The Shawshank Redemption

The Shawshank Redemption

 

It’s hard to believe now, but The Shaw­shank Redemp­tion was a rel­a­tive flop at the box office, and over­looked in all seven of its Acad­emy Award nom­i­na­tions (los­ing the 1994 Best Pic­ture to For­rest Gump). But true to its own themes, it found redemp­tion late in life, on tele­vi­sion and home video. It reg­u­larly tops the run­ning pop­u­lar­ity poll in IMDB.com, but has the rep­u­ta­tion for never being taken very seri­ously by crit­ics. In the Char­lie Rose Show inter­view included among the DVD bonus fea­tures, direc­tor Frank Darabont pierces the leg­end that the film was poorly reviewed. The four or five most widely read papers in the coun­try did pan the film (Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times being a notable excep­tion), but nation­wide, the reviews were highly pos­i­tive. Shaw­shank: The Redeem­ing Fea­ture, a British tele­vi­sion doc­u­men­tary also included on the DVD, posits the the­ory that any crit­i­cal dis­dain is attrib­ut­able to its con­clu­sive happy end­ing. The orig­i­nal novella and Darabont’s screen­play adap­ta­tion both end on an ambigu­ous note of hope, but the stu­dio Cas­tle Rock specif­i­cally requested a con­crete happy end­ing. Darabont still seems to have mixed feel­ings about the inserted coda, but there’s no doubt it gives its appre­ci­ate audi­ences mas­sive sat­is­fac­tion and uplift.

Morgan Freeman in The Shawshank RedemptionI know what you think it means, sonny

Despite the movie’s wild pop­u­lar­ity, it doesn’t seem widely known to be an adap­tion of the Stephen King novella Rita Hay­worth and Shaw­shank Redemp­tion (a clunky title with­out even a “The” to aid in its scan­sion). It’s an atyp­i­cal work that deals not at all with the super­nat­ural or the hor­rific, but King’s highly char­ac­ter­is­tic voice does show through in the sharp plot­ting, mon­strous vil­lains, and hilar­i­ously col­or­ful dia­logue. Seri­ously, did any­one at any time or in any social milieu ever actu­ally call any­one “fuck­stick?” Like many of King’s filthy turns of phrase, if they didn’t, they should have. Of note, Rita Hay­worth and Shaw­shank Redemp­tion was orig­i­nally pub­lished with three other novel­las in a sin­gle vol­ume, Dif­fer­ent Sea­sons. Two more became suc­cess­ful films: Apt Pupil (by direc­tor Bryan Singer) and The Body (as Stand By Me, by Barry Levinson).

Tim Robbins in The Shawshank RedemptionGet busy liv­ing, or get busy dying

The Shaw­shank Redemp­tion has its share of warm fuzzies, but repeat­edly coun­ter­punches with frank rep­re­sen­ta­tions of the injus­tice of prison life, includ­ing rape, bru­tal­ity, and exploita­tion. One glar­ing area in which it appears to wimp out, how­ever, is its fail­ure to acknowl­edge race. Racial ten­sions must have been at least as much of a prob­lem in 1930s-50s pris­ons as they are now, if not more so. The orig­i­nal char­ac­ter in the novella was a white Irish Amer­i­can, and Darabont reveals in the DVD bonus fea­tures that Mor­gan Free­man was an uncon­ven­tional addi­tion to the cast, an obvi­ously cor­rect deci­sion they couldn’t pass up. Per­haps inject­ing racial themes into the script at that point would have been one theme too many for an already over­stuffed movie, but they do per­co­late in the back­ground. Red, for exam­ple, reflex­ively calls even the slight­est author­ity fig­ure “sir.” Not only does Free­man carry a wholly nat­ural grav­i­tas (I recall a review of March of the Pen­guins that described him as “America’s favorite nar­ra­tor”) but Red & Andy’s friend­ship is made that much more pro­found for the effec­tive irrel­e­vance of their races.

While most Hol­ly­wood movies are struc­tured around adver­sar­ial rela­tion­ships between male antag­o­nists, The Shaw­shank Redemp­tion is a rare tale of deep, sin­cere male friend­ship. It could very well be the great­est man-love story ever told, able to bring a lump to the throat of even the most macho of viewers.


Buy the DVD from Ama­zon and kick back a few pen­nies to The Dork Report.

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