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Counsellor at Law

 
Movies:

Counsellor-At-Law

  • Director: William Wyler
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Psychological Drama, Romantic Drama
  • Themes: Midlife Crises, Class Differences, Office Politics
  • Main Cast: John Barrymore, Bebe Daniels, Doris Kenyon, Onslow Stevens, Isabel Jewell
  • Release Year: 1933
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 78 minutes

Plot

Adapted from the play by Elmer Rice, Counsellor-at-Law is the story of a successful Jewish lawyer George Simon (John Barrymore) who finds it's lonely at the top. Simon's wife (Doris Kenyon) and children look down upon him because of his humble upbringings, while his mother reprimands him for turning his back on his heritage. Simon is threatened with disbarment when a rival digs up a big wormy can of legal wrongdoing in Simon's past, but this is only the beginning of the end. When the beleaguered lawyer discovers that his wife has been unfaithful, he looks out the window of his Empire State Building office and contemplates suicide. Simon is brought to his senses by his faithful secretary (Bebe Daniels), who has loved him all along. Filled with vivid character vignettes and blessed with energetic direction by William Wyler, Counsellor-at-Law is one of the best "lawyer" films of the 1930s. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Melvyn Douglas - Roy Darwin; Marvin Kline - Herbert Weinberg; John Qualen - Breitstein; Clara Langsner - Lena Simon; T.H. Manning - Peter J. Malone; Vincent Sherman - Harry Becker; Frederick Burton - Crayfield; Bobby Gordon - Henry Susskind; Mayo Methot - Zedorah Chapman; Barbara Perry - Dorothy; Thelma Todd - Lillian La Rue; Richard Quine - Richard; Victor Adams - David Simon

Credit

William Wyler - Director, Dan Mandell - Editor, Charles Hall - Production Designer, Norbert F. Brodin - Cinematographer, Carl Laemmle, Jr. - Producer, Henry Henigson - Producer, Elmer Rice - Screenwriter, Elmer Rice - Play Author

Similar Movies

Dead End; One Third of a Nation; Winterset
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American Theater Guide: Counsellor-At-Law
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Counsellor‐At‐Law (1931), a play by Elmer Rice. [ Plymouth Theatre, 397 perf.] George Simon (Paul Muni) is an aggressive Lower East Sider who has clawed his way just about as far as a Jew could go in the legal profession of his day. With a probable eye to inching a few steps further, he marries a prominent, if cold, socialite. But his career is jeopardized when a bigoted society lawyer discovers that years before Simon had falsified evidence in a case. At the same time his wife runs off to Europe with her lover. Simon would jump from a window, but with the help of his sympathetic secretary, Regina (Anna Kostant), he unearths incriminating material about the society lawyer, presses him into silence, and concludes he can lead a happy life with the loyal Regina. Although some critics felt there was a superfluity of characters, and that many of them verged on caricature, Robert Coleman spoke for the majority when he wrote of the play in the Daily News, “It has an inspired fire, a dramatic, compelling surge, a human realism and sufficient comedy relief.” The work was successfully revived in 1942.

Wikipedia: Counsellor at Law
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Counsellor at Law

Original poster
Directed by William Wyler
Produced by Carl Laemmle Jr.
Written by Elmer Rice
Starring John Barrymore
Bebe Daniels
Doris Kenyon
Cinematography Norbert Brodine
Editing by Daniel Mandell
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) December 11, 1933
Running time 82 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Counsellor at Law is a 1933 American drama film directed by William Wyler. The screenplay by Elmer Rice is based on his 1931 play of the same title.

Contents

Plot

The story focuses on several days in a critical juncture in the life of George Simon, who rose from his humble roots in a poor Jewish ghetto on the Lower East Side of Manhattan to become a shrewd, highly successful attorney. Earlier in his career, he allowed a guilty client to perjure himself on the witness stand because he believed the man could be rehabilitated if freed. Rival lawyer Francis Clark Baird has learned about the incident and is threatening to expose George, which will lead to his disbarment. The possibility of a public scandal horrifies his socialite wife Cora, who plans to flee to Europe with Roy Darwin. Devastated by his wife's infidelity, George is about to leap from the window of his office in the Empire State Building when his secretary Regina, who is in love with him, comes to his rescue.

