Trumbo (2015 film)

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Trumbo
File:Trumbo (2015 film) poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Jay Roach
Produced by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Written by John McNamara
Based on Dalton Trumbo
by Bruce Cook
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Music by Theodore Shapiro
Cinematography Jim Denault
Edited by Alan Baumgarten
Production
company
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  • ShivHans Pictures
  • Everyman Pictures
  • Groundswell Productions
Distributed by Bleecker Street
Release dates
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  • September 12, 2015 (2015-09-12) (TIFF)
  • November 6, 2015 (2015-11-06) (United States)
Running time
124 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $15 million[2]
Box office $8.2 million[3]

Trumbo is a 2015 American biographical drama film directed by Jay Roach and written by John McNamara. The film stars Bryan Cranston, Diane Lane, Helen Mirren, Louis C.K., Elle Fanning, John Goodman and Michael Stuhlbarg. The film follows the life of Hollywood screenwriter Dalton Trumbo and is based on the biography Dalton Trumbo by Bruce Alexander Cook.[4]

The film was shown in the Special Presentations section of the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival on September 12, 2015,[5] and was released on November 6, 2015, by Bleecker Street. The film has received generally positive reviews, with lead actor Bryan Cranston nominated for several awards, including the Academy Award for Best Actor.[6][7] However, the film has also been criticized for historical inaccuracies and misportrayals of important people and events.[8][9][10]

Plot

Dalton Trumbo (Bryan Cranston) is a screenwriter whose talent places him among the elite of Hollywood. However, his active membership in the Communist Party of the USA draws the contempt of staunchly anti-Soviet entertainment-industry figures such as columnist Hedda Hopper (Helen Mirren) and actor John Wayne (David James Elliott).

Trumbo is one of 10 screenwriters subpoenaed to testify before the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) regarding alleged Communist propaganda in Hollywood films. They refuse to directly answer questions, confident that a liberal majority on the Supreme Court will overturn the convictions for contempt of Congress. Trumbo's friend Edward G. Robinson (Michael Stuhlbarg), who supports the cause, sells the Portrait of Père Tanguy to raise money for their legal defense fund.

The unexpected death of Justice Wiley Rutledge ruins Trumbo's plan to appeal to the Supreme Court. In 1950, Trumbo serves 11 months in Texarkana prison, where he meets former HUAC chairman J. Parnell Thomas, who was convicted of tax evasion.[11]

As the Hollywood Blacklist expands to exclude more communists and communist sympathizers from working in the industry, Trumbo and his comrades are abandoned by Robinson and producer Buddy Ross (Roger Bart), who disavow them to protect their careers. Trumbo is released from prison, but he remains blacklisted and his finances – and family life – become increasingly strained. He resorts to giving the screenplay for Roman Holiday to his friend Ian McLellan Hunter (Alan Tudyk), to take credit and a share of the money, and eventually the Academy Award for Best Story. Selling his idyllic lakeside home and moving to a house in the city, he goes to work as a pseudonymous screenwriter for the low-budget King Brothers Productions, also farming out the writing of B-movie screenplays to fellow blacklisted writers. He puts his wife Cleo (Diane Lane) and teenage children to work as his support staff, adding to domestic conflict. King Brothers' film The Brave One, an original story by Trumbo under a pseudonym, receives an Academy Award he cannot claim. His blacklisted friend Arlen Hird (Louis C.K.) dies, destitute, but an attempt by Hopper's allies to intimidate the head of King Brothers to fire Trumbo fails completely.

Over time, industry suspicion of Trumbo's ghostwriting develops, but he is careful not to confirm it. In 1960, actor Kirk Douglas (Dean O'Gorman) recruits him to write the screenplay for his epic film Spartacus, and director Otto Preminger (Christian Berkel) recruits him to script Exodus for him; both publicly credit Trumbo as the screenwriter despite Hopper's futile efforts to intimidate Douglas into dropping Trumbo. By 1960, the effectiveness of the Blacklist has been broken to the point where newly elected US President John F. Kennedy publicly endorses Spartacus and Trumbo and others are able to begin rebuilding their careers. Ten years later, finally receiving his due accolades from Hollywood, Trumbo speaks about how the Blacklist victimized them all: those who stood by their principles and lost their jobs, and also those who compromised their principles to keep them.

