Inherit the Wind (1960) | |||||||||||||
The Story (continued)
Lynching Mob Threatening Cates in Jail and Drummond in Mansion House: A mob of fundamentalists from town was rallied together to assemble outside Cates' jailhouse, singing the modified refrain (sung to "Battle Hymn of the Republic") and threatening to lynch him: "We'll hang Bert Cates to a sour apple tree, We'll hang Bert Cates to a sour apple tree..., Our God is marching on, Glory, Glory, Hallelujah." The frenzied group was also burning Cates' image in effigy. Meanwhile, Rachel was treated by a doctor for a nervous breakdown, and refused to speak to her father. Cates was injured by a rock thrown through the jail window.
The group moved on to the Mansion House where Henry Drummond was staying, with a changed refrain: "We'll hang Henry Drummond to a sour apple tree..." Hornbeck knocked on the door - and entered with a hooded mask, exclaiming cynically: "Hooligans of the world, unite! You've got nothing to burn but your intellectuals. (He pointed to the mob that was harrassing them) Well, those are the boobs that make our laws. It's a democratic process." Although he complimented Drummond for part of the day's proceedings, he also was critical of mankind and the entire human race for its basic stupidity:
Hornbeck considered Cates as "a monkey who tried to fly. Cates climbed to the top of the totem pole but - then he jumped, and there was nobody there to catch him, not even you." Drummond was stymied and frustrated about how to defend Cates with the presence of such ignorance and myopia. He was particularly frustrated for being denied permission to have a group of scientific expert witnesses testify. He stated that he needed "a miracle." Hornbeck tossed a Bible (courtesy of Brady) at Drummond (who caught the Bible), suggesting that there was a "whole bagful" of miracles inside. Hornbeck poured drinks for the two of them, turned, and realized that he had inspired Drummond to initiate a new way to argue his case. Drummond was clasping the Bible between his hands and smiling - realizing that he would make the Bible the centerpiece of his new strategy.
The Climactic Court Trial - Prosecuting Attorney Brady Called as a Defense Witness: After being cited with "contempt of court" the previous day, Drummond offered his sincere apology to the Judge the next morning: "Any remarks leading up to the contempt citation I regret very much. I realize your Honor is trying to be fair and I, uh, I'm very sorry for any remarks that were made in the heat of the moment." The Judge was accepting of Drummond's apology, gave a brief speech about the importance of forgiveness, and promptly withdrew the contempt citation. Drummond was allowed to continue as counsel for the defense of Mr. Cates.
Drummond decided to announce his new strategy: "Your Honor, the court, uh, has ruled out any evidence as to scientific knowledge or the Darwinian theory. Would the court admit evidence, expert evidence, on a book known as the Holy Bible?" When given the go-ahead by the prosecution, Drummond summoned his opponent Brady to the stand, calling him: "One of the world's foremost experts on the Bible and its teachings." Although the defense's move was "unorthodox," Brady's over-confident ego prevented him from declining and he welcomed the challenge: ("If the interests of right and justice will be served, I will take the stand...I shall speak out as I have all my life on behalf of the living truth of the Holy Scriptures"). Brady didn't foresee that he would become highly defensive and lose his credibility when interrogated and discredited by Drummond for his literal interpretations of the Bible.
