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Preston Sturges

Review: Hail the Conquering Hero

Hail the Conquering Hero (1944)

review | Hail the Conquering Hero

This Preston Sturges comedy would be one of the very best American films if Sturges hadn’t decided to pull his punches at the end

by Michael Gaughn
November 7, 2022

We’re back in smalltown America again with Eddie Bracken and William Demarest and the action again revolves around World War II, but beyond that Hail the Conquering Hero bears little resemblance to The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek from just earlier that same year. Preston Sturges was on a roll and Morgan’s Creek had been one of the biggest films of 1944, but he was never one for formula and Conquering Hero is dark and almost brooding in exactly all the places where Morgan’s Creek was silly and light. 

Sturges pretty much broke the comedy mold here. The first almost 20 minutes are shot and for the most part performed as straight drama—so are most of the closing 15. The satire, which was so light in Morgan’s Creek that the audience wasn’t even sure it was being kidded, is here brought to the foreground and with such force that it verges on the vicious and bitter. The contrasts are so stark that, if it wasn’t for the presence in both films of Bracken and Demarest, of Sturges’ recurring themes and his vast stock company, it would be hard to believe they’re from the same director, let alone made in the same year. 

This was all very much deliberate of course and not just Sturges being wildly schizo. You just need to compare Bracken’s characters, and his performances, to see what Sturges is up to. In Morgan’s Creek, Bracken is so broad you almost want to cringe. Here, his character is again a schnook but he’s also a genuinely tortured soul. The Norval of Morgan’s Creek could have never done the long monologue about the history of the Marines or the closing speech where Bracken tells the town members he’s nothing but a fraud while at the same time basically calling them a bunch of morons.

Morgan’s Creek was about how war hysteria had stirred the moral pot, breaking up the too-simple strictures of smalltown America and putting them in play. In Conquering Hero, Sturges frontally attacks the American love for appearances over substance, how we’ll believe practically anything as long as it comes from someone we want to believe in and are deaf to the people we don’t want to see. The film revolves around the premise that we already know what we want to hear and are just looking for mouthpieces that fit those preconceptions—which is why Bracken is able to get away with so visibly and audibly reacting to being forced into that role. The townspeople literally can’t see or hear him. 

The scene where he tries to resist the locals’ effort to draft him into running for mayor, with them conveniently spinning his protests into affirmations, is a sitcom staple I don’t think has ever once worked on TV. But it succeeds here because Sturges has built up to it so carefully and cunningly that it becomes an ambiguous and troubling moment that almost gets the audience to look at itself.

Hail the Conquering Hero is one of the great American movies and would be one of the very best if Sturges hadn’t gotten himself all snarled in his own net. The final third begins to fall into the tradition of bold and cutting truth-telling that defines the greatest American art—the saying “No! in thunder” that Melville ascribed to Hawthorne. But right after Sturges delivers a couple of staggering blows, he fails to finish the job, instead pulling his punches, all too aware he’s making a major-studio film in the middle of a particularly brutal war and ultimately reverting to what the audience wants to hear instead of what it ought to hear. And so it almost always goes with the movies, which is why they’ll always be a second-tier artform.

You have to wonder if Sturges’ inability to reconcile his insights and ambitions with the material didn’t spill over into the production, which is, at moments, oddly uneven. About half the cast proves nimble while the other half can barely get its lines out, which can be disconcerting when four or more of them are trading quips within the same scene. Ella Raines is undeniably striking but also as wooden as they come, and you just need to compare that four-minute take in Morgan’s Creek where Bracken and Betty Hutton stroll through town to the similarly long stroll here with Raines and the tall, handsome, and dull Bill Edwards to feel how the latter scene creates a drag on Conquering Hero. If coat trees could converse with each other, this is what it would sound like. 

