent, I should mention what I liked best about Gentleman’s Agreement: Celeste Holm steals every scene that she’s in and Peck and child actor Dean Stockwell must have had a great working relationship because their scenes together work better than the majority of the rest of the picture.
— Near the end of All the King’s Men, it being past her bedtime and everything, my wife entered the room, laid down, encountered the political talk and the crowd scenes emanating from the screen to her immediate left, and asked me point blank, “Are you watching this movie because of the election?”
I told her, “No. Just a coincidence.”
Yeah, no more and no less than a mere happy coincidence that I watched Gentleman’s Agreement and All the King’s Men back-to-back, just because they won Best Picture for their particular years and not because they concern two of the three hot button issues of The Now.
Let’s get down to brass tacks.
Comparisons have been made between Huey Long — the inspiration for the fictional Willie Stark in both the 1946 Robert Penn Warren novel and the 1949 film adaptation — and Donald Trump, since our 45th President began his political ascendance several years ago.
On Sept. 10, 1935, Dr. Carl Weiss shot and killed Long at the Louisiana State Capitol. Long wrote a fictional novel called My First Days in the White House, posthumously released.
Trump became President and wrote his Russian hack novel 280 characters at a time, most of them disputed since Nov. 3, 2020.
What kind of populist loses the popular vote twice? Once more and Trump could match William Jennings Bryan. Though, between all the recounts and frivolous lawsuits (1-59 in court with their preponderance of preposterous evidence) and cult rallies after the election, Trump has already surpassed Bryan. Bryan never had Jon Voight and Randy Quaid and Scott Baio and James Woods on his side, not to mention all the politicians and “entertainers” on state TV stirring up sedition, but Fredric March played lawyer and former politician Matthew Harrison Brady — based on Bryan — in Stanley Kramer’s Inherit the Wind, a 1960 film based on the 1955 play based on the 1925 Scopes Trial, so beat that.
Outgoing Michigan Republican Congressman Paul Mitchell said it best, “Stop the stupid.”
As far as All the King’s Men goes, it mirrors demagoguery in that it’s more compelling in the beginning and end stages and something that believers and nonbelievers alike attempt to survive in between. Of course, All the King’s Men proved to be considerably easier than 2020.
Since I just want to survive 2020, that’s why I should never tell a Trump supporter, “You’ve aroused my anthropological curiosity.” Oops, guess I let that one slip. Oh well.




