Calling this made-for-TV production of Saul
Levitt’s Broadway play a movie is a bit of a stretch, seeing as how it’s
essentially a videotaped recording of a live performance on a soundstage, but
the cast is so colorful and the story is so arresting that The Andersonville Trial demands attention. Set four months after
the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, Levitt’s play dramatizes the real-life
case of Captain Henry Wirz, the Confederate officer who oversaw a massive POW
camp in Andersonville, Georgia, where 14,000 inmates died from abuse,
deprivation, and exposure. In Levitt’s humanistic telling, Wirz was complicit
in the deaths, but he also unfairly received the brunt of the North’s anger
against the South following the Civil War, since he was the first Confederate
officer tried for war crimes. Staging The
Andersonville Trial for television soon after the My Lai massacre was
undoubtedly a conscious choice on the part of the producers, because Levitt’s
play explores the thorny issue of how conscientious soldiers struggle to reconcile
military and moral obligations, a relevant consideration during the Vietnam era.
George C. Scott, who played the leading role on
Broadway, slipped into the director’s chair for this production, and William
Shatner somewhat improbably inherited the part. Save for their flamboyance,
it’s hard to imagine two actors who are more different. That said, Shatner
attacks the part of prosecuting JAG Lt. Col. Norton P. Chipman with ferocity
and passion. In fact, The Andersonville
Trial may well contain the best visual record of Shatner’s capacity as an
actor. Many of Shatner’s excesses are present here, but so, too, are his
sometimes underrated gifts—he orates well, mostly eschewing his famous dramatic
pauses, and he shifts nimbly from anger to anguish. If not a remarkable
performance, it’s certainly a robust one.
As the title suggests, Levitt’s play tracks
several episodes during a long trial, with each act comprising an extended
real-time vignette. The defendant, Wirz (Richard Basehart), is an oddity, a
physically impaired European immigrant so proud of his blind service to
Confederate orders that he finds the whole trial offensive and ridiculous. He
represents the familiar notion that following orders absolves a soldier of
personal responsibility for atrocities. Conversely, Shipman represents a higher
form of justice, since his prosecution asks whether Wirz should have defied
orders in the name of mercy.
Levitt’s exploration of these complicated issues
within the framework of an exciting courtroom duel makes for compelling viewing
even though The Andersonville Trial
runs two and a half hours. It is also to Levitt’s and Scott’s credit that so
many mid-level actors deliver excellent work here. Jack Cassidy is smooth as
Wirz’s exasperated defense attorney, Cameron Mitchell conveys an interesting
mixture of condescension and dignity as the head of the military tribunal, and
folks shining in smaller roles include Michael Burns, Buddy Epsen, and Albert
Salmi. Attentive viewers will even spot a young Martin Sheen in a glorified
walk-on role toward the beginning of the piece.
The
Andersonville Trial: GROOVY
3 comments:
I remember this used to be on Netflix. Some of Shatner's finest work during a strange period in his career.
What a lineup.
I remember watching this when it originally aired. I agree, one of Shatner's better performances before he slipped into self-parody. Great cast.
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