Witness for the
Prosecution (dir. Billy Wilder, 1957) is worth watching solely for the characters
played by Charles Laughton (in his last film) and Marlene Dietrich. Based on a play based on a novel by Agatha
Christie, this courtroom drama offers nothing new in terms of style or
method. It’s strongly marked by the
characteristics of film noir, especially in its portrayal of individual
characters and their betrayals of one another. But it has comic elements too,
with its portrayal of the sick and aging barrister Sir Wilfrid Roberts
(Laughton). Hospitalized with a heart attack,
he is instructed by his doctors on his release to rest, to avoid cigars and
liquor and, especially not to take any cases that might stir him up. His personal nurse constantly warns him about
overexertion and chides him for his misbehavior. The comic tension between them is a running
gag throughout the film. Early in the film he goes to great lengths to be able
to smoke his cherished cigars.
Throughout the trial at the film’s center Roberts has a series of pills with
him in the courtroom which he must take once an hour, washed down with a flask
of what is undoubtedly whiskey.
Each of the characters in this film has a distinct personality,
even the minor ones. The film is highly
entertaining. I liked it, but my wife
hated it. This is the kind of old film
to which you simply have to surrender—surrender to its conventions, the slow
pacing, the overacting, the stereotypes, the formulaic plot. Though the plot is formulaic, what makes the
film is how successfully it enacts the components of the formula. By surrendering
to it, you allow the film to do its work.
The film’s title refers to a character named Christine, who
appears unexpectedly to testify for the prosecution. She’s the wife of Leonard (Tyrone Power), who
is on trial for murdering a wealthy older woman. Dietrich at the time of the film was probably
20 years older than her character. She
is sultry, imposing, and intimidating.
My wife and I both used the word “frightening” to describe how she
portrayed her role.
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