“Why
does the film make no mention of lynching, poll taxes or trace that
racism to the Democratic Party as Trumbo and Fast did? Why not
mention genocide against Black people? Answer, cause
#hollywoodsowhite But also because Hollywood can’t admit that
the communists were the only group trying to make Hollywood deal with
the Black movement, thus #hollywoodsoanticomunistandsowhite ”
Trumbo,
produced and written by John McNamara and Bruce Cook and
starring Bryan Cranston, is billed as a courageous defense of Dalton
Trumbo, a well-meaning communist writer. According to the film,
Trumbo was little more than a courageous democrat who was
Black-listed by Hollywood, went to prison, spent a decade in
screenplay exile, and triumphantly returned through his own true grit
and talent—as the good guys in Hollywood, Kirk Douglas and Otto
Preminger, finally got him re-instated. His life is portrayed as a
story of how truth, justice, and the American way win out over
narrowmindedness and knee jerk anti-communism. It vilifies and
caricatures those like Senator Joseph McCarthy, gossip columnist
Hedda Hopper, actor John Wayne, and the heads of the Hollywood
studios as those who sullied our wonderful first amendment. It’s
enough to make you sing America the Beautiful and sign up for the
U.S. army on the way out of the theater.
Not
surprisingly, we can’t expect Hollywood to tell the true story
of Dalton Trumbo the radical communist or to expose capitalism or
itself. It does not have the courage to present U.S. communists in
any of their toughminded, courageous splendor—as the leaders of
the fight against fascism, “the Party of the Negro,” the
driving force for trade unionism, the defenders of the foreign born,
the party that challenged the Democrats, the passionate friends and
defenders of the Soviet Union, the true victors of World War II, and
the best and the brightest of their generation.
There
is a pathetic scene in which Trumbo’s daughter asks him, “Dad
are you a communist?” He answers, “Would you share your
sandwich with someone who did not have one?” to which she
dutifully replies, “Of course” and he answers, “So
that makes you a communist too.” If only communists were people
who just wanted to share their sandwiches the entire witch hunt
against them would truly be bizarre and unjust. But what if he said,
“Honey, if you want to share your sandwich, seize the means of
production, and smash the capitalist state yes, that would make you a
communist.”
After
all, do we really expect Hollywood to urge people to become
communists or to challenge the Democratic Party and capitalism
itself? Hell no, they want to re-package the fight against the
Hollywood Blacklist as a feel-good story that would be better run on
the Hallmark Channel. A film the presents the real Dalton Trumbo and
other hard-assed communist writers like Richard Wright, Howard Fast,
Langston Hughes as socialist revolutionaries who had great influence
on their fellow travelers, Ernest Hemingway, John Dos Passos, John
Steinbeck, and many others is crying out to be made.
Let’s
look at how Hollywood and capitalism use a film about communism to
foster anti-communism at a time when people are once again seeing
through and challenging the system itself.
Dalton
Trumbo was a fine writer and screenwriter. In 1938, he wrote a great
anti-war novel, Johnny Got His Gun that challenged all forms
of capitalist wars. During World War II he faced his own dilemma when
his own true anti-war sentiments came in conflict with his support
for the great anti-fascist war and yes, a war to defend the Soviet
Union. That would have been worth exploring but of course it would
require some explanation of the great attraction of Trumbo to the
Soviet Union.
During
the 1930s the Soviet Union, having learned from its errors in
under-estimating Hitler in Germany, tried to organize an
international “united front against fascism.” The United
States, England, and France refused and instead conciliated with the
Nazis—and urged them to march east to overthrow the Soviet
Union if they could. In 1938 the British signed a non-aggression
pact with the Germans in Munich and boasted they had bought “peace
in our time.” In response, the Soviets correctly understood
they had no choice but to do the same. They signed a non-aggression
pact with the Germans in 1939 to buy time to arm themselves until the
inevitable Nazi invasion and put pressure on the Western pro-Nazi
“democracies.”
As
everyone kept switching sides in the war, the US., French, and
British finally reached the conclusion that a tactical alliance with
the Soviet Union was necessary to defeat Hitler. This brought the
world communist parties, including the CPUSA, back into the United
Front Against Fascism that they had tried to initiate and into the
leadership of the anti-Nazi front. Communists lead the anti-fascist
resistance in China, Vietnam, Algeria, and virtually all of what
would later be called Third World with the promise from the Western
imperialists that they would be granted independence in return.
