Meet John Doe (1941) | |
Plot Synopsis (continued)
A montage sequence illustrates the hoopla surrounding the radio-speech event, a 9 pm show on W.B.N. Posters are displayed with John Doe's picture and an announcement of the speech. Telephone operators tell callers that all the tickets have been sold. When he arrives in the crowded sea of people, he has misgivings about being packaged for the public for a media event, pressured by various interest groups, and reading words he has never seen before. In the greenroom, Ann primes John for his performance for "the big night." She encourages him before the program airs to avoid being nervous: "All you have to remember is to be sincere." She expresses her love for the fictional "John Doe" that she has created:
Connell barges in with two last-minute, ludicrous photo opportunities for John Doe ("cheap publicity" according to Ann): one with a bathing beauty (a ribbon across the model's bathing suit reads MISS AVERAGE GIRL): "If that guy lays an egg, I want to get something out of it. I'm getting a Jane Doe ready"; the other with two midgets ("a half a heelot" according to the Colonel), cynical "symbols of little people" that John holds in his arms during the pose. When the room has finally been cleared of people and there's one minute until the broadcast, Ann takes her turn to emotionally pressure him as she combs his hair and straightens his clothes - she admits that the words in the speech are her father's while coercing him to take on the characteristics of "the real John Doe." Then she kisses him good luck after using a baseball metaphor:
"John Doe" - completely impassive and non-reactive (except for obvious sweating and anxiety) is led to the imposing microphone (blurry in the foreground) in the studio - actually he's on a stage with an opened curtain, a live audience and an orchestra behind him. The fanfare of the orchestra at the appointed hour startles John, and then an announcer introduces him as "something entirely new and different."
The stage manager encourages applause from the audience and motions them to rise in their seats. Hesitant and awkward, John is pointed to the microphone with his prepared text for the memorable radio speech. He first explains who a typical Mr. John Doe is - the average little man:
When a heckling voice from the rival newspaper (in the audience) accuses him of being an imposter, police haul the agitator away to quell the disturbance. The beginning of the speech is delivered in a straightforward, amateurish and honest style. [The scene is quickly cross-cut from backstage onlookers, to individuals in the audience, to a gloating Norton listening to the broadcast in his home (and witnessing his servant-help enthusiastically gathered around a radio in the kitchen), back to Doe, and to the clock on the studio's wall as time passes.]
He describes the universality of John Does through time and history:
Then as he becomes more earnest and effective as his own feelings come to the forefront (and he simultaneously reacts to Ann's words), he appeals for all the John Does ("the little punks") in the world to get up on their feet and pull together as a team. He speaks of his faith in the essential goodness of the common man and promotes brotherly love with one's neighbor (the guy next door, one's teammate):
"John Doe" creates a furor with the fifteen-minute speech (interrupted at one point when the microphone flops over). He is mobbed by well-wishers, but escapes and retreats to one of his old vagabond haunts by a riverbank under a bridge with the Colonel. After running away and becoming disillusioned, he expresses his misgivings about turning down the $5,000 offer and becoming a sucker: "I could have been on my way to old Doc Brown." The Colonel is especially cynical about Ann ("She's a heelot just like the rest of us. Lucky you got away from her") and John's idealistic speech ("Tear down all the fences! Why, if you tore one picket off of your neighbor's fence, he'd sue ya!") They ride the rails toward the Columbia River, playing another duet of the carefree Hi Diddle Dee Dee (An Actor's Life for Me) [from Disney's animated film Pinocchio (1940)], while Norton orders a search for his new-found "terrific" sensation. The two are instantly recognized by a cafe counter clerk Dan (Sterling Holloway) in the small town of Millville during their independent journey, although baseball player Willoughby denies any connection other than his "spitting image" resemblance. He is quickly mobbed in the town where a chapter of the nationwide chain of "John Doe" clubs has already sprung up. As Norton's entourage arrives to reclaim John, Mayor Hawkins (Harry Holman) distrusts his own 'John Doe' constituents on his city hall's 'front porch,' cautioning them:
Before their arrival, Norton advises Ann: "Present it to him as a great cause for the common man." Norton and Ann are led into the mayor's office where John is surrounded by piles of home-made cooking and female admirers, while the mayor tells them: "The people were so excited they nearly tore his clothes off." [John Doe is significantly positioned before framed portraits on the back wall of Lincoln and Washington.] Doe wants to be left alone to return to his unrecognized life - uninterested in the results of the newspaper's "circulation stunt." He hears that people have been deeply influenced by his speech and have begun forming clubs "to carry out the principles" he espoused. With his "ability to influence people," Norton encourages him to join a lecture tour for the "glorious movement." But John Willoughby reluctantly and skeptically resists them: "Baseball's my racket and I'm stickin' to it." He urges the Colonel to leave with him: "Come on, Colonel, let's get outta here." Uneasy, ambivalent and "all mixed up," Doe listens to a presentation from local John Doe club members. The Colonel is obviously disinterested by the sentiments expressed. In appreciation, Bert Hansen (Regis Toomey), a self-conscious soda jerk and his embarrassed but proud wife (Ann Doran) tell Doe how his message of 'love thy neighbor' has changed their lives with their cranky elderly neighbor "Sourpuss" Smithers (J. Farrell MacDonald). They formed a John Doe Club in the schoolhouse and suddenly became friends with their neighbors:
Ann enticingly implores John to change his mind and be convinced to return to public life and the good-will campaign: "Don't you see what a wonderful thing this can be, but we need you, John." John consents, but his partner, the Colonel, flees from the hordes of heelots. Meanwhile, the strong John Doe Brotherhood Movement, only present in the Midwest, is being orchestrated and manipulated by Norton to spread across the entire country - to further his own political ambitions and the establishment of a police state. A rousing montage of campaign activity illustrates the spread of the movement (and chartering of clubs) like a "prairie fire," with its catchy slogan emblazoned on buttons: "BE A BETTER NEIGHBOR." Norton and other politicians realize the voting-bloc value of the supporters: "We've got to get to them. They represent millions of voters." Norton plans to steer the supporters of the National John Doe Clubs toward his own political goals through a convention. Charlie Dawson (Charles C. Wilson), one of John Doe's bodyguards, believes that Doe has "great yokel appeal," is "beginning to believe he really wrote that original suicide letter," thinks Ann is "Joan of Arc" and is infatuated ("nuts") over her. But Ann has doubts about her complicity and questions herself: "We're all heels, me especially." In her bedroom as she packs for the convention (folds clothes into her suitcase on the bed), John enters, sits down in the doorway and tells Ann about a "crazy dream" he had the night before in which Ann is about to marry Norton's rich nephew. The dream is both cryptic and symbolic (John appears as both Ann's father and as the justice of the peace), as he chases the young child Ann across building tops and finally catches her, after she grows up and just before she recites her marital vows to Ted Sheldon. He punishes her for marrying Ted (a man who represents values opposed to her father's values) by spanking her:
As John acts out her spanking, he describes the kind of man that would be best for Ann - a knight-in-shining-armor person with moral authority and responsibility toward his fellow man, holding values similar to the ones that Ann's father had:
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