Cast

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Production

On September 18, 2013, Bryan Cranston joined the cast to play Dalton Trumbo.[13] On April 14, 2014, Helen Mirren joined the cast to play Hedda Hopper.[14] On August 7, 2014, Diane Lane, Elle Fanning, John Goodman and Michael Stuhlbarg joined the cast.[15] On August 13, 2014, David James Elliott, Peter Mackenzie and Roger Bart joined the cast to play John Wayne, Robert Kenny and Buddy Ross, respectively.[16][17] On September 6, 2014, Louis C.K. joined the cast to play Arlen Hird.[18] On September 22, 2014, Dean O'Gorman joined the cast to play Kirk Douglas.[19] On October 16, 2014, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje joined the cast to play Virgil Brooks.[20] Principal photography began on September 15, 2014, and ended on November 6, 2014.[21][22]

Release

On August 13, 2014, it was announced that Bleecker Street would distribute the film.[23] The film had its world premiere at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival on September 12, 2015.[1] The film had a limited release on November 6, 2015 before going wide on November 25.[24]

Reception

Critical response

Trumbo has received generally positive reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a rating of 76%, based on 160 reviews, with an average rating of 6.7/10. The site's critical consensus states, "Trumbo serves as an honorable and well-acted tribute to a brilliant writer's principled stand, even if it doesn't quite achieve the greatness of its subject's own classic screenplays."[25] Metacritic gives the film a score of 60 out of 100, based on reviews from 33 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[26]

Peter Debruge of Variety gave the film a positive review, saying "Trumbo may be clumsy and overly simplistic at times, but it’s still an important reminder of how democracy can fail (that is, when a fervent majority turns on those with different and potentially threatening values), and the strength of character it takes to fight the system."[27] Lou Lumenick of the New York Post gave the film three and a half stars out of four, saying "It's a cracking good story, and Cranston does a great job portraying a man who made great sacrifices for his principles."[28] Manohla Dargis of The New York Times gave the film a negative review, saying "Part biopic, part historical gloss, Trumbo tells a great-man story with a patchwork of fact and fiction, mixing in the odd bit of newsreel with a great many dull, visually flat and poorly lighted dramatic scenes."[29] Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle gave the film three out of four stars, saying "Trumbo is breezy and pithy without ever undercutting the seriousness of the subject. A certain degree of wit is appropriate in a writer’s story, just as any Hollywood tale must at least have a whiff of absurdity, or else it can’t be true."[30] Richard Roeper of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film three out of four stars, saying "Trumbo is a corny, well-made B-movie about an A-list screenwriter who had to take jobs writing B-movies after he was blacklisted, but eventually worked his way back to writing A-movies with Kirk Douglas a.k.a. Spartacus as his champion."[31]

Jordan Mintzer of The Hollywood Reporter gave the film a positive review, saying "What makes the movie work are the lively performances, both from the supporting cast and from Cranston, who sheds the mimicry and pontificating of earlier scenes to turn Trumbo into a wry, self-deprecating and somewhat cheeky older man, even if he continued to stand up for what was right."[1] Ty Burr of The Boston Globe gave the film three out of four stars, saying "Cranston's performance is the motor that runs Trumbo, and that motor never idles, never flags in momentum or magnetism or idealistic scorn."[32] Alonso Duralde of TheWrap gave the film a positive review, saying "Roach and McNamara fall victim to the occasional phony biopic moment or straight-up moment of didacticism, but overall Trumbo is a lively history about the day-in-day-out drudgery of survival during oppressive times. Screenwriters are so rarely taken seriously by the film industry that it’s a nice switch to watch them be the heroes."[33] Bill Goodykoontz of The Arizona Republic gave the film three and a half stars out of four, saying "Roach’s film may be light in places, even sugarcoated in others, but any reminder of the past and its impact on the future is a welcome one. Plus, we get a good Cranston performance in the bargain."[34]

Despite generally positive reviews, several critics attacked the film for being historically misleading or for ideological reasons. Godfrey Cheshire of the Roger Ebert Journal wrote that Trumbo is “another of those simplistic, made-to-order films about the Hollywood blacklist in which the blacklisted movie folks are all innocent, in every conceivable way.” Cheshire decried the film's insinuation that Joseph McCarthy and the House Committee on Un-American Activities created the Hollywood blacklist. In reality, the blacklist was created by Hollywood studio chiefs. Cheshire also wrote that the film defended international communism: “it invites us to the see the Communist Party USA as just another political party rather than as the domestic instrument of a hostile and ultra-murderous foreign tyranny.”[8]

