Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

The Crucible

 
Movies:

The Crucible

  • Director: Nicholas Hytner
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Historical Film
  • Movie Type: Message Movie, Courtroom Drama
  • Themes: Miscarriage of Justice, Infidelity, Servants and Employers
  • Main Cast: Daniel Day-Lewis, Winona Ryder, Paul Scofield, Joan Allen, Bruce Davison
  • Release Year: 1996
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 123 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

When Arthur Miller's play The Crucible was first staged in 1953, it was widely acclaimed as a metaphor for the recklessness of Joseph McCarthy and his spurious crusade against communism. In its 1996 screen adaptation (scripted by Miller), the tone has been adjusted somewhat and plays as a warning against the dangers of political and religious extremism of all kinds. After a group of young women is accused of witchcraft in the Puritan community of Salem, Mass. in 1692, Abigail Williams (Winona Ryder) is held in suspicion of practicing magic. Abigail in turn levels charges against John Proctor (Daniel Day-Lewis) and his wife Elizabeth (Joan Allen). Abigail has a private grudge against the Proctors; while working as their servant, she had an affair with John, and when John ended the relationship and returned to his wife, Abigail was fired. Now the Reverend Parris (Bruce Davison) is hearing accusations and counter-accusations of misdeeds from all sides of the community in the wake of Abigail's charges, so he brings in Judge Danforth (Paul Scofield) to determine who is guilty or innocent. However, given the moral climate of the time, it seems someone has to be found guilty of witchcraft, even though firm evidence of wrongdoing is becoming hard to come by. This was the second screen version of The Crucible, though it was the first one in English; the previous version, filmed in France in 1956, starred Simone Signoret and Yves Montand. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

Aided by Arthur Miller's script, an adaptation of his own play, Nicholas Hytner's The Crucible captures a palpable sense of the hysteria and circular logic that damned 19 residents of Salem who refused to confess to witchcraft. The film sustains its tension for upwards of two hours, with top-notch acting by such heavy hitters as Daniel Day-Lewis, Joan Allen, and Paul Scofield. But it's Miller's dialogue, memorable for its lyrical precision, that perfectly distills the hopelessness of evading the accusations that spread through that small Massachusetts community. While the film surely condemns the alarmist reactions of the church and courts, it nonetheless outlines the systematic process that led the leaders to their conclusions. Alarmist they may have been, but believe it they did, and they acted on what they felt was the truth, after much internal debate. The film stirs up religious conundrums that are fascinating to contemplate, even for the spiritually disinclined. Scofield is powerful as the dispassionate magistrate whose word could send an accused witch to the gallows. Allen's crumbling stoicism in the role of Elizabeth Proctor earned her a well-deserved Oscar nomination, and Day-Lewis turns in his usual soulful performance, burning silently until a richly emotional denouement. Winona Ryder is a little too showy as the morally compromised Abigail Williams, but the rest of the supporting cast paints a true picture of a town torn asunder. The gorgeous cinematography supports the weighty issues at its core, making The Crucible a profound examination of one of the more disquieting and regrettable periods in American history. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Cast

Rob Campbell - Reverend John Hale; Jeffrey Jones - Thomas Putnam; Karron Graves - Mary Warren; Ken Cheeseman - Goat Owner; Mara Clark - Goody Barrow; Frances Conroy - Ann Putnam; George Gaynes - Judge Samuel Sewall; Mary Pat Gleason - Martha Corey; John Griesemer - Ezekial Cheever; Elizabeth Lawrence - Rebecca Nurse; Will Lyman - Isaiah Goodkind; Tom McDermott - Francis Nurse; Dossy Peabody - Goody Sibber; Ashley Peldon - Ruth Putman; William Preston - George Jacobs; Peter Vaughan - Giles Corey; Charlaine Woodard - Tituba; Peter Maloney - Dr. Griggs; David V. Picker; Michael Gaston - Marshal Herrick; Rachael Bella - Betty Parris; Robert Breuler - Judge Hathorne; Ruth Maleczech - Goody Osborne; Kali Rocha - Mercy Lewis; Karen MacDonald - Townswoman; Anna V. Boksenbaum - Sarah Pope; Dorothy Brodesser - Mrs Griggs; Sheila Ferrini - Townswoman; Amee Gray - Lydia Sheldon; Lian-Marie Holmes - Deliverance Fuller; Jessie Kilguss - Deborah Flint; June Lewin - Townswoman; Simone Marean - Rachel Buxton; Michael McKinstry - Daniel Proctor; Charlotte Melen - Margaret Kenney; Carmella Mulvihill - Hannah Brown; Katrina Nevin - Dorcas Bellows; Steven Ochoa - Putnam's servant; Sheila Pinkham - Goody Good; Jane Pulkkinen - Goody Bellows; Mary Reardon - Esther Wilkens; Alexander Streit - Joseph Proctor; Stanely Taylor - Joanna Preston

