I Am A Fugitive From A Chain Gang (1932) | |
The Story (continued)
During a dance-dinner party with his boss at the Club Chateau one evening, he makes the acquaintance of a sweet society woman named Helen (Helen Vinson). She learns that Jim likes to "build bridges and roads for people to use when they want to get away from things," but that he feels destined to be locked down: " - but they can't get away, nobody can." Together, they make a personal "getaway" and park in the moonlight by Lake Michigan, where he begins to fall in love with her:
1929's calendar months fly off the wall - August, September, October, November, and December, and into 1930 - January, February, and March [the start of the Depression]. As Marie lounges on their couch as he negotiates for a divorce, she disapproves of the split:
When he admits his love for another woman, she is unsympathetic with his plight ("That's just too bad"). So he threatens to divorce her if she won't listen to reason, and she determinedly counter-threatens him:
The next day, the Chairman of the Chamber of Commerce (Edward J. Le Saint) invites Allen to speak at a banquet, as a detective (Lee Shumway) bursts into his office and presents a warrant for his arrest. The camera zooms in for a close-up of Allen's stunned face. He has been informed upon by his blackmailing wife. A campaign is mounted to save Allen from being extradited back to the South to serve out his sentence:
Allen speaks to reporters about conditions in the southern penal system, vowing: "Every thing I've said are facts. I want this rotten chain gang system exposed." Opposing editorials appear in the papers, one titled: "Is This Civilization?"
The other is titled: "What Has Become of State Rights?"
In the offices of the Chicago District Attorney, the DA (Douglas Dumbrille) debates Allen's extradition. A southern representative proposes for Allen to voluntarily return to the state (and pay the expenses of the case), where he would be fully pardoned and exonerated after ninety days, working in some clerical job in one of the camps: (Supposedly, it's only a technicality: "No prisoner is eligible for pardon until he's served ninety days.") One of Allen's lawyers argues that his client shouldn't have to return at all: "Why mete out punishment to a man who has proven himself a useful and honorable citizen?" Allen's inclination, after speaking to fiancee Helen, is "to get it all cleaned up now, so that nothing will stand in the way of our happiness." In Allen's absence, the representative even defends the chain gang system and preaches that it is beneficial:
Allen voluntarily decides to give himself up and return - on the representative's assurance of a pardon, to wipe his past slate clean. He is told: "And you won't regret your decision." A train takes him back to the South (a superimposed map displays his journey back there, fading out in Kentucky). In the office of Attorney at Law Mr. F.E. Ramsey (Robert McWade), Allen pays the expenses of his capture and return ($350) and his lawyer's fee ($2,500). Ramsey admits that nothing is assured, and the promised clerical job has probably evaporated:
In the Tuttle County Prison Camp (with 69 Negroes and 33 White prisoners), Allen learns that promises have not been kept. He has not been made a trusty, but has been reassigned right back to an even tougher chain gang. Conditions are revealed to be no different in the bunkhouse as the camera pans through the filthy, grimy place. Bomber recognizes his freed pal:
The other inmates are incredulous that he believes that the state will pardon him from this ultimate of hellholes. Allen's case is heard in the prison board, with the chairman (Willard Robertson) presiding. Ramsey introduces Allen's brother to speak on Jim's behalf. The Reverend's demeanor is weak and unconvincing:
Ramsey concludes the proceedings: "I need not remind you that James Allen has kept his part of the bargain. He has returned voluntarily to this state and has paid all the expenses demanded of him. I cannot believe in the light of all this evidence and in the name of justice that you will bring yourselves even to consider any other alternative." The Chairman reminds the board of Allen's "malicious and unwarranted attack upon the chain gang system," and denounces him for his grossly exaggerated criticism of the penal system. He even uses Allen's own life story as proof that the chain gang rehabilitated him:
When Rev. Allen imparts the decision of the Prison Board to his brother, and Jim learns that his pardon has been refused, he bitterly complains about nine more years of confinement:
He ultimately resigns himself to his fate, to be a "model prisoner" for nine more months to pay his obligation "in full" to the state (a year minus three months already served). His brother persuades him to "be honorably free" and supported by legions of fans throughout the country who will force the state to release him:
Calendar months pass once more, from July to March, another nine months. Ramsey argues again before the stern-faced Prison Board that Allen has been a model prisoner - patient without complaining, with support from prominent individuals and organizations: "I think it only just, your honors, that he be given his freedom while there is still time for him to regain his former position in society of prominence and universal respect." As a result of a final report from the authorities on his new hearing, Allen is told by the warden in the bunkhouse: "They've suspended decision indefinitely." He is crushed - his face grimacing with pain and hurt. His hopes are dashed permanently. Allen makes a second, sensational jail-break escape with Bomber. They steal a truck carrying a case of high-explosive dynamite and blow up a bridge [opposite to his chosen profession, as he literally burns his bridges to society] to seal off the pursuit of guards, and Bomber is shot dead. Headlines read:
A Depression-era Editorial Asks: "What has become of James Allen? Is he, too, just another forgotten man?"
In a famous unforgettable, and unhappy dubious ending, as a harried and frightened convict hunted like an animal by police for over a year, a desperate and victimized Jim emerges from hiding one night in the shadows to see his fianceé Helen for a brief final farewell and a few words:
The final line of the film is his reply as he totally vanishes and delivers a postscript from within the dark abyss of shadows:
[Note: The composition and lighting of this abrupt scene, considered one of the most effective endings in film history, was actually an accident. Reportedly, the lights on the set were turned out prematurely (or failed, depending on the anecdote), but upon seeing the stark scene that resulted, the studio decided to keep the error in the final film.] |