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Mr. Smith
Goes to Washington (1939)
In Frank Capra's classic political-drama with a message
about honesty and maintaining one's ideals in government:
- the film's setup: rapid-fire telephone conversations
reporting the hospital-bed death of a Western state Senator's death:
"Senator Samuel Foley - dead, yeah, yeah, died a minute ago
- here at St. Vincent's. At the bedside was state political sidekick
Senator Joseph Paine. Yeah"
- the duty of 'yes-man' Governor Hubert "Happy" Hopper
(Guy Kibbee) to appoint a replacement for the recently-deceased US
Senator, and his choice of naive and wholesome local youth leader
Jefferson Smith (James Stewart), the Head of the Boy Rangers
- at a celebratory banquet, Smith tremulously spoke
in his first speech: "I-I can't help feeling that there's been
a big mistake somehow"
- the distinguished Senator Joseph Paine (Claude Rains)
approved the selection in conversation with powerful media magnate
Jim Taylor (Edward Arnold), head of a political machine that was
pushing for a pork barrel project to build an unneeded dam (the Willet
Creek Dam project): ("A young patriot, recites Lincoln and Jefferson,
turned loose in our nation's capital. Yeah. I think it's all right")
- the scene of the two-day train ride of Jefferson Smith
with Senator Paine to Washington, DC., when Smith remembered his
crusading editor/publisher father Clayton Smith's motto: "Dad
always used to say the only causes worth fighting for were the lost
causes"
- the initial sequence of Smith's initial reaction to
being in DC, during a whirlwind sightseeing bus tour of the capital
city's sites and monuments in a compiled montage of images - with
the idealistic Smith beaming with patriotism and pride
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Jefferson Smith's Naivete - His First Speech at
Banquet
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On Train: "...the only causes worth fighting
for were lost causes"
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At the Lincoln Memorial During Whirlwind Tour
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- the scene of the disillusioned, newly-elected Senator
Jefferson Smith, now serving in Washington DC, and his disgust
at the press corps (that had humiliated him in newspaper reports
for his naivete), and the dishonest corruption: ("Why don't
you tell the truth for a change?..People in this country pick up
their papers and what do they read?... If you thought as much about
being honest as you know about being smart") - Smith was cautioned
about being too altruistic and idealistic
- while drafting a boys' camp Senate bill to buy land
in his home state, the scene of Senator Smith late at night in the
Senate Office Building with his secretary Clarissa Saunders (Jean
Arthur), thinking about how to inject patriotic ideals into the words
of the bill - and pointing at the Capitol Dome out the window: ("The
Capitol Dome... I want to make that come to life for every boy in
this land. Yes, and all lighted up like that too! You see, you see,
boys forget what their country means by just reading 'the land of
the free' in history books. And they get to be men - they forget
even more. Liberty's too precious a thing to be buried in books,
Miss Saunders. Men should hold it up in front of them every single
day of their lives and say: 'I'm free to think and to speak. My ancestors
couldn't. I can. And my children will.' Boys want to grow up remembering
that")
- in his office, Senator Paine's explanation to Senator
Smith about compromising and being less of an idealist, after Paine's
Deficiency Bill on the projected site for a boys camp was discovered
to be a front for party Boss Jim Taylor's own plans to fraudulently
appropriate funds: ("This is a man's world. It's a brutal world,
Jeff, and you've no place in it. You'll only get hurt. Now take my
advice. Forget Taylor and what he said. Forget you ever heard of
the Willet Creek Dam...I know it's tough to run head-on into facts
but, well as I said, this is a man's world Jeff, and you've got to
check your ideals outside the door, like you do your rubbers. Thirty
years ago, I had your ideals. I was you. I had to make the
same decision you were asked to make today. And I made it. I compromised
- yes! So that all those years, I could sit in that Senate and serve
the people in a thousand honest ways. You've gotta face facts, Jeff.
I've served our state well, haven't I? We have the lowest unemployment
and the highest federal grants. But, well, I've had to compromise.
I've had to play ball. You can't count on people voting. Half the
time they don't vote anyway. That's how states and empires have been
built since time began. Don't you understand?") - Paine begged
Smith to avoid interfering with the Deficiency Bill on the Senate
floor - but Smith was unwilling to compromise and sacrifice his principles
for a scheme involving graft, and felt betrayed and let down by his
sponsoring guide in the Senate
- the scene the next day, when during the reading of
the Deficiency Bill, Smith rose to question Section 40 regarding
Willet Creek Dam, but the blame was shifted to Smith by Paine - to
discredit and accuse him of their own crimes (it was interpreted
as Smith's own pork barrel - introduced for his own profit)
- the scene of betrayed Senator Smith's late-night visit
to the Lincoln Memorial when he felt downtrodden and was ready to
leave town: ("This is a whole new world to me. What are you
gonna believe in? And a man like Paine, Senator Joseph Paine gets
up and swears that I've been robbin' kids of nickels and dimes -
a man I've admired and worshipped all my life. I don't know. There
are a lot of fancy words around this town. Some of them are carved
in stone. Some of 'em, I guess the Taylors and Paines have put 'em
up there so suckers like me can read 'em. Then when you find out
what men actually do - well, I'm gettin' out of this town so fast
and away from all the words and the monuments and the whole rotten
show") - and Saunders' encouragement for him to remain, go against
the odds, and tell the truth: ("You can't quit now. Not you!
