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MEET JOHN DOE (DVD)                                           NLA DVD Movie

MEET JOHN DOE (DVD) NLA DVD



PN: 090328903015     Release: 06/29/2004
Starring: Gary Cooper, Barbara Stanwyck, Edward Arnold
Director(s): Frank Capra


Meet John Doe
The first of director Frank Capra's independent productions (in partnership with Robert Riskin), Meet John Doe begins with the end of reporter Ann Mitchell's (Barbara Stanwyck) job. Fired as part of a downsizing move, she ends her last column with an imaginary letter written by "John Doe." Angered at the ill treatment of America's little people, the fabricated Doe announces that he's going to jump off City Hall on Christmas Eve. When the phony letter goes to press, it causes a public sensation. Seeking to secure her job, Mitchell talks her managing editor (James Gleason) into playing up the John Doe letter for all it's worth; but to ward off accusations from rival papers that the letter was bogus, they decide to hire someone to pose as John Doe: a ballplayer-turned-hobo (Gary Cooper), who'll do anything for three squares and a place to sleep. "John Doe" and his traveling companion The Colonel (Walter Brennan) are ensconced in a luxury hotel while Mitchell continues churning out chunks of John Doe philosophy. When newspaper publisher D.B. Norton (Edward Arnold), a fascistic type with presidential aspirations, decides to use Doe as his ticket to the White House, he puts Doe on the radio to deliver inspirational speeches to the masses -- ghost-written by Mitchell, who, it is implied, has become the publisher's mistress. The central message of the Doe speeches is "Love Thy Neighbor," though, conceived in cynicism, the speeches strike so responsive a chord with the public that John Doe clubs pop up all over the country. Believing he is working for the good of America, Cooper agrees to front the National John Doe Movement -- until he discovers that Norton plans to exploit Doe in order to create a third political party and impose a virtual dictatorship on the country. The last of Capra's "social statement" films, Meet John Doe posted a profit, although Capra and Riskin were forced to dissolve their corporation due to excessive taxes. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Cast
Gary Cooper as Long John Willoughby
Barbara Stanwyck as Ann Mitchell
Edward Arnold as D.B. Norton
Walter Brennan as The Colonel
Spring Byington as Mrs. Mitchell
James Gleason as Henry Connell
Gene Lockhart as Mayor Lovett
Rod La Rocque as Ted Sheldon
Irving Bacon as Beany
Regis Toomey as Bert Hansen
John Farrell MacDonald as Sourpuss Smithers
Warren Hymer as Angelface
Harry Holman as Mayor Hawkins
Andrew Tombes as Spencer
Pierre Watkin as Hammett
Stanley Andrews as Weston
Mitchell Lewis as Bennett
Charles Wilson as Charlie Dawson
Vaughan Glaser as Governor
Sterling Holloway as Dan
Mike J. Frankovich as Radio Announcer
Knox Manning as Radio Announcer at Convention
John B. Hughes as Radio Announcers at Convention
Crew
Stephen Goosson - Art Director
Natalie Visart - Costume Designer
Arthur S. Black, Jr. - First Assistant Director
Frank Capra - Director
Dan Mandell - Editor
Dimitri Tiomkin - Composer (Music Score)
Leo F. Forbstein - Musical Direction/Supervision
George Barnes - Cinematographer
Frank Capra - Producer
Jack Cosgrove - Special Effects
C.A. Riggs - Sound/Sound Designer
Richard Connell - Screen Story
Robert R. Presnell, Sr. - Screen Story
Robert R. Presnell, Sr. - Screenwriter
Robert Riskin - Screenwriter
Richard Connell - Screenwriter

Meet John Doe
Meet John Doe is the Frank Capra movie that spoke most directly to the mood of the United States at the time that it was made. It's a fundamentally pessimistic film, without a positive resolution, and also an astonishingly mature movie -- virtually groundbreaking as a "message" movie aimed at a mainstream audience. Appearing in 1940, it closed out a decade that had been dominated by despair, disillusionment, dislocation (economic and personal), and desperation, a period characterized by a reliance on often inept government officials or duplicitous would-be leaders. All of these elements are present in Meet John Doe from its opening scene (a mass layoff at a newspaper), and they get addressed over and over again as the plot unfolds. The movie also had the courage to put some very attractive stars -- Gary Cooper and Barbara Stanwyck -- in some very unattractive roles, as two people putting over a huge fraud on a public that trusts them. It wasn't considered a very successful film in its own time, being a little too dark and mature amid the ominous reality of the European war being waged at the time, but it is probably the best of Capra's "message" pictures and his best slice-of-life drama other than It Happened One Night. One scene, in which Cooper's Long John Willoughby tries to address the crowd and is cut off, was mimicked (some would say perverted) in real life during the 1980 presidential campaign, when Ronald Reagan defiantly resisted being cut off during the New Hampshire debates. It was life imitating art, and Reagan played it even better than Cooper did in the movie. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
 
James Gleason: National Board of Review, Best Acting (winner)
Richard Connell: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scie, Best Original Story (nominated)
Robert Presnell, Jr.: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scie, Best Original Story (nominated)

 

General Specifications:

Language Options:
Subtitle Options:
Sound Processing:2: PCM stereo
Additional Features:
MPAA Rating:
DVD Discs Included:1
DVD Sides:1
DVD DVD Region Code:All
Content Length:122 min
 

DVD Chapters:

Disc #1 -- Meet John Doe
2. Chapter 1 [19:57]
3. Chapter 2 [20:01]
4. Chapter 3 [20:57]
5. Chapter 4 [20:01]
6. Chapter 5 [21:16]


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