The cinematographer, as with Morgan’s Creek, is John Seitz, the man who in Double Indemnity single-handedly defined the look of noir and thereby the look of all American movies from that moment on. Conquering Hero has a much more noirish style than Morgan’s Creek and that couldn’t feel more right—partly because what Sturges is doing here overlaps sympathetically with the true heart of noir. The distance between Fred McMurray in Indemnity and Bracken in Hero is so slight they could be doppelgängers. Both are trying to control worlds that have their own agendas—worlds that definitely don’t have either character’s best interests at heart. Both ultimately have to admit to the futility of will and don’t so much come to accept their fates as have them imposed on them. 

Visually, Conquering Hero is discernibly darker than Morgan’s Creek and that comes across well in the HD presentation on Amazon Prime, which is a step up from the same service’s presentation of the latter. But the deep grays (there are no real blacks) are muddy and crushed throughout, making the transfer darker than it should be, which can make the film feel a little oppressive. The 4K HDR release of A Clockwork Orange showed how using a transfer to bring a film all the way back to its original look can have a big impact on how it’s perceived (that is, if the director and cinematographer knew what they were doing in the first place). I have to wonder if nailing the original look of Conquering Hero—getting the visual tone to match the comedic/dramatic tone—wouldn’t go a long way toward clarifying what Sturges was up to. 

Many filmmakers have tried to peer into the American soul—some have even tried to lead a charge against it—but none have ever done it, as Sturges did here, in the guise of Norman Rockwell. It all comes cascading down in an avalanche—patriotism, heroism, boosterism, motherhood, smalltown democracy, civic pride, the myth of the childhood sweetheart, the basic decency of the common man. The funny thing is, in the wake of the ‘60s and ‘70s and their relentless assault on those same institutions, which triggered the relentlessly cynical reaction of the ‘80s to the present, all of that has been successfully obliterated but nothing of any substance has been put in its place. We just have endless self-obsession and self-indulgence and the need to be endlessly diverted instead. That lends a delicious and frightening irony Sturges could have never foreseen to the fact that everything in Hail the Conquering Hero is set in motion by the actions of a psychopath.

Michael Gaughn—The Absolute Sound, The Perfect Vision, Wideband, Stereo Review, Sound & Vision, The Rayva Roundtablemarketing, product design, some theater designs, a couple TV shows, some commercials, and now this.

PICTURE | Conquering Hero is a dark, almost noirish film, and that comes across well in the HD presentation on Amazon Prime. But the deep grays (there are no real blacks) are muddy and crushed throughout, making the transfer a touch darker than it should be. 

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Review: The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek

The Miracle of Morgan's Creek (1944)

review | The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek

The big hit of 1944 and maybe Preston Sturges’ best film, this manic romp still delivers, despite an uneven transfer

by Michael Gaughn
August 2, 2022

Reviewing The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek, James Agee famously concluded that the Hays Office, responsible for policing film content, had ”been raped in its sleep.” And It’s kind of easy to see why, since the film is about a super horny juvenile who uses wartime hyper patriotism as a cover to bed down with GIs departing for the front, resulting in her committing bigamy (among other things) and having not one but six illegitimate children. On Christmas Day. 

Pretty racy for 1944, but that didn’t seem to deter anyone from going to see the Preston Sturges comedy, which ended up being the biggest hit of the year. They might have been deterred if they’d been given a chance to pay attention to what was actually going on, but Sturges keeps the action so manic and cartoonish that contemporary audiences treated the quieter moments, where the plot comes to the foreground for consideration, as little more than badly needed breaks from all the mayhem.

If you know Sturges at all, you probably know all of the above, and if you don’t, you have no idea what I’m talking about. Preston Sturges was yet another bratty rich kid who got to show up in Hollywood and walk pretty much straight into making pictures—like the CEO’s kid who starts in the mailroom and rapidly works his way up to the top. Like he was destined to land anywhere but there. (To be fair, Hollywood was slightly more democratic before the 1980s, and someone born elsewhere than within the upper crust occasionally got to make a movie, unlike the complete stranglehold the wealthy have on the creative end—and every other aspect—of filmmaking today.)