Immediately, Drummond learned that Brady had not read Darwin's book Origin of Species ("I am not the least interested in the pagan hypotheses of that book"), and then stated:
When Drummond continued to pursue his line of questioning regarding Darwin's book, he was ordered by the Judge to "confine" his questions to the Bible. Drummond assented to the restrictions - without protest: ("We'll play in your ballpark, Colonel"). He began to reveal Brady's ignorant and contradictory statements when forced to explain certain unusual Biblical events, such as the Jonah-and-the Whale and Joshua-and-the-Sun stories, and when he struggled to interpret them as completely literal:
Drummond also referenced the Biblical story of Joshua making the sun stand still. Brady was scornful at Drummond's question: "I do not question or scoff at the miracles of the Lord, as do ye of little faith." Drummond brought up some understandable scientific issues with the Biblical account:
Then, Drummond read an excerpt from Genesis (chapter 4, verse 16-17): "And Cain went out from the presence of the Lord, and dwelt in the land of Nod, on the east of Eden. And Cain knew his wife." He then asked: "Now, where the hell did she come from?...If in the beginning, there were just Cain and Abel and Adam and Eve, where, where did this extra woman come from? Did you ever stop to think about that?...Never bothered you?...Never tried to find out?...You figure somebody else pulled another creation over in the next county somewhere?" Brady admitted that he boldfacedly accepted God's word, without ever questioning it or expressing curiosity:
The touchy subject of sex in the Bible was also brought up - Drummond noted the endless string of generational records in the Bible that were tied together with the word "begat." He inquired:
Brady was willing to endure Drummond's persistent questioning that began to amuse the spectators: "I am willing to sit here and endure Mr. Drummond's sneering and his disrespect, for he is pleading the case of the prosecution by his contempt for all that is holy." Drummond asserted that the one thing he considered "holy" was the power of human thought, and that human "progress" always meant a trade-off:
The absurdity of Brady's answer was clearly evident, that Drummond's client Bert Cates was being denied the "same privilege as a sponge - he wishes to think." Brady shouted out: "But your client is wrong! He is deluded! He has lost his way!" One of film's most famous lines was delivered by Brady after being asked by the tousled-haired Drummond how old he thought a 10 million year-old rock was:
Drummond also held up the fossil remains of a marine prehistoric creature from millions of years earlier. Brady thought it was only 6,000 years old, and used the opportunity to present his literal interpretation of the Bible's Great Flood and God's Act of Creation, calculated by Biblical scholar Bishop Usher to be in the year 4004 B.C. - on the 23rd of October at 9 am. He insisted it was a "literal fact" and not an opinion, and declared that only his particular interpretation of the Bible was correct.
He refused to answer Drummond's pestering questions about the time zone, and the length in hours of a day: ("I do not think about things that I do not think about"), and finally conceded that a day could have been 25 hours long instead of 24:
Objections were raised by the prosecutorial bench that the questioning was "irrelevant" and "immaterial," seconded by Brady who asserted Drummond's true motive: "He wants to destroy everybody's belief in the Bible and in God." Drummond argued otherwise:
An exasperated evangelical, Brady lost his composure on the witness stand by the incessant grilling and brow-beating from Drummond - and blurted out, like a bumbling, mindless, stammering buffoon. He was ultimately forced to frantically call out the Books of the Bible in order - clearly shaken and defeated:
Brady's admissions lost him the support of other fundamentalists in the courtroom, who looked crushed. He had opened the door to the idea that evolution was not opposed to Biblical teachings, and that Cates was free to "think" for himself without being silenced by Biblical literalists. As a result of the intense questioning, Brady had implicitly admitted that the Bible could be interpreted non-literally. Court was adjourned until 10:00 am the following morning. At the Mansion House That Evening: Rachel entered the Mansion House and spoke to Sara following the climactic day of Brady's testimony - she insisted on seeing the prosecutor: "He's got to tell Bert it wasn't my fault...Why should I be quiet? I want the whole world to know that Matthew Harrison Brady's a fake." Sara slapped Rachel across the face, to quiet her, but then apologized. Rachel described her nightmare of being on the witness stand: "I was dreaming I was in the witness chair, chained to it. I kept begging him to let me go." She remained distraught and hurt that she had confided in him and then he had betrayed her trust:
Brady was awakened from sleep by their discussion, and after Rachel left, Sara expressed her life-long support for her husband: "You were always a good man. That's why I loved you, even from the very beginning. People said you made mistakes, wrong decisions. You could have been President three times over, but I never doubted you, Matt, because your decisions were honest. You never sacrificed your principles just to win." Brady broke down and became hysterical when he realized he had personal flaws that had caused him to lose the case:
The Last Day of the Trial (The State v. Bertram Cates) on July 21, 1925 - The Sentencing of Cates: Before the last day of the trial began, Rachel confessed to Bert that she had left her father. He was supportively understanding of her decision and her disastrous courtroom testimony against him: "It wasn't your fault, Rach. I know how Brady can twist things..." The verdict was going to be covered by a nationwide radio broadcast delivered straight to a million people on WGN in Chicago. After the jury filed in, radio broadcaster Harry Esterbrook (Harp McGuire) set the scene for listeners regarding "the historic Hillsboro 'Monkey Trial' case" --- "In a few moments, we will know whether Bertram Cates will be found innocent or guilty. I wish I could describe the tension, in this courtroom today." The mayor of Hillsboro whispered to the Judge that the Lieutenant Governor of the state was suggesting that the Judge "let this whole thing kind of simmer down," due to the negative newspaper publicity and political embarrassment. Drummond technically lost the case when Cates was unanimously convicted by the conservative jury and found "guilty as charged." Esterbrook reported the live announcement of the verdict: "Bertram Cates, schoolteacher, keystone, and defendant in one of the greatest ethical contests known to our country, Bertram Cates has been found guilty. The law has been satisfied. But what profound repercussions of what has happened in this courtroom will be known only to the future."
