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The Molly Maguires (film)

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The Molly Maguires
Original promotional poster for The Molly Maguires
Directed byMartin Ritt
Written byWalter Bernstein
Based onLament for the Molly Maguires
1964 book
by Arthur H. Lewis
Produced byMartin Ritt
Walter Bernstein
Starring
CinematographyJames Wong Howe
Edited byFrank Bracht
Music byHenry Mancini
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • January 28, 1970 (1970-01-28)
Running time
124 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$11 million[1]
Box office$2,200,000 (US)[1]
James Wong Howe and Samantha Eggar on set of The Molly Maguires
Coal cracker in Eckley Miners' Village, a prop for The Molly Maguires

The Molly Maguires is a 1970 American historical drama film directed by Martin Ritt, starring Sean Connery and Richard Harris.[2] It is based on the 1964 book Lament for the Molly Maguires by Arthur H. Lewis.[3]

Set in late 19th century Carbon County, Pennsylvania, this social drama tells the story of an undercover detective sent to a coal mining community to expose a secret society of Irish-American miners battling exploitation at the hand of the owners. Partly inspired by a true story, the film portrays the rebellious leader of the Molly Maguires and his will to achieve social justice.

The film score for The Molly Maguires was by Henry Mancini, a late entry in the production replacing a score by Charles Strouse.

Plot

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In a coalmine in Pennsylvania in 1876, coal is still dug by hand and taken out on rails in wagons pulled by ponies. Pit props are improvised with timber. Conditions are always dirty, often cramped and generally unhealthy. Miners are shown with naked flames on their hats as their only light source. Men are shown planting charges. This appears to be work-related but all men leave the mine and the resultant explosion destroys the mine.

Pinkerton sends James McParlan to investigate. He arrives by train in the late evening and goes to a local bar and orders a beer, while Kehoe observes and motions for Dougherty and Frazier to deal with the matter. McParlan joins Dougherty and Frazier at a card table and says he is looking for work in the mine. They are suspicious and see his hands have never dug coal. They accuse him of cheating and deliberately start a fight. Police Captain Davies breaks up the fight and arrests McParlan. However, this is just a ploy as the police know McParlan's role. Davies explains to McParlan the problem of the Molly Maguires—and that they are named after a gang in Ireland. They need an inside man to infiltrate the pit.

McParlan rents a room from Mary Raines and gives his name as McKenna. He goes to the pit to ask for a job and is told to come back at five o'clock in the morning on the following day. Back at the house he befriends Mary's father.

He begins work the next day—it is back-breaking work and he is exhausted. At the end of the week, he joins the long queue for pay. He is paid $9.24, however a long list is made of "deductions" including cost of explosives and cost of shovels. $9 is deducted, so his pay for the week is 24 cents.

In church, the priest condemns "last night's actions" by the Molly Maguires—beating a watchman and flooding a mine. James attends church with Mary.

Kehoe confronts James in the pit the next day and asks why he is there. A fake accident is organized where Kehoe rescues James from a huge avalanche of coal. James then gives a false confession saying he is there to avoid the law as he is a forger, and he is in hiding. He also says he killed a man in Buffalo, New York, over a woman. Kehoe discusses "McKenna" with his wife and then with other miners. They do suspect that he is a spy.

After a violent football match with a rival pit, Dougherty gets in a fight with one of the rivals and is beaten up by the police. James is asked to take a revenge action and breaks a policeman's jaw. The captain chastises James but he said he had to make it look real (quoting the captain regarding his earlier attack in the bar).

Kehoe and the four other ringleaders appear at the Raines house and usher old Mr. Raines away. They ask James to kneel and they make the sign of the cross. He thinks he is going to die but instead they make him a member of the Ancient Order of Hibernians. Mary chides him for joining, but the next day they take a train trip to the city and go shopping. While Mary is looking at hats, he has a rendezvous with the captain and gets payment for giving the names of the ringleaders.

