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The Devil's Disciple (1959 film)

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The Devil's Disciple
Original window card
Directed byGuy Hamilton
Screenplay byJohn Dighton
Roland Kibbee
Based onThe Devil's Disciple
1897 play
by George Bernard Shaw
Produced byHarold Hecht
Starring
Narrated byPeter Leeds
CinematographyJack Hildyard
Edited byAlan Osbiston
Music byRichard Rodney Bennett
Production
companies
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date
  • 20 August 1959 (1959-08-20)
Running time
83 minutes
CountriesUnited Kingdom
United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1.5 million[1]
Box office$1.8 million (est. US/ Canada rentals)[2]

The Devil's Disciple is a 1959 British-American film adaptation of the 1897 George Bernard Shaw play The Devil's Disciple. The Anglo-American film was directed by Guy Hamilton, who replaced Alexander Mackendrick,[3] and starred Burt Lancaster, Kirk Douglas and Laurence Olivier. Mary Grant designed the film's costumes.

Lancaster and Douglas made several films together over the decades, including I Walk Alone (1948), Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957), The List of Adrian Messenger (1963), Seven Days in May (1964) and Tough Guys (1986).

Plot

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Richard "Dick" Dudgeon (Kirk Douglas) is apostate and outcast from his family in colonial Websterbridge, New Hampshire, who returns their hatred with scorn. After the death of his father, mistakenly hanged by the British as a rebel in nearby Springtown, Dick rescues his body from the gallows, where it had been left as an example to others. He leaves it for burial in the parish graveyard in Websterbridge. Dick then returns to his childhood home to hear the reading of his father's will, much to his family's dismay.

Local minister Rev. Anthony Anderson (Burt Lancaster), almost arrested for trying to talk the British into taking the body down, treats Dick with courtesy, despite Dick's self-proclaimed apostasy. Dick's "wickedness," however, appalls Anderson's wife, Judith (Janette Scott). To everyone's surprise, Dick's father left the bulk of his estate to Dick, his eldest son. To Dick's shock, his mother (Eva Le Gallienne), who brought a large dowry to her marriage, refuses to stay with him and curses him. Dick proclaims himself a rebel against the British and scorns his family as cowards for appeasing the British.

In the meantime, the British discover the father's grave. Anderson warns Dick that the British may arrest him for retrieving the body. He takes Dick home, thinking the British will not look for a disreputable outcast at a minister’s home. While Dick is there, Anderson is called to tend to Dick’s sick mother. Dick is left alone with Judith, despite the social impropriety. Before Anderson’s return, British soldiers enter Anderson's home and arrest Dick, mistaking him for Anderson. They believe Anderson illegally retrieved the body. Dick allows them to take him away without revealing his actual identity. He swears Judith to secrecy lest her husband be arrested for Dick's crime. In a state of great agitation, Judith finds her husband, who asks if Dick has harmed her. Breaking her promise to Dick, Judith reveals that soldiers came to arrest Anderson but Dick went in his place, stunning Anderson. Anderson tells Judith to have Dick keep quiet as long as possible, to give him "more start," then quickly rides away. Judith is unaware that Anderson has gone to seek help from Lawyer Hawkins (Basil Sydney), secretly the leader of the local rebels, to negotiate giving himself up in exchange for Dick (if Anderson just gave himself up, the British would keep them both). Judith believes her husband to be a coward and now sees Dick, who she previously despised, as a hero. She willingly kisses Dick farewell.

Before a military tribunal, observed by General Burgoyne (Laurence Olivier), Dick is skeptical about British justice, pointing out the scaffolding being built to hang him. He keeps up the pretense of being Anderson during the questioning until Judith tries to save him by revealing that he is not her husband. Regardless of the mistaken identity, Dick has been insulting enough to the British to condemn himself (“When you make up your mind to hang a man you put yourself at a disadvantage with him...I might as well be hanged for a sheep as a lamb.”). Burgoyne now sarcastically observes to the prosecutor, “I really must congratulate you, Swindon. Despite your deplorable error and the prisoner’s undoubted innocence at the start of the proceedings, you managed to provoke him into guilt by the end of them. A forensic triumph.”

Meanwhile, Anderson decides to abandon his ministry and turn rebel. In Springtown, a battle is going on. Anderson enters a house that the British have commandeered that is next to their ammunition dump. Fighting off British soldiers, Anderson sets fire to the British ammunition dump, which explodes. He then dons the clothes of a Loyalist courier carrying an urgent message from General Howe to General Burgoyne. Reaching the village where Dick is about to be hanged, he presents a safe conduct from General Phillips, who the rebels have captured in Springtown. Terms are the withdrawal of British troops and the immediate release of Richard Dudgeon. Since General Howe is still in New York and not coming for relief, Burgoyne accedes to the demands. Anderson rises in his wife’s esteem, who chooses to remain with him rather than go off with Dick.

Cast

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Production and reception

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The play was among those by George Bernard Shaw whose film rights were purchased by Gabriel Pascal in 1938; a planned production was announced several times in the years that followed.[4] The rights were acquired from Pascal's estate by the production company of Burt Lancaster and Harold Hecht in 1955. The film was shot at Associated British Studios in Elstree, near London, England between late July and mid-October 1958.[4] In early August, the production company announced original director Alexander Mackendrick had been replaced by Guy Hamilton.[5]

A.H. Weiler in The New York Times argued admirers of Shaw's "plays would be a mite confused by this copiously edited and re-written edition of his noted lampoon of American Revolutionary events and some Englishmen involved in losing a valuable colony." This adaptation "is, somewhat disappointingly, less the biting satire of the stage and more an unevenly paced comedy-melodrama leaning heavily toward action. ... Shaw's meticulous development of character and a healthy portion of his gibes and barbs are merely shadowy effects here".[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Kate Buford, Burt Lancaster: An American Life, Da Capo 2000 p 190
  2. ^ "1959: Probable Domestic Take", Variety, 6 January 1960 p 34
  3. ^ "The Devil's Disciple". The Sticking Place. Archived from the original on 4 February 2013. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
  4. ^ a b The Devil's Disciple at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
  5. ^ Pryor, Thomas M. (2 August 1958). "U.S. Studio Drops British Director; Hecht Ousts Mackendrick From 'Devil's Disciple' -- Independents Retrench". The New York Times. p. 11. Retrieved 24 July 2022.
  6. ^ Weiler, A.H. (21 August 1959). "'Devil's Disciple"; Shaw Story Is Shown at Two Theatres". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 July 2022.
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