As Cates was about to be sentenced in the hushed courtroom, he was allowed to speak. He mentioned that he would no longer be a school teacher, but disavowed the verdict: "I feel that I've been convicted of violating an unjust law. I will continue in the future, as I have in the past, to oppose this law in any way I can." According to the Judge, the sentence for the statute's violation would be either a fine or imprisonment. To avoid further controversy, however, the Judge leniently fined Cates only a token fee of $100 dollars:
Although Brady had won the case, he was outraged and protested the Judge's decision: "Your Honor, the prosecution takes exception! Why, the issues are so titanic, the court must mete out more drastic punishment!" Drummond stood up to oppose Brady's grand-standing, and announced his intention to appeal:
The Judge granted 30 days for the preparation of the appeal, and set bail bond at $200 dollars.
Brady valiantly struggled to deliver one final religious defense - his prepared closing statement ("a few short remarks") to be entered into the record, although Drummond's request for official adjournment ("Our business in Hillsboro is completed") had already been confirmed by the Judge. In the hot and chaotic courtroom as everyone clamored to exit, spectators were disinterested in hearing Brady's oratory: ("Here in this courtroom, we have seen vindicated the faith of our fathers, living still in spite of dungeon, fire and sword. Oh, how our hearts be high with joy whenever we hear the glorious word, faith of our fathers, holy faith! We will be true to thee - till death!"). Those at the defense table looked at Brady - aghast with pity, including his dismayed wife in the audience. A rambunctious young child banged the gavel on a desk, and a vendor (Jack Daly) sold Eskimo Pies. As he lost his voice and gasped for breath, the "holy prophet" Brady suffered a massive heart attack (or stroke), and collapsed and fainted with a loud thud - seen in an overhead view under an overhead fan. He died shortly later.
The Concluding Aftermath of the Verdict: In the concluding scene after Brady's death, the camera focused on a statue of the blindfolded Lady Justice, holding a balance and a sword. Hornbeck was calling in his story to the Baltimore Herald, and mentioned the cause of death to Drummond: "He died of a busted belly." The defense lawyer accused Hornbeck of callousness, while offering praise for Brady: "There was much greatness in the man."
For Brady's obituary, Hornbeck thought of using Brady's Biblical quote (Proverbs 11:29 - the "Inherit the Wind" verse) earlier spoken to Reverend Brown at the prayer meeting rally, when the preacher was about to curse his own 'flesh and blood' daughter Rachel. Drummond was able to quote the entire verse verbatim for him:
Hornbeck was shocked by Drummond's memorized recall of the Biblical verse: "Well, Colonel Drummond, we're growing an odd crop of agnostics this year!" Drummond took the opportunity to debate the atheistic reporter ("I'm getting damned sick of you") who had unjustly accused Drummond of extreme sentimentality for Brady. Drummond listened as Hornbeck denounced Brady for his life-long bigotry:
Hornbeck chastised Drummond for hypocritically stating a belief in God: "Wh-why, you hypocrite. Y-you fraud. The atheist who believes in God. Aah, you're just as religious as he was." Drummond countered by accusing Hornbeck of heartless cynicism, for believing in nothing, and for only whipping up media hoopla and hysterical frenzy between the opposing forces:
As Hornbeck was preparing to leave the courtroom, he spoke the film's final words: "You're wrong, Henry. You'll be there. You're the type. Who else would defend my right to be lonely?" Alone in the final scene in the courtroom, Drummond glanced at copies of Darwin's book and the Bible on the bench. He held up Darwin's volume of On the Origin of Species in his left hand, and the Bible in his right hand - thoughtfully weighing them and balancing them against each other in the air. He half-smiled, shrugged, clapped them against each other, and then carried them together in his right arm as he exited the courtroom, while an invisible chorus and sole acappella voice (of Leslie Uggams) sang the stirring The Battle Hymn of the Republic. End credits were missing from the film. |