Other critics raised similar historical concerns. While the film portrays Trumbo as “a New Deal liberal hero defending civil liberties”, Ron Capshaw explained how the real Trumbo was an outspoken supporter of Soviet-style communism, including the brutal regimes of Joseph Stalin and North Korean dictator Kim Il-sung.[9] The conservative Pat Buchanan questioned the appropriateness of portraying Trumbo as a “martyr to the first amendment” while overlooking his support for regimes that actively suppress free speech.[10] Armond White of the National Review went a step further, accusing director Jay Roach of “unrestrained partisanship” for whitewashing the dark history of communist ideologies to invent a hero that supports Roach’s political views.[35]

Box office

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. As of February 25, 2016, Trumbo has grossed $7,833,347 domestically and $377,920 overseas for a worldwide total of $8,211,267.[36]

Accolades

Bryan Cranston received numerous award nominations for his portrayal of Trumbo, including an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor.

Awards
Award Date of Ceremony Category Recipient Outcome
Academy Awards February 28, 2016 Best Actor Bryan Cranston Nominated
British Academy Film Awards[37] February 14, 2016 Best Actor in a Leading Role Bryan Cranston Nominated
Costume Designers Guild Awards[38] February 23, 2016 Excellence in Period Film Daniel Orlandi Nominated
Critics' Choice Awards[39] January 17, 2016 Best Actor Bryan Cranston Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Helen Mirren Nominated
Best Acting Ensemble Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Louis C.K., Bryan Cranston, David James Elliott, Elle Fanning, John Goodman, Diane Lane, Helen Mirren, Michael Stuhlbarg, Alan Tudyk Nominated
Golden Globe Awards[40] January 10, 2016 Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama Bryan Cranston Nominated
Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture Helen Mirren Nominated
Houston Film Critics Society[41] January 9, 2016 Best Actor Bryan Cranston Nominated
Indiana Film Journalists Association Awards[42] December 14, 2015 Best Film Bryan Cranston Nominated
Best Actor Bryan Cranston Nominated
Best Supporting Actor Louis C.K. Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Helen Mirren Nominated
Palm Springs International Film Festival[43] January 2, 2016 Spotlight Award – Actor Bryan Cranston Won
San Diego Film Critics Society[44] December 14, 2015 Best Actor Bryan Cranston Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Helen Mirren Nominated
San Francisco Film Critics Circle[45] December 12, 2015 Best Actor Bryan Cranston Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Helen Mirren Nominated
Screen Actors Guild Awards[46] January 30, 2016 Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role Bryan Cranston Nominated
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role Helen Mirren Nominated
Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Louis C.K., Bryan Cranston, David James Elliott, Elle Fanning, John Goodman, Diane Lane, Helen Mirren, Michael Stuhlbarg, Alan Tudyk Nominated
Writers Guild of America Award[47] February 13, 2016 Best Adapted Screenplay John McNamara Nominated

Alleged Robinson inaccuracy

The film depicts actor Edward G. Robinson betraying his friend Dalton Trumbo and others by naming them as communists before the House Un-American Activities Committee. Robinson did testify four times before the committee and eventually stated that he had been a dupe of communist front organizations, but he never named anyone, friend or foe, as a communist.[48] According to the transcript of a hearing on April 30, 1952, Robinson gave the following testimony: "Well, you had Albert Maltz, and you have Dalton Trumbo, and you have—what is the other fellow, the top fellow who they say is the commissar out there?", and after being prompted by his questioner (Mr. Walter), Robinson continued: "Yes, John Howard Lawson. I knew Frank Tuttle. I didn't know Dmytryk at all. There are the Buchmans, that I know, Sidney Buchman and all that sort of thing. It never entered my mind that any of these people were Communists."[49] His testimony is re-enacted in the film, but with alterations, including to some of the names and their order. For instance, instead of John Howard Lawson, the composite character, Arlen Hird, is identified as "the commissar".[50]

References

Notes
  1. "Arlen Hird" is a composite character based on Alvah Bessie, Lester Cole, John Howard Lawson, Albert Maltz, and Samuel Ornitz.[12]
  2. "Buddy Ross" is a composite character based on Dore Schary and Walter Wanger.[12]
Citations
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  11. J. Parnell Thomas was actually incarcerated in Federal Correctional Institution, Danbury and Trumbo in Federal Correctional Institution, Ashland
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  48. Ross, Steven J. Hollywood Left and Right: How Movie Stars Shaped American Politics, Oxford University Press, 2011
  49. Testimony of Edward G. Robinson before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, April, 1952. U.S. Government Printing Office, 1952, p. 2421.
  50. Trumbo, Apple iTunes M4V video file, beginning at minute 46:20.

External links