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Inherit the Wind

 

            This film was created based on the book written by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. It is based on a real-life case in 1925, two great lawyers argue the case for and against a science teacher accused of the crime of teaching evolution. I watched this film in high school after I read the book. I found it very interesting and I remember watching it and the effect it had on me. .
             Bertram Cates was behind bars, awaiting trial for teaching his students about Darwin's theory of evolution. Matthew Harrison Brady, who leads the prosecution, arrived to a warm welcome from the townspeople and a picnic in his honor. Brady met with Reverend Brown, District Attorney Tom Davenport, and the mayor. Litigator Henry Drummond represented the defense. Brady makes a joke about Drummond's bright purple suspenders, but Drummond turns the tables by revealing that he bought the suspenders in Brady's Nebraska hometown. Drummond and Brady throw sarcastic comments to each other throughout the movie, showing the friction between them.
             Drummond shifts gears and calls Brady to the stand as an expert on the Bible. Asking Brady several questions about Biblical passages that defy the tenets of modern science, Drummond catches Brady off balance and gains the support of the crowd. As Drummond exposes contradiction after contradiction in Brady's views, Brady becomes hysterical and begins to shout names from the Bible.
             The jury hands their verdict to the judge, who declares Cates guilty and fines him $100, which is not that much money now-a-days, but back then was a lot. . Brady has a mental breakdown and must be carried out of the courtroom as he deliriously recites what sounds like a presidential campaign victory speech. This movie was very ironic, but the movie helped me understand the book much more than I did in the beginning.
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