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Fury (1936)
In director Fritz Lang's crime drama (his first American
film) with a message about the dangers of mob violence:
- the predicament: gas station manager Joe Wilson
(Spencer Tracy) was wrongly-accused and arrested by Deputy "Bugs" Meyers
(Walter Brennan) on child kidnapping charges in a different state
- and jailed, because of circumstantial evidence - he had in his
possession a $5 bill from the ransom money
- the scene in which Joe's fiancee Katherine Grant (Sylvia
Sidney) saw him behind flaming jailbars in a cell in the small midwestern
town of Strand, that had been set on fire by a raging lynch mob,
with Joe inside and screaming for his life; she fainted from fright
- Joe had escaped death, revealed when he made a sudden,
shadowy reappearance in a doorway at the apartment of his brothers
Charlie (Frank Albertson) and Tom (George Walcott), where he recalled
his escape from the jail when it was dynamited: ("I could smell
myself burn"); he vowed to avenge his wrong-doing with a vengeful
frame-up of the lynchers, while everyone continued to presume that
he was dead: ("I'm burned to death by a mob of animals. I'm
legally dead and they're legally murderers. That I'm alive's not
their fault. But I know 'em. I know a lot of 'em and they'll hang
for it, accordin' to the law which says if you kill somebody, you
gotta be killed yourself. But I'll give 'em the chance they didn't
give me. They'll get a legal trial in a legal courtroom. They'll
have a legal judge and a legal defense. They'll get a legal sentence
and a legal DEATH!")
- he hid out during the trial as multiple lynch mob
suspects (accused of Joe's first-degree murder) perjured themselves
with dubious alibis; meanwhile, the real criminal kidnappers were
caught, implying that Wilson was innocent all along
- the moment after the reading of a special delivery
letter (from an anonymous person) in the trial when Katherine saw
the mis-spelled word "mementum"
instead of momentum - convincing her that Joe was still alive
- the prosecuting D.A. Adams (Walter Abel) projected
newsreel film (via movie projector) to provide "stop-action" conclusive
film evidence to identify the twenty-two individuals in the lynch
mob who were complicit and guilty of the crime of the jail 'murder',
after they had already given perjured testimony; newspaper headlines
heralded: "IDENTITY OF 22 PROVED," "MOVIES IDENTIFY
DEFENDANTS IN WILSON LYNCHING TRIAL," and "22 FACE DEATH"
Joe's Appearance at Trial of 22 Lynch Mob Members
Who "Murdered" Joe
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Newsreel Evidence to Identify Guilty
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Joe Speaking to Judge Before Guilty Verdict
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- the climactic ending scene when Joe realized that
his frame-up had gone far enough and that he had become a vindictive,
one-man 'lynch mob' himself; he strode into the courtroom and addressed
Judge Daniel Hopkins (Frederick Burton) just before guilty verdicts
were to be read for the 22 convicted individuals - in the film's
final lines of dialogue: "I know that by coming here, I saved
the lives of these twenty-two people, but that isn't why I'm here.
I don't care anything about saving them. They're murderers. I know
the law says they're not because I'm still alive, but that's not
their fault. And the law doesn't know that a lot of things that
were very important to me, silly things maybe, like a belief in
justice, and an idea that men were civilized, and a feeling of
pride that this country of mine was different from all others.
The law doesn't know that those things were burned to death within
me that night. I came here today for my own sake. I couldn't stand
it anymore. I couldn't stop thinking about them with every step
and every breath I took, and I didn't believe Katherine when she
said... Katherine is the young lady who was going to marry me.
Maybe someday after I've paid for what I did, they'll be a chance
to begin again, and then maybe Katherine and I..." - he turned
to kiss and embrace Katherine as the film ended on a hopeful and
optimistic note
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Katherine's Fearful View of Her Wrongly-Accused Fiancee
Joe 'Dying' in a Flaming Jail
Thought to be Dead, Joe's Sudden Reappearance
Joe's Vow to Seek Revenge
Special Delivery Letter - A Clue That Joe Was Alive
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