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An Enemy Of The People
(1979)
Director: George Schaefer
Cast: Steve McQueen, Charles Durning, Bibi Andersson
Steve McQueen fans will no doubt be surprised by this movie on several
levels. Probably their initial surprise will be when they discover that
this movie exists - despite the presence of their favorite movie star,
this movie has not attracted a lot of attention over the years. Their next
surprise will probably come from when they see how Steve McQueen looks
like here. In An Enemy Of The People, McQueen is pretty much
unrecognizable - even I had a lot of trouble picturing him under his long
wavy hair, his granny glasses, his puffy and curly beard, and his extra
weight. And the final surprise is the subject matter of this movie; in
previous movies (and afterwards, with Tom Horn and The
Hunter) McQueen is known for playing cool, heroic loners in actioners.
An
Enemy Of The People is nowhere near an actioner - it's an adaptation
of a dramatic play by Henrik Ibsen! And McQueen's character here is a small
town doctor in 19th century Scandinavia who tries to solve a crisis with
logic and scientific fact - no cars, motorbikes, or guns here.
How did McQueen get involved in such an unlikely project? As it turns
out, even he knew that the commercial prospects for An Enemy Of The
People were not great, to say the least. After 1974's The
Towering Inferno, he took some time off, partly due to some big
problems in his personal life. (Though he secretly did some of the motorcycle
stunt work in the 1976 exploitation movie Dixie Dynamite.)
Though he wanted to rest, there was one monkey on his back - he was under
contract by the production company First Artists (a company he now despised)
to do another movie for them. However, his contract stated that he was
allowed to pick the project. So to get revenge, and possibly get First
Artists to go under (they eventually did, though I'm not sure if this movie
was the cause), he decided to pick something extremely uncommercial - hence
An
Enemy Of The People.
The movie was shot and completed in 1977, with a closed set and McQueen
refusing to give interviews. A funny thing happened to McQueen during the
shoot. As time progressed, his fondness and enthusiasm for the project
kept growing. By the end, he was convinced that the movie was going to
be a big hit, and started claiming to his friends that he had chosen the
movie because looking back at his previous work he felt "artistically,
I've failed," and that, for the first time, he felt like he was actually
acting.
However, when distributor Warner Brothers saw the movie, they got nervous,
and shelved it for some time, unsure on how to market it. After two years
had past, they tested the movie at several college campuses, where several
movie critics caught it and heavily panned it. As a result, the movie never
got a further release to theaters, and to this date it hasn't been released
on video. I finally caught this movie on one of its rare broadcasts on
TV.
It's a pretty good movie. It isn't a masterpiece or a great movie, but
it's a competent, interesting little movie, covering issues Ibsen wrote
about that are still around today. McQueen's doctor character Tom at the
beginning of the movie makes a horrifying discovery - the town's spring,
which is destined to become a future health resort by several of the town's
leading citizens (including Tom), is contaminated. Feeling that the resort
plan should stop, Tom tells his brother Peter (Durning), who is also the
town's mayor. To Tom's shock, Peter refuses to stop the project, claiming
the costs and time for cleanup would be enormous, and potential tourists
would be scared off. ("You want to ruin this town?")
Tom then heads to the owners of the local newspaper, who are initially
eager to print Tom's report, partly due to the fact they despise the town
council and have political aspirations of their own. However, Peter later
visits the newspaper to tell them that printing the article would result
in a large taxation for the cleanup - and the citizens wouldn't be fond
of any government under that tax. The newspaper then declines to run the
story. Tom, still determined the truth should be told, tries taking his
case to the citizens, but finds it much harder than he thinks, due both
to unforeseen circumstances and the citizens not taking to the tongue of
this stubborn, scientific man. Soon, Tom finds himself an outcast, finding
himself in a "damned if you do, damned if you don't" dilemma and wondering
what to do next.
Government corruption, a public unable to comprehend scientific fact,
greed - these are all things we can relate to even in the 20th century
- Ibsen clearly had a good idea of the basic, unchanged nature of man.
In addition, there's discussion on the individual's role in society (to
blend in or not?), if the majority is "always right", and also interesting
looks when people agree on a problem, but can't decide on the proper solution.
Moderation? Full out? There are no easy answers both for Tom and the other
citizens. Even the neutral side is explored in this movie, represented
by Captain Forster (Richard Bradford, in a small but standout performance),
who claims to be politically neutral (he doesn't vote), but his later actions
show that even he has a hard time staying neutral in the conflict.
Besides Bradford, there's also an excellent performance by Durning as
Tom's brother. The way the role is written, it's very easy for a performer
to portray Peter as a selfish, evil man. But with During in the role, you
see that Peter isn't altogether bad - he is sneaky and manipulative, and
will do anything to survive the crisis, but at the same time he seems to
genuinely believe what he's doing is for the overall good of the community.
A special acting note also goes to Eric Christmas as Tom's father-in-law,
whose memorable character initially seems to be in the play for light comic
relief, but later provides a sinister piece of the puzzle.
