A true ’70s obscurity
that’s well worth tracking down, The Man
is a whip-smart imaginary tale about the first black U.S. president. Built
around a taut screenplay by Rod Serling and a commanding performance by James
Earl Jones, the picture now seems quite prescient—believe it or not, the title
character’s campaign slogan is “Change.” Based on a novel by Irving Wallace,
the story presents a convoluted chain of events leading to the installation of
Sen. Douglass Dilman as president. After the previous commander in chief and
the Speaker of the House are killed in an accident, the sitting vice president exits
the line of succession because he’s terminally ill. Thus, the presidency falls
to the Senate’s pro tem president, Dilman. This doesn’t sit well with white
power brokers including Secretary of State Eaton (William Windom), who has
designs on the Oval Office, and Senator Watson (Burgess Meredith), an
unapologetic racist from an unnamed Southern state. As a result, Dilman is a political
target from the moment he takes power.
Even potential supporters have issues
with Dilman, simply because his ascension carries the weight of history. In one
of the film’s best quiet moments, Dilman shares an exchange with his activist
daughter, Wanda (Janet MacLachlan), the night he inherits the presidency. “They
were expecting a black messiah,” Dilman says about African-Americans. Her reply? “What
they’ve got is a black president—that’s more than they’ve ever gotten.” Then Dilman delivers the kicker, which resonates strongly in the Obama era: “I
can’t be what everyone wants me to be.” The
Man poignantly anticipates the gulf between dreams and reality that has
been the source of so much anti-Obama criticism and disappointment.
Yet The Man cleverly sidesteps the question of what a black president
might do with a mandate, instead portraying Dilman as a dedicated public
servant who inherits a racially charged mess. At the moment he takes the oath
of office, a young African-American college student is under suspicion
following an attempt on the South African defense minister’s life, and a
minority-rights bill is working its way through Congress. Worse, domestic
adversaries including Watson, Eaton, and Eaton’s Lady Macbeth-esque wife, Kay
(Barbara Rush), forge political wedges with which to dislodge Dilman’s
political standing, lest the accidental president decide he wants a full term.
The Man is preachy and talky—Serling
shares with Aaron Sorkin the debate-club approach to dramatic structure—but the
plot churns with enough Beltway skullduggery to ground the speechifying in
suspense. Director Joseph Sargent, a reliable TV-trained helmer, serves the material
well by staying out of the way, and the acting is uniformly vivid. Meredith and
Rush are believably loathsome as D.C. barracudas, Georg Sanford Brown lends
fire as the impassioned college student, and the great Martin Balsam provides gravitas
and warmth as the president’s chief of staff. The whole movie rests on Jones’
shoulders, however, and he meets the challenge with grace. Portraying an
intellectual who has channeled his indignation into diplomatic rhetoric, Jones
employs his formidable powers to convey charisma, strength, and wisdom—the very
qualities that, decades later, distinguish the individual who changed history
in the real world the way the Dilman character changed history in the reel
world.
The Man:
GROOVY
Never heard of this one. Interested big time!
ReplyDeleteIt's so strange to see Barbara Rush play a character like that.
ReplyDelete