Credit

John Warnke - Art Director, Mitchell Levin - Associate Producer, Carolyn Pickman - Casting, Donna Isaacson - Casting, Daniel Swee - Casting, Christian Kaplan - Casting, George Fenton - Conductor, Diana Pokorny - Co-producer, Bob Crowley - Costume Designer, Bob Wagner - First Assistant Director, Mike Topoozian - First Assistant Director, Richard Oswald - First Assistant Director, Michael McCue - First Assistant Director, Dirk Wallace Craft - First Assistant Director, Nicholas Hytner - Director, Tariq Anwar - Editor, Charles Harrington - Location Manager, George Fenton - Composer (Music Score), Eliza Thompson - Musical Direction/Supervision, George Fenton - Songwriter, Naomi Donne - Makeup, Carla White - Makeup, Paula Kelly - Makeup, Todd Kleitsch - Makeup, Bruce MacCallum - Camera Operator, Lilly Kilvert - Production Designer, Andrew Dunn - Cinematographer, Bob Miller - Producer, David V. Picker - Producer, Robert A. Miller - Producer, Alan S. Kaye - Set Designer, Louis Montejano - Set Designer, Nick Navarro - Set Designer, Gary King - Special Effects, William "Billie Jack" Jakielaszek - Special Effects, Stephen R. Ricci - Special Effects, Michael Barosky - Sound Mixer, Walter Scott - Stunts Coordinator, Diana Pokorny - Unit Production Manager, Arthur Miller - Screenwriter, Drew Conroy - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Bill Andrulitis - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Tim Carroll - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Daniel Collins - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Jerry Courser - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, William Curtney - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Edward A. Frisbie - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, David Kennard - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Barbara Lowes - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Andrew L. Messersmith - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Diane Bennette - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Peter W. Cook - Historical Consultant, Christopher Lloyd - Music Editor, William W. Weiske III - Post Production Coordinator, Susannah McCarthy - Production Coordinator, Mari Jo Winkler-Ioffreda - Production Supervisor, Dean Humphreys - Re-Recording Mixer, Mary Cybulski - Script Supervisor, Brian Ricci - Special Effects Coordinator, Chris Ackland - Supervising Sound Editor, Nick Lowe - ADR Editor, Deirdre Williams - Costumes Supervisor, Lisa R. Frucht - Costumes Supervisor, Joe Gilmore - Dialogue Editor, Lucy Fawcett - Foley Artist, Pauline Griffiths - Foley Artist, Stan Fiferman - Foley Editor, Jan Archibald - Key Hairstylist, Gretchen Rau - Set Decorator, Arthur Miller - Play Author, Edward Colyer - Foley Mixer, Bruce Winant - Voice Casting, Loopers Unlimited - Voice Casting, General Screen Enterprises - Title Design, Ray Short - Title Design

Similar Movies

Day of Wrath; The Baby of Macon; Black Noon; Les Sorcières de Salem; Fear on Trial; Les Risques du Metier; Salem Witch Trials; Dogville; The Woman Who Came Back; Doubt
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: The Crucible (1996 film)
Top
The Crucible
Directed by Nicholas Hytner
Written by Arthur Miller
Starring Daniel Day-Lewis
Winona Ryder
Paul Scofield
Joan Allen
Bruce Davison
Rob Campbell
Frances Conroy
Cinematography Andrew Dunn
Editing by Tariq Anwar
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) November 27, 1996
Running time 124 min.
Language English
Budget US$15,000,000

The Crucible is a 1996 film, written by Arthur Miller and based on his play of the same name. It was directed by Nicholas Hytner and stars Daniel Day-Lewis as John Proctor, Winona Ryder as Abigail Williams, Paul Scofield as Judge Thomas Danforth, and Joan Allen as Elizabeth Proctor.

Contents

Plot

Early morning in 1692 Salem, Massachusetts. All of the young village girls meet in the woods with a black slave from Barbados named Tituba. Tituba begins a ritual and the girls call out the names of men they wish to marry. One girl, named Abigail, does something different. Instead of calling for the man she loves, named John Proctor, she kills a chicken, and drinks the blood, and wishes for Proctor's wife to die. The girls begin to dance (one of them even runs naked) and run through the woods and suddenly are surprised when Abigail's uncle, Reverend Parris (Bruce Davison) come to them. As the girls scream and run away, Parris' daughter, Betty, falls over unconscious.