Communists in France, Italy, and Eastern Europe also lead the
anti-fascist resistance and hoped to build socialist revolutions
after the conclusion of the war or at least broad anti-capitalist,
anti-fascist coalition governments.
But
the United States had no such plans. In fact, as early as 1945, with
the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the United States, England,
and France double crossed their Soviet Allies who had been by far the
most courageous and effective military opponents of the Nazis. They
threatened the newly victorious Soviet Union with nuclear bombs and
moved against communists and friends of communists in government, the
arts, culture, and the Black movement. By 1947 Churchill issued his
Iron Curtain speech in which the West rehabilitated Nazis in Germany,
Japan, and Italy and focused on crushing a post-war socialist threat.
The United States went to war against the Soviet Union and the
communist Parties all over the world.
In
the U.S. the Democratic and Republican Parties passed the
Taft-Hartley Act of 1947 that smashed communist leadership in the
trade unions. The act prohibited members of the CPUSA from holding
elected office as the Democrats and trade union bureaucrats turned
against the courageous communists who had led the building of the
Congress of Industrial Organizations. Many social democratic
sell-outs in the unions reaped the benefits—taking over offices
of unions, collaborating with the Democratic Party, setting up the
American Institute for Free Labor Development as warriors in the
cold war and allies of the corporations and the capitalist system.
The U.S. moved against great Black leaders in politics and the arts
such as Paul Robeson and W.E.B. DuBois, branding them as foreign
agents, seizing their passports, and confining them as political
prisoners in, as DuBois called it, “The land of the thief and
the home of the slave.” The Democratic Party continued to be
the party of the Southern Dixiecrats—the most virulent southern
racists were Democrats.
The
attacks on the Hollywood Ten and pro-communist artists and writers
was situated in a world anti-communist Cold War carried out by the
capitalist class and the leaders of both parties. There is where the
term “bi-partisan” was coined. Democrats and Republicans
all agreed that the enemy was communism and the Communist Party and
agreed to become two wings of one pro-capitalist party to advance the
interests of U.S. imperialism internationally. It is funny that
leftists who say that the U.S. has “one capitalist party with
two wings” are called dogmatists when after World War II it was
the Democrats and Republicans who boasted that such was the case in
the war against communism.
The
true story of Dalton Trumbo and the Hollywood Ten would require a
tough-minded film that explained the meritorious motivations of
communists and the Communist Party in the United States. It would
explore the true political beliefs that led people to become
communists and join the Party. It would show the great role of the
CPUSA in building the trade unions, fighting for the Negro, and yes,
its active support of the Soviet Union and the enormous sacrifices
made by tens of thousands of communist cadre. It would show how many
communists joined the U.S. army to fight the fascists and were among
the bravest and most courageous in battle.
It
would show Dalton Trumbo, Ring Lardner Jr., John Howard Lawson, and
so many others risking their careers, refusing to name names,
refusing to snitch, because they were fighters for socialism not
do-good liberals. It would show how they went to prison, lost jobs,
risked and lost their mental and physical health. The true Trumbo
film would situate his life among the lives of so many Black and
white working class people who also were red-baited from their jobs,
driven out of high schools, colleges, unions, and often were driven
into poverty.
I
remember, in 1965, meeting Irving and Skippy Riskin, two former
communists who were active in the anti-war movement and whose lives
still inspire me today. They were very proud of their Communist Party
past. They told me about how, during the 1950s, they had gone
underground, under false names, gotten “normal” jobs and
tried to lead normal lives. Then they woke up one morning to read in
a local New Jersey newspaper, “Irving and Skippy Riskin, Soviet
spies, are underground in our community” and had to run out of
town with their children with only the clothing on their backs. There
are no such characters in the film.
The
real Trumbo would allow real anti-capitalist dialogue that
would challenge the pro-capitalist ideology of today’s
audiences. This level of communist ideological discourse was often
the butt of anti-communist jokes at the time. Most communists did
talk about “the capitalist system, fascism, the party of the
working class, the labor fakers, the fascist bastards, the Negro
revolution, the wonders of the Soviet Union, the beauty of the
working class, and the march forward of the proletariat" from
morning to night. Sometimes they did so without much modulation,
humor, and subtlety but virtually none were mealy-mouthed liberals
the way Trumbo portrays its name sake
The
film goes out of its way to portray Dalton Trumbo and his compatriots
in the CP as simply good people who wanted jobs and justice and had
nothing to do with the Soviet Union. This is an anti-communist lie.
