- East of Eden (film)
Infobox Film
name = East of Eden
caption = "East of Eden" DVD cover
director =Elia Kazan
writer =Paul Osborn ,John Steinbeck (uncredited)
starring =James Dean Raymond Massey Julie Harris Burl Ives Richard Davalos Jo Van Fleet
producer =Elia Kazan
music =Leonard Rosenman
cinematography =Ted D. McCord
editing =Owen Marks
distributor =Warner Bros.
released =March 9 ,1955 http://movies2.nytimes.com/mem/movies/review.html?res=EE05E7DF173BB32CA3494CC3B679998E6896]
runtime = 115 min.
country = United States
language = English
amg_id = 1:15163
imdb_id = 0048028"East of Eden" is a 1955 film, directed by
Elia Kazan , and loosely based on part of the 1952 novel of the same name by US authorJohn Steinbeck .It stars
Julie Harris ,James Dean (in his first major screen role), andRaymond Massey ; it also featuresBurl Ives ,Richard Davalos andJo Van Fleet , and was adapted byPaul Osborn and John Steinbeck (uncreditedFact|date=February 2007).Although set in early twentieth century
Monterey, California , much of the film was actually shot on location inMendocino, California . Some scenes were filmed in theSalinas Valley .Plot
The story is set in
1917 , duringWorld War I , in the central California coastal towns of Monterey and Salinas. Cal ("Caleb ") (James Dean) andAron (Richard Davalos) are the young adult sons of a modestly successful farmer and wartime draft board chairman named Adam Trask (Raymond Massey). Adam is a deeply religious man. Cal is moody and embittered by his belief that his father loves only Aron.The Trask family has a farm in the fertile Salinas valley. Although both Cal and Aron had been led to believe that their mother had died "and gone to heaven", the opening scene reveals that Cal knows that his mother is still alive, owning and running a successful
brothel .After the father's idealistic plans for a long-haul vegetable shipping business venture end in a loss of thousands of dollars, Cal decides to enter the bean-growing business, as a way of recouping the money his father lost in the vegetable shipping venture. He knows that if the United States enters the war, the price of beans will skyrocket. Cal hopes this will finally earn him the love and respect of his father. He goes to his mother Kate (Jo Van Fleet) to ask to borrow the capital he needs. She reluctantly lends him the five thousand dollars.
Meanwhile, Aron's girlfriend Abra (Julie Harris) finds herself attracted to Cal.
Cal's business goes quite well. He makes a birthday present of the money to his father. However, Adam refuses to accept any money earned by
war profiteering . Cal does not understand, and sees his father's refusal to accept the gift as just another rejection. When the distraught Cal leaves the room, Abra goes after him, to console him as best she can. Aron follows and orders Cal to stay away from her.In anger, Cal takes his brother to see their mother, then returns home alone. When his father demands to know where his brother is, Cal tells him. The shock drives the pacifistic Aron to get drunk and then board a troop train to enlist in the army. When Sam (Burl Ives), the sheriff, brings the news, Adam rushes to the train station in a futile attempt to dissuade him.
The old man then suffers a
stroke , which leaves him paralyzed and unable to communicate. Cal tries to talk to him, but gets no response and leaves the bedroom. Abra pleads with Adam to show Cal some affection before it is too late. Then she drags Cal back into the room. When Cal makes his last bid for acceptance before leaving town, his father manages to speak. He tells his son to get rid of the annoying nurse and not to get anyone else, but to stay and take care of him himself.Filming Dates
27 May 1954 -13 August 1954 Critical reaction
Bosley Crowther , writing for "The New York Times ", described the film as having "energy and intensity but little clarity and emotion"; he notes::In one respect, it is brilliant. The use that Mr. Kazan has made ofCinemaScope and color in capturing expanse and mood in his California settings is almost beyond compare. His views of verdant farmlands in the famous Salinas "salad bowl," sharply focused to the horizon in the sunshine, are fairly fragrant with atmosphere. The strain of troubled people against such backgrounds has a clear and enhanced irony.But the "stubborn fact is that the people who move about in this film are not sufficiently well established to give point to the anguish through which they go, and the demonstrations of their torment are perceptibly stylized and grotesque." Crowther calls Dean's performance a "mass of histrionic gingerbread" which clearly emulates the style ofMarlon Brando .Fifty years later,
Kenneth Turan of the "Los Angeles Times " was much more positive, saying "East of Eden" is "not only one of Kazan's richest films and Dean's first significant role, it is also arguably the actor's best performance." [http://www.calendarlive.com/movies/turan/cl-et-deancapsules10jun10,0,15195.story 'East of Eden' and 'Rebel Without a Cause' - MOVIE REVIEW - Los Angeles Times - calendarlive.com ] ] The film's depiction of the interaction between Dean and Massey was characterized by Turan as "the paradigmatic generational conflict in all of American film."Awards
Academy Awards 1956
*
Academy Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role : WinnerJo Van Fleet
*Academy Award for Best Actor : Nominated James Dean
*Academy Award for Directing : Nominated Elia Kazan
*Academy Award for Best Writing, screenplay: NominatedPaul Osborn BAFTA Awards 1956
*Best Film from Any Source: Nominated
*Best Foreign Actor: Nominated James Dean
*Most Promising Newcomer: Nominated Jo Van FleetCannes Film Festival 1955
*Winner - Best Dramatic Film, Elia Kazan
Golden Globes 1956
*Winner - Best Motion Picture Drama
References
External links
* [http://faculty.quinnipiac.edu/libraries/tballard/eastofeden.html East of Eden: A resource guide to the 1955 film] , from the website of a librarian at
Quinnipiac University
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.