Captures the stark plainness of the migrants, stripped to a few possessions, left with innumerable relations and little hope.
The Grapes of Wrath (1940)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:36
Fresh:36
Rotten:0
Average Rating:8.9/10
Consensus: A potent drama that is as socially important today as when it was made, The Grapes of Wrath is affecting, moving, and deservedly considered an American classic.
Runtime: 2 hrs 9 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: John Ford's memorable screen version of John Steinbeck's epic novel of the Great Depression--often regarded as the director's best film--stars Henry Fonda as Tom Joad. After having served a brief... John Ford's memorable screen version of John Steinbeck's epic novel of the Great Depression--often regarded as the director's best film--stars Henry Fonda as Tom Joad. After having served a brief prison sentence for manslaughter, Joad arrives at his family's Oklahoma farm only to find it abandoned. Muley (John Qualen), a neighbor now nearly mad with grief, tells Tom of the drought that has transformed the farmland of Oklahoma into a desert and of the preying land agents who have plowed under the shacks of the sharecroppers. Joined by former hellfire preacher Casy (John Carradine), Tom finds his extended family, including Pa (Charles Grapewin) and his indomitable Ma (Jane Darwell), packing their ramshackle truck to seek work in the fields of California. As the family treks across the country, their dissolution begins with the deaths of Tom's grandparents at close intervals. When they arrive in California, the Joads find only an abundance of poverty-stricken migrants like themselves and little in the way of potential work. Yet, ever resilient, they maintain their dignity, hoping for the best. Among the talented cast, Fonda does perhaps the best work of his career, as does Qualen in the film's most haunting sequence. Director of photography Gregg Toland captures the suffering and the weathered, luminous nobility of the Joads and the other uprooted, drifting families, creating striking images equal to the best work of Dorothea Lange and Walker Evans. In a stirring film that stands as a microcosm of the depression experience of millions, Ford gives poverty a human face in a way that was rare then and even rarer in the decades to follow as Hollywood films with a sense of class consciousness dwindled like a species nearing extinction. [More]
Starring: Henry Fonda, Jane Darwell, John Carradine, Charley Grapewin
Starring: Henry Fonda, Jane Darwell, John Carradine, Charley Grapewin, Doris Bowden, Russell Simpson, O.Z. Whitehead, John Qualen, Eddie Quillan, Zeffie Tilbury, Grant Mitchell
Director: John Ford
Director: John Ford
Screenwriter: Nunnally Johnson
Producer: Nunnally Johnson, Darryl F. Zanuck
Reviews for The Grapes of Wrath
This 1940 film is one of the best literary adaptations ever (and one of the quickest too -- it was in theaters within a year of the book's publication).
Cinematographer Gregg Toland perfectly captures the wide open spaces and big skies of rural America, while the normally conservative Ford puts forward a sympathetic but radical plea for workers' rights and freedom for the common people.
The Grapes of Wrath, whether in novel or movie form, remains a shockingly potent work of social criticism to this day.
Despite an occasional excess of sentiment and politics that are sometimes naive, 'Wrath' remains essential viewing...
...it proves that a Hollywood film can be both socially engaged and a work of lasting, entertaining art.
Like To Kill a Mockingbird, [it's] one of those rare motion pictures that perfectly captures the essence of its source material without compromising it in any way.
The Grapes of Wrath (1940) is director John Ford's most famous epic drama - the classic adaptation of John Steinbeck's Pulitzer Prize-winning, widely-read 1939 novel.
The Grapes of Wrath was often named the greatest American film, until it was dethroned by the re-release of Citizen Kane.
It is an absorbing, tense melodrama, starkly realistic, and loaded with social and political fireworks.
Like a grand Biblical epic, John Ford's film is a triumph on both the political and personal levels.
What really solidifies the greatness of The Grapes of Wrath is Ford’s ability to blend the personal and political without causing damage to either characters or themes.
Ford's admirers have rightly tended to play this down in favor of his later and more personal westerns, but there's much to admire here in Gregg Toland's sun-beaten photography and Henry Fonda's meticulous performance.
This brilliant film shows us a family of enormous dignity and commitment.
The Grapes of Wrath is just about as good as any picture has a right to be; if it were any better, we just wouldn't believe our eyes.
John Ford's adaptation of the John Steinbeck novel is moving and heartfelt, despite its random structure and rambling, overwrought (and overly political) narrative.
...one of the most powerful films Hollywood ever made, and just as moving today as it was all those years ago.
Latest News for The Grapes of Wrath
June 22, 2007:
AFI Announces Top 100 Movies of All Time ... Again
Ten years ago the AFI gave us a list of the Top 100 American Films Ever Made -- and when that was done they churned out 15 other lists every few years. And then last night they... More...
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