Joining the CPUSA had everything to do with the Soviet Union.
Communist cadre would tell Black and white working people and yes,
writers and intellectuals, “The Soviet Union is the first
workers state. They tell you socialism and revolution are not
possible but look, the Soviet workers did it, we can do it too? And
look. The U.S. does not want the Soviet Union to last and will not
really fight to defend the Soviet Union They want the Nazis to defeat
the socialist experiment which is why they won’t open up a
second front in World War II. Join the party. Defend the Soviet
Union. Demand that the Democrats and Roosevelt open up that second
front.”
The
real Dalton Trumbo defended the Soviet-Nazi pact and was aggressively
pro-Soviet. As Gerald Horne recounts, “Dalton Trumbo recounts
with typical sarcasm and precision that in the welter of attention
devoted to the Soviet-German non-aggression pact of 1939, lost in the
discussion were the French-Italian agreement of 1935, the Anglo-Nazi
treaty of 1935, the British Italian accord of 1938, and the
Anglo-Nazi and French Nazi non-aggression pacts of 1938—all if
which preceded and considerably affected the one pact they cherish
and recall.” If only Bryan Cranston delivered those lines
instead of his pathetic share your sandwich communism.
And
what if the film explained that under this pressure of communist
power, Franklin Delano Roosevelt publicly called Joseph Stalin, his
new dear friend, “Uncle Joe” and the Hollywood film
industry, always doing what the ruling class told it to do, make a
film, Mission to Moscow in 1943 that glorified the Soviet
Union to create support for the alliance.
Again,
the real Dalton Trumbo was an aggressive defender of the Soviet Union
and that was why he was black listed. In a 1946 article titled "The
Russian Menace" Trumbo wrote from the perspective of a
post-World War II Russian citizen. He stated, “If I were a
Russian...I would be alarmed [by the U.S. nuclear threat] and I would
petition my government to take measures at once against what would
seem an almost certain blow aimed at my existence. This is how it
must appear in Russia today." Paul Robeson, the great Black
artist and organizer said that Black people in the U.S. would not
fight against the Soviet Union. Dalton Trumbo said that the United
States was threatening the Soviet Union. The U.S. government moved
against them precisely because they were friends of the Soviet Union.
The
trailer that says Trumbo had nothing to do with the Soviet Union is a
lie. A film built on a lie is a lie.
The
film Trumbo creates an all-white world—there are no
Black figures in the film and Trumbo appears to have no Black friends
or pro-Black politics. But Trumbo, like most white communists, was
very pro-Negro and spoke out strongly for civil rights and Black
Liberation. The Communist Party was very pro-Black and part of its
attraction was the multi-racial political, cultural, friendship, and
social relations among its members and friends—the racial
equality, including sexual relationships, that was at the heart of
the racist fears. The film’s portrayal as Trumbo as a cigarette
holding white privileged man of lame wit and little passion with no
discussion of Black people or civil rights is a racist
misrepresentation.
Gerald
Horn in his essential The Final Victim of the Blacklist: John
Howard Lawson, Dean of the Hollywood Ten documents Trumbo’s
and the CP’s passionate and radical demands for Negro rights.
Horne describes a meeting in 1947 involving producer Dore Shary, and
future Hollywood Ten communist writers John Howard Lawson, Ring
Lardner Jr. and Dalton Trumbo. “They discussed dramatically the
recent lynchings in Georgia and other outrageous violations of civil
liberties as evidence of the growth of Fascism.” They voted to
offer a $100,000 reward for the capture of those responsible, placed
ads in trade and Negro papers announcing their activities and sent
wires of protest to President Truman. They urged CBS to produce a
show similar to the Detroit riots to “improve race relations”.
Black actor Canada Lee joined with Groucho and Harpo Marx, Edward G.
Robinson, and George Burns demanding the repeal of the poll tax.
When
the Hollywood Ten was indicted pro-Communist Black icon Paul Robeson
mentioned Dalton Trumbo by name as a friend of the Negro people and
talked about the Blacklist in the context of the racist capitalist
system attack on Black people. In 1951, William L. Patterson, a
leading Communist Party attorney and public figure, with the support
of Paul Robeson and W.E.B. DuBois, presented an historic “We
Charge Genocide: The Historic Petition to the United Nations for
Relief of a Crime of the United States Government Against the Negro.”
