A Face in the Crowd

Larry on live TV

Loved by Truffaut, borrowed by Spike Lee, strangely overlooked today, A Face in the Crowd is a prescient film from 1957 that uses the word ā€œinfluencerā€, is worried about demagogues in public life, the corrupting effect of the media and the weird lives of celebrities. Itā€™s directed by Elia Kazan, a man with an eye for for a political meme ā€“ he did Gentlemanā€™s Agreement (anti-semitism) and On the Waterfront (union corruption) ā€“ and was made five years after heā€™d testified to the House Unamerican Activities Committee and ā€œnamed namesā€. The febrile McCarthyite atmosphere of the times is partly what Kazan and regular writer Budd Schulberg are tilting at in the story of … Read more