A train of coal wagons is derailed by an explosion on the track co-ordinated by the Mollys. At a meeting of the Hibernians, James is asked to put a superintendent at the Shenandoah pit out of action. Kehoe and James go to Shenandoah, but are ambushed by the police. The police arrest eight men back at the pit, but all men have alibis. James is taken to the captain to interview, who beats him up before he returns for realism.

By now James and Mary are in love. They go for a picnic and discuss morality.

Frazier and his wife are murdered in their bed by police (the "peelers") in a revenge attack. At the funeral, the priest shows little sympathy. Dougherty is arrested for killing the superintendent of the Shenandoah, but this is a ploy to bring the real killers forward. As old Mr. Raines gets the last rites, the priest calls Kehoe to discuss the whole affair. At Mr. Raines' wake the Mollys meet in a back room. The wake party break into the company store and steal a suit for Mr. Raines to be buried in, but Kehoe then gets carried away and starts stealing more things. He is distracted when James starts destroying bottles of alcohol with a shovel. They decide to set the store on fire.

Kehoe and McAndrew are caught red-handed as they break into the explosives store at the pit and find that it is full of police.

Only at the trial do they discover James' true identity. Mary watches in shock. Kehoe, McAndrew and Dougherty are sentenced to death. Mary explains she could cope with him as a murderer, but not as a traitor.

Awaiting execution, Kehoe is visited in the death cell by James. They have a quiet and civilised conversation. Kehoe sees that James seeks absolution. He suddenly loses his temper and attacks James. He is rescued by the warders. He tells his one-time ally that no punishment short of hell can redeem his treachery. Detective McParlan retorts that, in that case, "See you in hell."

Cast

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Background

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The Molly Maguires were a secret organization of Irish coal miners established in nineteenth century Pennsylvania to fight oppressive mineowners. Led by Jack Kehoe, they plant gunpowder to destroy plant shafts and equipment. Pinkerton Detective James McParland was employed to infiltrate the Mollies.

Production

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The lead sequence and opening credits for The Molly Maguires runs 14 minutes and 51 seconds, through three Henry Mancini scores, before the first word of dialogue is spoken.

The majority of the location filming occurred in Northeastern Pennsylvania in 1968. The town of Eckley, was so unchanged from its 1870s appearance that the only major alterations needed for filming were to remove television antennas and install underground electric wiring. A wooden coal breaker which was built as a prop and is featured extensively in the film, partially stands to this day. The movie resulted in the town's being saved from demolition. It was afterward converted into a mining museum under the control of the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. Portions of the film were also shot in Jim Thorpe. The courtroom, where the trial scene was filmed is in the Carbon County Courthouse, used for trials until 1996. Railroad scenes were filmed on the now-defunct Carrol Park & Western Railroad in Bloomsburg.

The Molly Maguires soundtrack composed by Henry Mancini replaced the one originally composed by Charles Strouse. Mancini's score employed Irish modal harmony, played by period instruments including the Irish Harp, Tin Whistle (pennywhistle) and Squeezebox. Both soundtracks were released by Kritzerland in 2012 on a limited edition CD, now sold-out.

A big budget film for its time, with stars Connery (who had recently left the James Bond franchise) and Harris (Camelot) at career peaks, it was considered a major box-office failure. Social issue director Ritt would score later with Norma Rae (1979). This was the next-to-the-last film for legendary cinematographer James Wong Howe, who had previously worked with Ritt on Hud and Hombre.

Awards and nominations

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The film was nominated for an Oscar for Best Art Direction (Art Direction Tambi Larsen; Set Decoration: Darrell Silvera).[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "The Molly Maguires - Box Office Data". The Numbers. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  2. ^ Variety film review; January 21, 1970, page 18.
  3. ^ "Lament for the Molly Maguires". American Film Institute. Retrieved 30 August 2019.
  4. ^ "NY Times: The Molly Maguires". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2011. Archived from the original on 16 February 2011. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
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