There was always something a bit precious about Sturges—which was OK as long as he held it in check, but helps explain why I’ve never been head over heels about either Sullivan’s Travels or The Lady Eve, which many consider the pinnacle of his work. I find more to savor in Hail the Conquering Hero and Unfaithfully Yours, and even have a soft spot for the tissue-thin Christmas in July. But Morgan’s Creek might be his most satisfying effort because he tries to do as much as possible while trying to make it look like the film is about nothing at all. And it displays—even though it might all be a pose—a disarming humility. 

Yes, everyone in the town of Morgan’s Creek is a bit of a dope—and ill-mannered and, often, duplicitous and grasping, and sometimes just flat-out mean. But you can tell that Sturges kind of envies their intimate connections, their elaborate interwovenness. And he expresses that early on through a four-minute long-take tracking shot as Eddie Bracken and Betty Hutton stroll from Hutton’s house, through the neighborhood, and into the heart of town. It’s artificial as hell, but it makes you buy into the film because it’s in real-time, and everyone at that time knew it was true to those towns and how people lived in those towns. Without it, none of what’s to come would make sense or would land as strongly as it does. And maybe the biggest miracle of all is that the somewhat aloof and very privileged Sturges could even get onto that more mundane and frowsy wavelength and portray it all so well. 

Eddie Bracken is the kind of actor who emerges because the movies temporarily need a certain type—here, an out-and-out schlub—which it then tosses aside when the fad has passed, so it would be easy to write him off as a one-trick wonder. But his performance is mesmerizing, flawlessly timed and turning schtick that would sink lesser comedians into something so telling it’s poetic. It would be similarly easy to dismiss William Demarest, who was typecast—even in Sturges films—as a perpetually dyspeptic grouse. But he transcends that here to play someone who, despite all his bluster, clearly cares about his daughters and his town and, ultimately, Bracken’s Norval. 

Maybe the greatest irony of Morgan’s Creek is that this whole raging avalanche of a movie turns out to be nothing but a 90-minute setup so Demarest can do a perfectly timed pratfall in a hospital corridor. And, indulgent as that sounds, it’s worth it.

Morgan’s Creek was shot by master cinematographer John Seitz, best known for single-handedly defining the film noir genre with Double Indemnity. The rule has always been that you never want a comedy to look too pretty or too moody, but, while Seitz never goes overboard, he doesn’t shy away from making his frames nuanced and expressive, in a comic-elegant way. Creek looks passably good on Amazon Prime—as in, you wouldn’t turn it off if you watched on a home cinema-sized screen, but you’d always be wanting more. But the wraparound scenes—the first three and a half minutes and some shots near the end—are curiously flat and washed out. 

This film is really just a succession of master shots and long takes, which really allows the comedy to thrive. But while Sturges rises to that self-imposed challenge masterfully, he does indulge in maybe two too many of them—and in too many big physical gags, when it’s inevitably the smaller bits of business that play better—which can make Morgan’s Creek seem a little grating at around the 2/3s mark. But hang in there—it all ultimately pays off. The movie still works on its own terms, and time has leant it some little touches—like finding out the Kockenlockers live in the same house as The Girl from Lover’s Lane, and encountering a newspaper headline that screams “Hitler Demands Recount”—that provide a kind of gruesome pleasure in retrospect.

Little fades faster than comedy—except maybe fantasy. The best silent comedies hold up surprisingly well, especially the shorts, maybe because they’re so abstract and don’t rely much on the world of the time for their effect. And the best of the screwballs remain resilient—most of Sturges’ output and Hawks’ Bringing Up Baby and His Girl Friday in particular.  Go much outside of that and you’re talking the very definition of the ephemeral. So it’s more than worth it to seek out and plumb the best ones, and it’s hard not to be in awe that they even exist at all. 

Michael Gaughn—The Absolute Sound, The Perfect Vision, Wideband, Stereo Review, Sound & Vision, The Rayva Roundtablemarketing, product design, some theater designs, a couple TV shows, some commercials, and now this.

PICTURE | Acceptable when viewed on a big screen, except for a couple of passages, but catching glimpses of what the original looked like only makes you long for a proper restoration

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