As for McQueen - well, I was relieved to see that he actually seems
to fit in the movie, a large part of that being that he is pretty much
unrecognizable. So he doesn't seem that out of place, though at the same
time he isn't stupendous. McQueen gives a low key performance here, talking
very softly when he is not brooding in silence. His performance is so low
key at times, other performers sometimes have trouble with him - witness
the scene when Durning and McQueen are first alone. You'd think this would
be a great scene, with two acclaimed actors by themselves. But McQueen
is so subdued, that Durning seems unsure of how to act with him, even
descending down to McQueen's low key nature in this scene. In fairness
to McQueen, there is one kind of acting that he does very well here - his
"eye" acting. When he has a close-up, and you see his eyes clearly, you
can tell exactly what his character is thinking.
There are some other notable flaws in An Enemy To The People that
make it a perfectly acceptable movie instead of the powerhouse it could
have been. The musical score by Leonard Rosenman is nice, but it seems
this low budget movie could only afford one instrumental song, since variations
of various pieces of this song are played throughout the movie. The movie
is directed in a fashion that seems more suited to the stage instead of
a sound stage; at key moments we sense a curtain should be falling to end
the act, and many of the sets look only a little better to what one may
find at a good community theater. Some scenes are directed with the central
conversation in one room, while the camera looks on at someone (working
in silence) in another room. And the few outdoor scenes were obviously
filmed indoors. It's almost as if the production didn't have time to rewrite
the play as a movie, and director Schaefer was struggling to make the play
script look as much like a movie as possible. And the ending of the movie
is extremely rushed - I haven't seen or read the original play, but I sincerely
doubt the final action, whatever it is, is played at that speed. Despite
this kind of treatment, the story and themes of An Enemy To The People
are
still strong enough to be of interest to viewers who are interested in
them, and made the movie worthwhile to me. Still, the movie clearly could
have been much better, and I'm not sure that McQueen fans, enthusiastic
as they are about their idol, will be as interested in this movie as they
are of his better-known efforts.
UPDATE: One of the sources I used during
my research on this movie was a Steve McQueen biography (published just
a few years ago) that stated the movie was only screened at college campuses.
However, reader William Norton reveals that the release was actually wider:
"You...mentioned An Enemy Of The People never played on regular
runs, but it did in 1981 (or was it 1982?) in Seattle. Siskel and
Ebert mentioned the film on their show also, so it must have played in
Chicago."
If any other readers remember seeing any kind of release in their area
for An Enemy Of The People, please write in, so the size
of its release can be confirmed once and for all.
UPDATE 2:
C.F.
Velkas sent this along:
"I came
across your review some time ago and was pleased
to have the opportunity to read it, especially
the information about the distribution/ showings
of Mr. McQueen's film, An Enemy Of The People.
"Background: In Oct. 1976 (at age 51) I read a
front page story in the local Bennington,
Vermont newspaper about a research team from the
Atlanta based Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
having discovered high levels of lead in the
blood of factory workers who worked at Globe
Union Battery Factory. The batteries contained
lead plates and the workers were exposed to lead
dust, etc. at the work place. To their surprise,
the (CDC) team also found above average lead
blood levels in a research "Control Group" with
no history of exposure to lead. The CDC team
then called for another CDC team, composed of
epidemiologists, to investigate and determine
the source of the lead in the Control Group.
After ruling out many other factors, the
epidemiologists found that the town public
drinking water contained high levels of lead.
"As a clinical psychologist in private practice,
I understood the permanent damage caused by
lead, etc. to the central nervous system and
assumed the medical doctor community would see
to correcting this problem. After a short while,
it became obvious that they were not going to
lift a finger. So I sought to have the then
State's Attorney (referred to in some other
States as the "D.A.") to legally stop the Town
from distributing the lead-laced drinking water
via the Town public water distribution system. I
had become aware that Vermont has a "rule"
(which has the force of law) that prohibits lead
and some other toxic materials in Town public
water with a penalty of one year in jail and/or
a fine. No action came from the "D.A." So I
tried, and failed, to persuade an attorney to
represent me in a suit to restrain the Town from
distributing the water.
"Having no
experience in writing up law suit papers to file
in Courts, I looked over legal papers drawn up
to prosecute persons involved in the 1865
shooting of Pres. Lincoln and, acting as a
self-appointed prosecutor, put together a
complaint against the criminal behavior of the
six members of the Town governing Board of
Selectmen (Chair "man" was a woman), and filed
it,, "pro se", in Dec. of 1976 with the Court
Clerk after serving a copy on the Town Manager.
This resulted in the Town testing lead levels in
different parts of Town, selecting public
locations able to meet the then government
mandated permitted levels of toxic substances in
public drinking water, and advising residents of
the availability of drinking/ cooking water at
those approved locations. Then over the year
1977, I worked to secure government funds to
replace the old lead distribution pipes in town
with non-lead pipes. (As I write, the Town is
still removing old lead pipes). It turns out
that the Town added "acidic" river water to our
nice underground aquifer water source in order
to meet the needs of a new industry they were
trying to attract to come to Bennington with
jobs for the locals. They sweetened the offer
with sufficient water, a tax reduction clause,
and the acidic water is carried via a new long
main water pipe from our new water treatment
plant (money came from my continuing
hell-raising) to the site where they were to
build their new Globe Union Battery Factory.
