Seven Days in May

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Seven Days in May

theatrical poster
Directed by John Frankenheimer
Produced by John Frankenheimer
Edward Lewis
Written by Novel:<br<Fletcher Knebel
Charles W. Bailey II
Screenplay:
Rod Serling
Starring Burt Lancaster
Kirk Douglas
Fredric March
Ava Gardner
Edmond O'Brien
Music by Jerry Goldsmith
Cinematography Ellsworth Fredericks
Editing by Ferris Webster
Distributed by Paramount Pictures (original release)
Warner Bros. (current rights holders)
Release date(s) February 12, 1964
(D.C. premiere)
Running time 118 min
Country United States
Language English
Budget $2.2 million (est.)
IMDb profile

Seven Days in May is a political thriller novel written by Fletcher Knebel and Charles W. Bailey II and published by Harper & Row in 1962. The novel was made into a motion picture in 1964, with screenplay by Rod Serling, directed by John Frankenheimer, and starring Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas. The story is said to have been influenced by the right-wing anti-Communist political activities of General Edwin A. Walker after he retired from the military. The author, Knebel, got the idea for the book after interviewing then Air Force Chief of Staff Curtis LeMay.


Contents

[edit] Plot

U.S. President Jordan Lyman (Frederic March)vs. General James Mattoon Scott (Burt Lancaster)
U.S. President Jordan Lyman (Frederic March)
vs. General James Mattoon Scott (Burt Lancaster)

The novel and film tell the story of fictitious U.S. President Jordan Lyman (Fredric March). As the story begins, Lyman faces a wave of public dissatisfaction with his decision to sign a treaty with the Soviet Union, an agreement that will supposedly result in both nations simultaneously destroying their nuclear weapons under mutual international inspection. This is extremely unpopular with both the President's opposition and the military, who believe the Soviets cannot be trusted.

As the debate over the treaty rages on, an alert and well-positioned Pentagon insider, United States Marine Corps Colonel Martin "Jiggs" Casey (Kirk Douglas) becomes aware of a conspiracy among the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) led by his own superior officer, the charismatic head of the JCS, Air Force General James Mattoon Scott (Burt Lancaster). As he digs deeper, he uncovers the conspiracy's shocking goal: Scott and his cohorts, along with allies in the United States Congress and the news media, are plotting to stage a coup d'etat to remove President Lyman and his cabinet seven days hence.

The plot itself, called ECOMCON (for "Emergency Communications Control"), entails the seizure of the nation's telephone, radio and television network infrastructure by a secret United States Army combat unit created and controlled by Scott's conspiracy and based near Fort Bliss, Texas. Once this is done, General Scott and his conspirators will control the nation's communications assets; then, from their headquarters within a vast underground nuclear shelter called "Mount Thunder" (based on the actual continuity of government facility maintained by the U.S. at Mount Weather in Berryville, Virginia), they will use the power of the media and the military to prevent the implementation of the treaty.

Although personally opposed to President Lyman and to the treaty, Casey is appalled by the unconstitutional cabal and alerts Lyman and his inner circle. As the countdown begins, both sides maneuver behind the scenes: Lyman sends Casey to New York to ferret out secrets that can be used against Scott, forcing Casey to cruelly deceive the general's former mistress, the vulnerable Ellie Holbrook (Ava Gardner). He then sends the aging, alcoholic Georgia Senator Raymond Clark (Edmond O'Brien) to El Paso, Texas to see if he can locate the base. Lyman also sends White House aide Paul Girard (Martin Balsam) to the Mediterranean to get the confession of an admiral who knows of the plot. Girard receives the confession, but is killed on his way back to Washington. Clark finds the base, but is taken captive and held prisoner until he can convince a friend of Casey stationed there to help him escape. Clark makes it back, but the officer is taken prisoner by Scott.

Lyman confronts Scott in the Oval Office, but Scott refuses to resign, saying that everything that happened and is going to happen is the President's fault. Lyman demands Scott to resign, but does not use the letters to incriminate him; instead using their difference of opinion on the treaty. Scott was planning to appear on air to denounce the President, but Lyman holds a press conference where he demands the resignation. Lyman then discovers the confession which Girard obtained survived, and a copy of it is given to Scott and other officers who were in on the plot. Scott's cohorts resign, and Scott's plan completely falls though, leaving him distraught and depressed. The film ends as Lyman closes his press conference.

[edit] Background

Frederic Marchas President Lyman
Frederic March
as President Lyman

In the novel, the story is set in May 1974, not long after the conclusion of a stalemated war in Iran fought along conventional warfare lines similar to Korea. The motion picture is set four years earlier, in May 1970, as shown both by the day/date indicator in the Pentagon, and the reference by Jordan Lyman to "a year and nine months" before Election Day 1972.

The novel has White House aide Paul Girard meeting with Vice Admiral Farley C. Barnswell, USN, on board the U.S. Sixth Fleet flagship, a 100,000-ton nuclear-powered aircraft carrier named after the late President Dwight D. Eisenhower, at anchor in the Bay of Gibraltar. The U.S. Navy's third nuclear-powered supercarrier was the Nimitz class USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN-69), which was actually commissioned in 1977.