They aren't all Taylors and Paines in Washington. Their kind just
throw big shadows, that's all. You didn't just have faith in Paine
or any other living man. You had faith in something bigger than that.
You had plain, decent, every day, common rightness. And this country
could use some of that. Yeah - so could the whole cock-eyed world.
A lot of it. Remember the first day you got here? Remember what you
said about Mr. Lincoln? You said he was sitting up there waiting
for someone to come along. You were right! He was waiting for a man
who could see his job and sail into it. That's what he was waiting
for. A man who could tear into the Taylors and root 'em out into
the open. I think he was waiting for you Jeff. He knows you can do
it. So do I")
- the classic, climactic scene of idealist Senator
Smith's exhausting, desperate one-man filibuster (that was to last
almost 24 hours) in the US Senate - when he was on the verge of being
threatened with expulsion - at first, he refused to yield to Senator
Paine, and then accused Paine (in cahoots with Taylor) of graft:
("I was ready to tell you that a certain man of my state, a
Mr. James Taylor, wanted to put through this dam for his own profit.
A man who controls a political machine! And controls everything else
worth controlling in my state!") - he insisted on continuing
to speak:
"I've got a piece to speak, and blow hot or cold, I'm gonna speak
it....The wild horses aren't gonna drag me off this floor until those
people have heard everything I've got to say, even if it takes all
winter" - the long filibuster caused Senator Smith to become increasingly
exhausted
Smith's Exhausting One-Man Filibuster
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- Smith preached to the Senate and offered home-spun
insight on democratic ideals: "I wouldn't give you two cents
for all your fancy rules if, behind them, they didn't have a little
bit of plain, ordinary, everyday kindness and a - a little lookin'
out for the other fella, too...And I hate to stand here and try
your patience like this, but EITHER I'M DEAD RIGHT OR I'M CRAZY"
- after almost 24 hours, Smith exhorted the Senate:
"Get up there with that lady, that's up on top of this Capitol
Dome. That lady that stands for Liberty. Take a look at this country
through her eyes if you really want to see somethin'. And you won't
just see scenery. You'll see the whole parade of what man's carved
out for himself after centuries of fighting. And fighting for something
better than just jungle law. Fighting so as he can stand on his own
two feet free and decent, like he was created no matter what his race,
color, or creed. That's what you'd see. There's no place out there
for graft or greed or lies! ...this country is bigger than the Taylors
or you or me or anything else. Great principles don't get lost once
they come to light. They're right here. You just have to see them again"
- the sequence in which thousands of "Taylor-made" phony
telegrams from constituents in his state were manufactured (at the
direction of Taylor), and deposited in front of the Senate chamber;
Senator Paine held up a fistful, telling Smith that they all demanded
that he yield the floor and give up his filibuster: "The people's
answer to Jefferson Smith"; Smith grabbed two fist fulls of
the phony documents, and in a hoarse voice toward Senator Paine,
he delivered an impassioned speech about "lost causes"
- accusing Paine face-to-face of betraying his ideals this time around:
("I guess this is just another lost cause, Mr. Paine. All you
people don't know about lost causes. Mr. Paine does. He said once they
were the only causes worth fighting for. And he fought for them once,
for the only reason that any man ever fights for them. Because of just
one plain simple rule: 'Love thy neighbor'")
- Smith spoke one more time directly to Paine: ("You
think I'm licked. You all think I'm licked. Well, I'm not licked,
and I'm gonna stay right here and fight for this lost cause even
if this room gets filled with lies like these, and the Taylors and
all their armies come marching into this place. Somebody'll listen
to me. Some...") - and then Smith collapsed onto the floor
Smith Collapsing Onto the Senate Floor
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Senator Paine's Admission of Dishonesty
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The Senate Floor and Gallery Erupting With Joy
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- the exciting and triumphant conclusion, when a remorseful
Senator Paine failed in an attempted suicide (gunshots were heard
outside the Senate) as he admitted his dishonesty: ("I'm not
fit to be a Senator. I'm not fit to live. Expel me! Expel me! Not
him"); Paine then returned to the Senate floor to exonerate
Smith: ("Every word that boy said is the truth! Every word
about Taylor and me and graft and the rotten political corruption
of our state. Every word of it is true. I'm not fit for office!
I'm not fit for any place of honor or trust. Expel me!");
the Senate floor and gallery erupted with joy; Saunders danced
up and down with Diz Moore (Thomas Mitchell) in the gallery and
then shouted: "Yippee!"
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Reports of a Senator's Death
Youth Leader Jefferson Smith Appointed by Governor to
Serve in US Senate
Senator Paine's Approval of the Selection in Discussion
with Scheming Jim Taylor
Smith Humiliated by the DC Press
Shattered Idealism: Senator Smith's Disgust with
DC Press Corps and Corruption
Pointing at the Capitol Dome During Drafting of
Boys' Camp Senate Bill
Senator Paine to Smith: "This is a man's world"
In the Senate, Paine's Denouncement of Smith's Boys'
Camp Bill in the Senate - to Shift Blame
Late Night Visit with Saunders to the Lincoln Memorial
Paine Challenged Smith with 50,000 Telegrams
Smith Aghast at Phony Telegrams Sent to Senate Chamber
Smith's Final "Lost Causes" and "You
Think I'm Licked" Speeches
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