"By late 1977, the New York Times got wind of
all this and their Boston Bureau Chief came up
here, with a photographer, to put together a
story which appeared on the front page of a
Sunday issue of the NYT in January 1978, and
which story was distributed to over 200 U.S. and
other papers world-wide (including the Paris
American Herald Tribune). The writer compared my
experience to that of the Doctor in Ibsen's AN
ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE. Then followed a segment on
a CBC TV affiliate in Albany, N.Y. on their "30
Minutes" program which aired just before the
Sunday CBS "60 Minutes program" and later an
invitation from a Professor of Political Science
to address some classes and a faculty group at
Keene (New Hampshire) State University where I
was applauded by the students after the talk and
approached for my autograph. My treatment from
Bennington residents, however, was not unlike
that accorded Ibsen's Doctor.
"So I have wondered if Mr McQueen's decision in
1977 to select the Ibsen script was influenced
by knowledge of my 1977 then mostly unpublicized
local efforts. Some time after the NYT article,
I received a phone call from a famous LA/NY
publicist who asked me to review the film and
make suggestions as to what final form it should
take. He later had to cancel the trip here.
Didn't say why - perhaps because of Mr.
McQueen's illness. In the middle of this, I did
receive a package of 8 X 10 stills of scenes
from the film and some pages of descriptive
material with information that the film had been
shown in St Louis and the audience had written
good review comments about it on forms they
filled out at the end of the showing.
"I have always been sorry that the film has not
received wider distribution and has not been
available on video tape (and now DVD). Years
ago, I telephoned Warner Brothers about lack of
distribution and they were not pleasant. I
suppose they control what happens and Mr.
McQueen's widow and children have no say in it.
"A few years ago, I read an article (Associated
Press) in the local paper that had a story about
the increase in the use of bottled water and I
noticed that a graph that was part of the
article showed a dramatic increase in the sale
of bottled water beginning in early 1978
(following the Jan. 1978 NYT article ?) It so
happens that we have here a natural spring (in
Town) named Morgan Spring that produces gallons
per minute of the best drinking water you could
ever imagine. Instead of bottling it and putting
it on the market, that spring water is added to
the river water along with CHLORINE, SODIUM
HYDROXIDE (the main ingredient of DRAINO - see
the skull and crossbones on the can), and SODIUM
BICARBONATE (see the warning on the side of
boxes of baking soda). Cheers ! Of course, you
can buy Saratoga (N.Y.) bottled water, and
bottled water from Hawaii, the island where
Napoleon spent his last years, Canada, Alaska,
water from icebergs (big in Japan), France,
Italy, you name it."
UPDATE 3: John Wilson sent me this:
"Re your reference to Siskel and Ebert's
discussion of An Enemy Of The People,
Siskel wrote a column in the Chicago Tribune
about attending a showing at a drive-in in the
Chicago suburbs at which the movie was shown. I
believe he ironically pointed out that this was
the "world premiere" for the film, which had
been completed some time before that showing.
"There was no special advertising, just than the
regular listings of what was to be shown. It is
unclear what the motive was for this isolated
screening, but it may be that the "release" was
accidental. In any case, although the movie has
been shown in isolated instances such as this,
no funding was ever provided by the studio for a
general release, according to STEVE MCQUEEN:
PORTRAIT OF AN AMERICAN REBEL by Marshall
Terrill."
UPDATE 4: Bora Kizilirmak sent this
in:
"You were asking readers in your site if
anybody saw An Enemy Of The People in
their region and/or country. Well, I saw it in
Ankara/Turkey in
"Cagdas Aahne" movie theatre around the early
1980s and I liked the movie a lot. I remember it
very well; it was played just after the week
they played another forgotten movie which is
also very good, Children of Sanchez."
UPDATE 5: "Markmanpix" sent this in:
"Maybe this is ancient history now, but if
you are still interested:
I worked in Pay TV in the late '70s and early
'80s. An Enemy of the People had its U.S.
TV premiere on a system called SelecTV, which
operated in Los Angeles. This was somewhere
between '79 and '81, and this was reported in
one of the books that came out on McQueen - but
I can't remember which. Immediately after that,
it was shown by ON TV, another L.A. based pay TV
system, which had over half a million
subscribers in Los Angeles, and also aired their
programming in a few other cities back east.
"The movie also played in a few art houses in
New York in 1981, creating some press at the
time. the reviews were all good.
"In the mid 1980s, AMC ran the movie. I have it
on tape from one of those airings, with the AMC
intro.
"Several years back, it was released on video,
by Warner Home Video, in England. some of those
used tapes, in a picture box, come up on ebay
from time to time."
Check for availability on Amazon.
Check for availability of Steve McQueen
biography on Amazon
Also: The
Ambassador, Bad
Company, Your
Three Minutes Are Up
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