The scenario of the film may have been inspired by the clash between General Curtis LeMay and President John F. Kennedy. It is suspected that LeMay, furious after the Cuban missile crisis for not being allowed to use his atomic bombs, talked to some of his staff about removing the President from power. Other observers cite as the inspiration for the story a historically-ambiguous conspiracy among major industrial leaders to enlist retired Marine Gen. Smedley Butler in a plot to infiltrate Franklin Delano Roosevelt's inner circle, as reported by Butler in his testimony to the McCormack-Dickstein Congressional Committee in 1934. (See Business Plot of 1933.)

[edit] Production

Kirk Douglas and director John Frankenheimer were the moving force behind the filming of Seven Days in May. The film was produced through Douglas' Joel Productions, and Douglas agreed to star in it. However, he also wanted Burt Lancaster to star in the film, which almost caused Frankenheimer to back out, since he and Lancaster had butted heads on The Birdman of Alcatraz several years before. Only Douglas' assurances that Lancaster would behave kept the director on the project.[1] Ironically, Lancaster and Frankenheimer became close friends during the filming, while Douglas and the director had a falling out.[2][3]

Behind the Scenes:  Fredric March and John Frankenheimer
Behind the Scenes: Fredric March and John Frankenheimer

Lancaster and Douglas made several films together, including I Walk Alone (1948), Gunfight at the OK Corral (1957), The Devil's Disciple (1959), and Tough Guys (1986), which fixed the notion of the pair as something of a team in the public's imagination. Douglas was always second-billed under Lancaster in these films but, with the exception of I Walk Alone, in which Douglas played a villain, their roles were usually more or less the same size.

Some of the other actors had problems with Frankenheimer. Ava Gardner thought he favored the other actors over her, and Martin Balsam objected to his habit of shooting off pistols behind him during important scenes.[1]

Interiors for Seven Days in May were shot at the Paramount studios in Hollywood, and on location in Paris, France, Washington, D.C., San Diego, Arizona and in California's Imperial Valley.[4][5] In an example of guerrilla filmmaking, Frankenheimer photographed Martin Balsam being ferried out to the supercarrier USS Kitty Hawk, formerly CVA-63, anchored at Naval Station San Diego without prior Defense Department permission. He also wanted a shot of Kirk Douglas entering the Pentagon, but could not get permission because of security considerations, so he rigged a movie camera in a parked station wagon to photograph Douglas walking up to the Pentagon. Douglas actually received salutes from military personnel because he was wearing the uniform of a U.S. Marine Corps colonel.[6]

Getting permission near the White House was easier. Frankenheimer said that Pierre Salinger conveyed to him President Kennedy's wish that the film be made, "these were the days of General Walker" and, though the Pentagon did not want the film made, the President would conveniently arrange to visit Hyannis Port for a weekend when the film needed to shoot outside the White House.[7]

Some efforts were made in the film to have the film appear to take place in the near future, for instance the use of the then-futuristic technology of video teleconferencing.

According to Douglas, an alternate ending was shot, but discarded:

General Scott, the treacherous Burt Lancaster character, goes off in his sports car, and dies in a wreck. Was it an accident or suicide? Coming up out of the wreckage over the car radio is President Lyman Jordan's speech about the sanctity of the Constitution. Instead, the last time we see Burt is in his confrontation with me. He regards me as a traitor to him; I know he has been a traitor to the country. He says to me, "Do you know who Judas was?" I answer, "Yes. He's a man I used to work for and respect, until he disgraced the four stars on his uniform."[3]

Seven Days in May premiered on 12 February 1964, appropriately in Washington, D.C.[8] It opened to good critical notices and audience response.[1]

[edit] Cast


Cast notes

[edit] Awards

Seven Days in May was nominated for two 1965 Academy Awards, for Edmond O'Brien for "Best Actor in a Supporting Role", and for "Best Art Direction-Set Decoration/Black-and-White" for Cary Odell and Edward G. Boyle. In that year's Golden Globe Awards, O'Brien won for "Best Supporting Actor", while Frederic March, John Frankenheimer and composer Jerry Goldsmith were nominated but did not win.

Frakenheimer won a Danish Bodil Award for directing the "Best Non-European Film", and Rod Serling was nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award for "Best Written American Drama."

[edit] Remakes

The movie was remade and updated in 1994 by HBO and renamed The Enemy Within with Sam Waterson as "President William Foster," Jason Robards as "General R. Pendleton Lloyd" and Forest Whitaker as "Colonel MacKenzie 'Mac' Casey." This particular version followed the plot of the original closely with some changes made for contemporary audiences and the end of the Cold War.

[edit] See also

original film poster
original film poster

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c Jeff Stafford "Seven Days in May" (TCM article)
  2. ^ Frankenheimer, John and Champlin, Charles. John Frankenheimer : A Conversation Riverwood Press, 1995. ISBN 1880756137
  3. ^ a b Douglas, Kirk. The Ragman's Son New York: Simon & Schuster, 1988.
  4. ^ IMDB Filming Locations
  5. ^ TCM Notes
  6. ^ Pratley, Gerald. The Cinema of John Frankenheimer London: A. Zwemmer, 1969. ISBN 978-0302020005.
  7. ^ "Robert Kennedy and his Times", Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Futura Publications, p485, 1979, ISBN 0 7088 1633 9
  8. ^ TCM Overview
  9. ^ Seven Days in May at the Internet Movie Database
  10. ^ John Houseman at the Internet Movie Database

[edit] External links