To Kill a Mockingbird

Reviewed by: CalGal

July 15, 1999

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I think TKAM is a marvellously made film. All the flaws that make it tedious in my eyes are in the original novel, which I do not like, either.

I thought the structure of having the little girl observe the changes and developments in her brother was a needless addition to the movie. Her cluelessness was often annoying. Remove Scout, focus on Jeb and his dad, the story would be much improved. As it was, the Scout character was an intrusion--it's hardly necessary to be told that she's an autobiographical representation of the author, who clearly needed to feel her presence mattered, somehow. But the conceit of one unknowingly observing the other observe and grow from his father's example just annoyed me no end.

I think Finch was a lousy lawyer, in this sense: he lectured to a racist jury. Utterly foolish. It brings to mind the only barely decent part of a horrible movie, A Time To Kill, when McConnaughey asked the jury to pretend the little girl was white. *That's* lawyering. But Finch's appeal to the jury was speechifying to self-indulgent effect. But worse, a wily lawyer (even a racist one) could have gotten Tom off. I grant you, I am judging the movie by current standards, but then my point is that it does not age well.

Finally, Ewell, the bad guy, was just completely unbelievable. A very unconvincing, slimy villain. And I've never thought the Boo experience was all that mystical and magical. So all things considered, the ending left me unmoved.

(Again--all these flaws are ones I minded in the novel as well as the movie.)

Plus side: performances are superb. I think this is Peck's best work. Jeb is a great character, and the kid who plays him is wonderful. Brock Peters scores well in his few scenes, as does Calpurnia. Everyone else does fine. The production values are wonderful; this is a beautifully produced film.

I also thought that the picture works well as a portrayal of the South and an era that is largely gone, for better and worse. It captures a sense of community, of caring for one's own (although how one defines "own" depends on the individual). Benear is hallucinating any comments I made about community in regards to this movie, or whether or not community still exists, btw.

When I compare the two movies as "issue" movies, GA wins hands down. When I compare the movies on their own merits (regardless of their "issue" standing), GA still wins. But my reasoning in comparing them on their own merits are entirely personal. Were I to make recommendations to someone else, I would tell them that both movies are wonderful; that TKAM is the more accessible of the two.

 

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