Production

After directing a series of films he considered inconsequential, William Wyler was happy to be assigned to a prestigious project based on a play that had enjoyed successful runs on Broadway and in Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Producer Carl Laemmle Jr. paid $150,000 for the screen rights, an unusually high price tag during the Great Depression, and to ensure the film's success he hired Elmer Rice to adapt his own play.[1]

In early August 1933, Wyler met Rice in Mexico City, where he was vacationing with his family, for preliminary discussions about the script. Rice was loath to mix business with pleasure and assured the director he would begin working as soon as his holiday ended. On August 22, he shipped a first draft from his New York office to Universal Pictures. Wyler approved of the screenplay, and principal photography was slated to begin on September 8.[2]

Laemmle wanted to cast Paul Muni as George Simon, the role he had created on stage, but the actor declined because he feared being typecast as Jewish. Edward G. Robinson, Joseph Schildkraut, and William Powell were considered before Laemmle decide to cast against type and offer the role to John Barrymore in order to capitalize on his box office appeal. Both Wyler and Rice wanted to cast performers from the various stage productions, and although several screen tests were made, most of the roles were filled by studio contract players. Vincent Sherman, who had been in the Chicago production, was signed to reprise his small role of Harry Becker, a young radical with Communist leanings; he later became a prolific film and television director.[3]

Soon after filming began, Wyler realized much of the material Rice had excised from his play was necessary to build scenes, and he began incorporating it back into the screenplay. Eventually he worked with both the screenplay and play script at hand, a procedure he would follow when making The Little Foxes in later years.[4]

Barrymore had signed for $25,000 per week, and Wyler was ordered to film all his scenes as quickly as possible. What should have taken two weeks ultimately took three-and-a-half because the actor could not remember his lines. After taking twenty-seven takes to complete one brief scene, Wyler decided to resort to cue cards strategically placed around the set. Also adding to delays was Barrymore's heavy drinking, which frequently gave his face a puffy appearance that required the makeup crew to tape his jowls. Between dealing with Barrymore and trying to comply with Laemmle's demands to complete the film on schedule and within the allotted budget, Wyler was tense and irritable and tended to take out his frustrations on the supporting cast.[5]

Three months after filming began, the film opened to critical and commercial success at Radio City Music Hall on December 11, 1933.[6]

Cast

Critical reception

Mordaunt Hall of the New York Times said the film "moves along with lusty energy, the scenes being so complete that none of them seems a fraction of a minute too long. Parts of the stage work have perforce been omitted, but where this occurs Mr. Rice and the director, William Wyler, leave nothing in doubt." He praised Barrymore for giving his role "the vigor, imagination and authority one might expect" and added, "The characterization is believable and thoroughly sympathetic."[7]

The Hollywood Reporter said the film proved "the value of having a playwright adapt his own brainchild to the screen." It also praised Wyler for giving it "a far better tempo than the play possessed" and added, "He milks each situation and lets it go without stressing . . . many scenes which could easily have ensnared a less capable director."[8]

Years later, in a critique of Barrymore's career, Pauline Kael described his portrayal of George Simon as "one of the few screen roles that reveal his measure as an actor."[9]

Notes

  1. ^ Herman, p. 114
  2. ^ Herman, pp. 114-115
  3. ^ Herman, pp. 115-116
  4. ^ Herman, p. 115
  5. ^ Herman, pp. 116-118
  6. ^ Herman, p. 119
  7. ^ New York Times review
  8. ^ Herman, p. 119
  9. ^ Kael, p. 124

References

  • Herman, Jan, A Talent for Trouble: The Life of Hollywood's Most Acclaimed Director. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons 1995. ISBN 0-399-14012-3
  • Kael, Pauline, 5001 Nights at the Movies. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston 1984. ISBN 0-099-33550-6

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Counsellor at Law" Read more

 
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