"The Day the Earth Stood Still"

Last night I watched "The Day the Earth Stood Still" on video. It was the first time I had seen it since the original theater appearance in  1952. It is one of the first films of the period to question the cold war, just as another science fiction flick "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" was designed to increase anti-Communist hysteria.

A flying saucer lands in Washington, DC and discharges its two passengers, the humanoid Klaatu, played to a tee by Yorkshireman Michael Dennie who bears a striking resemblance to David Bowie, and his assistant Gort, an 8 foot robot with super-powers.

Klaatu has come to the planet Earth to deliver a message to the assembled leaders of all governments. He belongs to an interplanetary confederation that has outlawed warfare that has become aware of the earthlings' recent experiments with guided missiles carrying nuclear warheads. They fear that eventually these types of weapons might be introduced into outer space. So an ultimatum is to be delivered. Unless these experiments are called to a halt, the confederation will send a fleet of robots to destroy the planet Earth.

Klaatu can not even get to first base with the truculent and irrational earthlings. The Russian government will only attend a conference if it is based in Moscow, while the British are opposed to setting foot in Communist territory. Meanwhile, many Washingtonians believe that Klaatu is a Communist spy, while others simply want to eliminate him as a threat to the status quo.

In order to find out more about the mores of the planet, Klaatu disappears into the streets of Washington and finds a furnished room in a house where Patricia Neal and her young son live. Klaatu takes the two into his confidence and they find themselves in solidarity with his mission. In the climax of the film, Neal rescues the planet from immanent destruction by giving "Don't shoot" instructions to the robot: "Gort! Klaatu barada nikto!"

Klaatu also makes an effort to set up a meeting with the world's greatest scientist, Dr. Berhardt, who is played by Sam Jaffe, and other leading scientists. Bernhardt. Bernhardt is an obvious stand-in for Albert Einstein, who had come out repeatedly against atomic testing and for socialism during those insane years.

Although director Robert Wise is better known for his "West Side Story" and other mainstream Hollywood flicks, there is some strong circumstantial evidence of leftist sympathies. He was chosen by Harry Belafonte to direct "Odds Against Tomorrow", a noir masterpiece that was written by blacklistee Abraham Polonsky and which challenged some of the major racial stereotypes of the 1950s.

In the climactic scene of Robert Wise's 1951 science fiction film classic, is killed by a fear-mongering government agency, then resurrected by his robot charge Gort. Astonished by the power of this foreign technology, Patricia Neal asks him whether control over life and death is possible. Klaatu assures her that such powers belong only to the "Almighty Spirit" and that his life extension is good only "for a limited period," the duration of which "no one can tell." In Edmund North's original script, Gort resurrects Klaatu without limitation. But the movie industry's censors told the producers: "Only God can do that."

North's other best-known writing credit was the screenplay for Francis Ford Coppola's "Patton," about which he stated, ''I hope those who've seen the picture will agree with me that it is not only a war picture, but a peace picture as well.''

The film's producer Julian Blaustein also produced "Broken Arrow," based on the Elliott Arnold novel "Blood Brother," Blaustein demonstrated great enlightenment for that time in Hollywood by working hard to portray Native Americans fairly. He employed 375 Apaches to perform in the film, build authentic wickiups and other props, play native instruments and teach the movie-makers traditional dances.

"We have treated them as people, not savages," Blaustein told The Times in 1950. "We have tried to show that the only real 'heavies' are ignorance, misunderstanding and intolerance."

It is very likely that Robert Wise, Edmund North and Julian Blaustein were all touched to one degree or another by the great outpouring of radical politics and culture of the 1930s and 40s. Their story is being told by Paul Buhle and others. It is worth emulating as we move toward a new radicalization provoked by the capitalist contradictions of the new millenium.