Back at Parris' house, Parris questions Abigail about the events that took place in the woods, and then slaps her across the face in suspicion that she is lying to him. Betty will not awaken, nor will Ruth, the daughter of Thomas and Ann Putnam, who was also dancing. This strikes Mrs. Putnam hard as she has had seven other children before Ruth who died at childbirth. As well as the Putnams, the Parris house is also visited by Giles Corey, who is concerned about how his wife constantly reads books, Rebecca Nurse, who suspects that the children are just acting their sicknesses, and John Proctor. While alone outside with Proctor, Abigail strikes up a conversation with him, revealing that when she worked at his home previously, they had had an affair. Now Abigail still loves Proctor, but he feels that he made a mistake and leaves her. The Putnams and Reverend Parris believe that Betty and Ruth are demonically possessed, so they call from another town the Reverend Hale, who examines Betty, then gathers together the other girls who danced. To save themselves from punishment, Abigail claims that Tituba was working with the devil the entire time. The attention then turns to Tituba who insists on her innocence. When no one believes her, she confesses (after being whipped mercilessly and threatened with death if she did not confess) and then she and all the other girls, including Betty, begin naming other women whom they "saw" with the devil. Soon, old drunks, people who curse others, and those who do so much as look funnily at others are accused as witches. Of those accused, three were Rebecca Nurse (accused by the Putnams for the supernatural murder of Mrs. Putnam's babies), Martha Corey (for supernaturally cursing a man so that all the pigs he bought would die), and Elizabeth Proctor, John's wife (accused by Abigail of using a doll to supernaturally give her a stab wound in the stomach).

John, determined not to give his lover in to "vengeance" insists that his servant, Mary Warren, one of the "afflicted" girls, testify in court that the witchcraft was faked. Although Mary Warren is frightened of Abigail, she eventually agrees. In the court, Francis Nurse gives a list of names of people who vouch for Martha, Rebecca, and Elizabeth's character. The judges responded by ordering the arrest of every person on the list so they could be brought in for questioning. Giles Corey insists that when Ruth Putnam accused Rebecca Nurse, Mr. Putnam was heard to tell his daughter that she had won him a "fine gift of land" (the Nurses' property was coveted by the Putnam family). Corey refuses to give the name of the person who heard this remark, however, as he knows that they will be arrested. The judges order Corey's arrest for refusing to give the name. Meanwhile, Mary Warren insists that she only thought she saw spirits, which was why she screamed and fainted at the trials. John is told that Elizabeth is pregnant and will be spared from death until the baby is born, but he insists on charging the girls of false witness.

The other girls are called in and asked if they were lying about the witchcraft. Abigail pretends that Mary Warren is bewitching them with an icy breeze and begins to pray to God for help. Proctor angrily tells the court that Abigail is a whore, who accused Elizabeth to get rid of her in order to be able to marry him. Elizabeth is called in to see if the accusation is true, however, she does not know that John confessed and lies that the affair never took place, to protect his name. Reverend Hale, who believes now that the girls are lying, attempts to convince the court that Abigail is false, however the girls pretend that Mary Warren supernaturally began to attack them in the form of a yellow bird. The girls run from the courthouse, to a pond and jump in to escape from the "bird".

To save herself from being hanged as a witch, Mary Warren accuses John of forcing her to upset the court and free Elizabeth. John angrily yells that "God is dead!" and is arrested as a warlock. Reverend Hale angrily quits the court. John, Elizabeth, Rebecca, Martha, and the other accused witches are excommunicated and seventeen are hanged.

On the day before John is to be hanged, Abigail attempts to convince the court that Hale's wife is also a witch, but this ploy backfires on her because the judges believe that a reverend's wife is too clean to be possessed by Satan. Abigail and another one of the girls steal Reverend Parris's money to catch a ship to flee to Barbados, and Abigail asks John to go with her, telling him she never wished any of this on him. He refuses, telling her they will meet again in Hell.

On the eve of John, Martha, and Rebecca's hanging, Parris fears that their execution will cause riots in Salem, as the three are very well-respected citizens. The judges refuse to postpone the executions, but allow John to meet with Elizabeth, to see if she could make her husband "confess", convincing Martha and Rebecca to "confess" in the process. Martha and Rebecca refuse to "damn themselves", but John agrees to. After signing the confession, however, he takes it from the judges, saying that there is no reason for it to be needed, as they saw him sign it and know he confessed. The judges insist that it must be hung up to prove his innocence and John angrily tears the confession, determined to keep his name pure. He is taken away with Martha and Rebecca to be hanged, as Hale and Parris plead with him to change his mind. The three are lead onto a platform where the crowd watches and have nooses tied around their necks. Before being hanged, they recite the Lord's Prayer, with John, as the last one hanged, finishes it (but is unable to say Amen) as he is thrown from the scaffold, breaking his neck instantly.

Cast

Reception

The film was on the top 10 lists for both of Entertainment Weekly's film critics.

Roger Ebert gave the film a negative review.[1]

Awards

  • The film received nominations for Best Supporting Actor (Paul Scofield) and Best Supporting Actress (Joan Allen) from the Hollywood Foreign Press.
  • From the International Press Academy The Crucible received nominations in the Adapted Screenplay, Supporting Actor (Scofield), and Supporting Actress (Allen) categories.
  • Paul Scofield won the BAFTA for Best Supporting Actor. Arthur Miller was nominated in the Adapted Screenplay category.

External links

References


 
 

 

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
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Crucible (1996 film)" Read more