It was signed by more than 40 prominent public figures all close to
the Communist Party including Howard Fast, by then a member of the
Hollywood Ten. Fast and Trumbo were friends, comrades, often
competitive but fully in agreement in 1951 on The Negro Question.
Why
does the film make no mention of lynching, poll taxes or trace to the
Democratic Party as Trumbo and Fast did? Why not mention genocide
against Black people? Answer, cause #hollywoodsowhite! But also
because Hollywood can’t admit that the communists were the only
group trying to make Hollywood deal with the Black movement, thus
#hollywoodsoanti-comunistandsowhite
Trumbo
makes it appear that gossip columnist Hedda Hopper was the
ringleader of the Hollywood Blacklist. That is ridiculous. U.S.
Presidents Harry Truman and later Dwight D. Eisenhower were in
charge. A film showing how the so called “bi-partisan”
anti-communist alliance in the United States organized the Cold War
and the Hollywood Black list is badly needed.
I
just saw a far better film, Bridge of Spies, by Stephen
Spielberg, with Tom Hanks and Mark Rylance. Spies, ironically,
portrayed the Soviet spy Rudolph Abel in a far more sympathetic light
than Trumbo—as a man of his principles, tough, and clear he is
at war. The film portrayed the U.S. state department as a ruthless
Cold War machine, sending spy planes over the Soviet Union, using its
pilots, including Francis Gary Powers, as human sacrifices equipped
with cyanide tablets for instant suicide before capture. It showed
the hypocrisy of the U.S. acting outraged about Soviet spies when the
U.S. spying apparatus was run by U.S. Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles and President Dwight Eisenhower. Stephen Spielberg showed far
more courage than the makers of Trumbo in showing the Cold War as a
real war—a war that Trumbo the film pretends never
happened. Once again the Hollywood Dream Machine spreads the big lie,
and make a real U.S. initiated World War against communism into a big
misunderstanding.
In
the film, Dalton Trumbo is finally rehabilitated, given back his
Oscar that he earned under an assumed name, and given adulation and
even apology by Hollywood. The film acknowledges with irony that the
film Spartacus was based on the book by communist Howard Fast and the
screenplay by communist Dalton Trumbo. (Apparently, Fast later argued
that he “rescued” the film from Trumbo’s poor
screen-writing and had to re-write most of the scenes. That in
itself would have been a complex scene worth telling from both points
of view—yes comrades, there is competition and ego among
communists in Hollywood and elsewhere, as long as it also explained
they are real, dangerous communists.)
In
the film’s final scene, Trumbo gives a lame speech in which he
goes out of his way to blame no one—with a pathetic “we
are all to blame and thus, no one is to blame” rap. No
capitalism, no imperialism, no Cold War, no fascism, no Democratic
Party treachery. The Blacklist and the Hollywood Ten and even his
time in prison was just a big misunderstanding in which we “all”
lost sight of our better selves.
How
wonderful if the film would have ended with Trumbo’s actual
words in front of the House Committee on Un-American Activities in
Washington, D.C.
“You
have produced a capital city on the eve of its Reichstag fire. For
those who remember German history in the autumn of 1932 there is the
smell of smoke in this very room. This is the beginning of an
American concentration camp!”
Trumbo
fosters rather than challenges the very anti-communism of its
audience. Anti-communism is alive and well in the United States—and
not just among right-wing Republicans, liberal Democrats, and
well-meaning activists. Many of today’s “social movement
organizers” openly express contempt for and superiority to the
Soviet and Chinese revolutions and socialist experiments. They
distance themselves from the Cuban and Venezuelan
revolutions—offering “critical support” as if
anyone wants to hear their U.S. criticisms or receive such
half-hearted support. They put themselves forth as “democratic”
when in fact they are at best “social democrats” and do
not have the courage of their own weak convictions.
In
1989, at a forum in which some were celebrating the “fall of
communism,” Cornel West, who saw himself as a radical social
democrat, observed, “Before we gloat over the problems of
communism we have to ask ourselves why it was that the communists
attracted the most militant people and were the only socialists to
attract Black people.” That challenge remains today. The real
Trumbo could have pushed the envelope for that discussion and debate
about the great contributions of communism.
Tender Comrades: A Backstory of the Hollywood Blacklist by Patrick
McGilligan and Paul Buhle, The Final Victim of the Blacklist: John Howard Lawson, Dean of the Hollywood Ten
by Gerald Horne, and Here I Stand
by Paul Robeson can help us continue this conversation.
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