The assistant (Arthur) of a sleazy lawyer (Holt) is determined to end his cheating ways.The assistant (Arthur) of a sleazy lawyer (Holt) is determined to end his cheating ways.The assistant (Arthur) of a sleazy lawyer (Holt) is determined to end his cheating ways.
Vivien Oakland
- Mrs. Monte Ballou
- (as Vivian Oakland)
Arthur Belasco
- Gun Store Owner
- (uncredited)
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Jack Holt is a criminal defense lawyer who always get 'em off. Jean Arthur has just graduated with a law degree and wants to work for him. As she observes his methods, she discovers that what he says about himself is true: he has no legal ethics and is a publicity hound. As he is in the middle of defending a kidnapper and child murderer, she comes to him with an ultimatum from an earlier case: he has suborned perjury.
It's the second movie that Holt starred in under the direction of Lambert Hillyer, with Joseph August as the cinematographer. Hillyer and August went way back; for half a dozen years, they were the director and cameraman for William S. Hart. This was the last of 22 movies they did together, and it's a visual treat.
The standard shot in this one is a portrait two-shot, with one person talking and the other watching, cutting to a solo reaction shot. Only in the two-shots between the leads is there a visible reaction for the first fifty minutes, and then others begin showing their emotions: first Donald Meek as Holt's clerk, then others. It's a very cinematic technique of showing the growing openness of the characters, presaging the changes that make this a well-told story instead of a series of anecdotes. Also, this being a Columbia film, it should be noted that it's a cheaper way of shooting, rather than longer takes with more people to break down and make retakes necessary.
There are other nice touches to this movie, particularly the way that sound man Edward Bernds uses the sounds of newspaper plants to snap the audience from one scene to the next. Although this story of how idealistic young lawyer Jean Arthur reforms old, bad lawyer Holt -- which sounds a lot like a lot of William S. Hart movies in which a young Christian woman reforms Hart -- is nothing much in the writing department, Hillyer makes a very good movie thanks to his professionalism and that of the people he is working with.
It's the second movie that Holt starred in under the direction of Lambert Hillyer, with Joseph August as the cinematographer. Hillyer and August went way back; for half a dozen years, they were the director and cameraman for William S. Hart. This was the last of 22 movies they did together, and it's a visual treat.
The standard shot in this one is a portrait two-shot, with one person talking and the other watching, cutting to a solo reaction shot. Only in the two-shots between the leads is there a visible reaction for the first fifty minutes, and then others begin showing their emotions: first Donald Meek as Holt's clerk, then others. It's a very cinematic technique of showing the growing openness of the characters, presaging the changes that make this a well-told story instead of a series of anecdotes. Also, this being a Columbia film, it should be noted that it's a cheaper way of shooting, rather than longer takes with more people to break down and make retakes necessary.
There are other nice touches to this movie, particularly the way that sound man Edward Bernds uses the sounds of newspaper plants to snap the audience from one scene to the next. Although this story of how idealistic young lawyer Jean Arthur reforms old, bad lawyer Holt -- which sounds a lot like a lot of William S. Hart movies in which a young Christian woman reforms Hart -- is nothing much in the writing department, Hillyer makes a very good movie thanks to his professionalism and that of the people he is working with.
The only other review appearing here more than adequately covers some of the holes in this film's screenplay, but I am a performance-oriented viewer and would rate the film more highly simply because of the plethora of excellent character actors peopling it. Amazingly, it is the lead, Jack Holt, who appears most against the normal grain as the unethical lawyer (well, legal ethics are like no others so that perhaps 'immoral lawyer' is a better descriptive). Holt, the physical model for Al Capp's Fearless Fosdick cartoon character (a take-off on HUAC and the like, if Fosdick even suspected you of doing something wrong, you were likely to end up with a big comic strip bullet hole right in the middle of your cranium) was so granite-jawed that he made Charlton Heston look like Wally Cox, and he was usually seen as the stalwart hero of Westerns, but he was getting on by 1934, and this seemed like a pretty good role to him, I would imagine. Anyway, even in his most sympathetic moments, he fails to evoke much sympathy; he just isn't that kind of actor. Jean Arthur shows up to good advantage here, only about a year away from achieving major stardom, and one has to wonder why it took so long for her to do so. Arthur Hohl, who just looked sneaky and played roles to fit, is seen here as a totally above-board district attorney who can't stand the way Holt operates, and he pulls it off (nobody ever said a crusading district attorney couldn't still look sneaky!). And instead of a semi-comic detective, Harold Huber here gets to play a mover and shaker of the city's criminal element, and is nicely authoritative throughout. But the two performances I loved (one of them with very few lines) were those of Sarah Padden as the mother of a murdered child, and John Wray as the dastardly fellow who committed that murder. Padden was one of those actresses who took every job available as the years rolled on, but back in the 1930s she had several really special dramatic roles and this was one of them. Underacting in a way we didn't see much of until the Actors Studio graduates started to populate Hollywood films, made a fetish of incomprehensibility, and mumbled their way to stardom, she was definitely ahead of her time, and she is so 'real' in many of her roles that it almost hurts. You can see the tension building up in her in her every line, and when she takes the action that finally convinces Holt that he's working for the wrong people, it is perhaps the dramatic highlight of the film. And Wray, a superb character actor who was also a director and who died fairly young, is so much of a weasel as the murderer, and so exuding of cowardice, that you almost feel sorry for the miserable creep. Both Padden and Wray seem to be totally forgotten by all but the most vociferous fans of films of the so-called Golden Age, and it is a shame, because they often stole films from both stars and better-known 'character' actors. Anyway, a film to see for its acting before any other consideration.
"Joan Hayes" (Jean Arthur) is employed by hotshot criminal lawyer "Mitchell" (Jack Holt) just as he heads to court for what we are sure will be his 38th straight victory. Following a kidnapping, though, "Mrs Evans" (Sarah Padden) comes to visit and as her boss is busy, she is seen by the new and keen "Joan" who begins to piece two and two together and conclude that her butter-wouldn't-melt employer is maybe not quite the shining light he purports to be. Armed with some damning evidence, she confronts him - but events elsewhere overtake their stand-off and soon the fate of a man facing the chair is front and centre of the story. That story is a bit more substantial than many of these standard afternoon features with a rather beefier part for Arthur and a decent chemistry between the two as things get messy and dangerous. Add a couple of mob heavies and maybe just a hint of integrity and this makes for quite an enjoyable seventy minutes of crime-noir.
Did you know
- Trivia"The Defense Rests" was included in the four-disc Jean Arthur Drama Collection along with "Whirlpool," "Most Precious Thing in Life," and "Party Wire," released by Turner Classics in November 2014. The quality of the transfers in this set is very clear, both video and audio.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Take the Witness
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 10 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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