Ayn Rand always preferred stories in which the main conflict is between noble and heroic figures (though one or both may be tragically misguided) rather than between heroes and villains; this is one of many things she liked about Victor Hugo, whose works evince the same preference. I was reminded of this last night on TCM when I caught the 1939 film Juarez, which I greatly enjoyed. (Amazon seems to have it only in vhs; another outfit offers it in dvd, but I suspect the recording may be of inferior quality.)
The film officially stars Paul Muni as Mexican president Benito Juárez (so I guess Tom Russell was wrong) and Bette Davis as Empress Carlota, but despite both billing and title, the actual lead is Brian Aherne, doing a terrific and subtle job as the ill-fated Emperor Maximilian. (We also see Claude Rains as a somewhat too forceful Napoléon III, and John Garfield as a much too likable Porfirio Díaz.)
In Rands introduction (reprinted in The Romantic Manfesto) to Hugos novel Ninety-Three, she praises Hugo for portraying the two chief anatagonists the monarchist leader Lantenac and the republican leader Cimourdain as equals in spiritual grandeur, intransigent integrity, unflinching courage and ruthless dedication, even while deploring the weakness and vacuity of the political arguments Hugo has his characters make on behalf of their respective ideologies. In both these respects Juarez is remarkably Hugoesque.
The two chief antagonists, Maximilian the fey otherworldly idealist and Juárez the canny Yoda-like enigma, couldnt be more different (Misesian alert: one is a Habsburg who regards monarchy as the best guarantor of individual liberty, while the other is a democrat who worshipfully carries around an icon of, and dresses to imitate, Abraham Lincoln), but both command our sympathy and respect for their spiritual grandeur, intransigent integrity, unflinching courage and ruthless dedication (though, unlike in Ninety-Three, we, rather frustratingly, never get to see a personal confrontation between the two). Likewise, Maximilians case for the independence of kings from faction is both an historical and a theoretical absurdity, while Juárezs brief for popular rule confuses individual with collective self-government. But dont watch the movie for political philosophy, watch it for a clash between two really cool characters.
P.S. Oh, and heres a truly awful trailer for the movie (proving, inter alia, that back in 1939 they didnt know the difference between flaunt and flout either). The movie really is much better than one would guess from this trailer.
P.P.S. Some connections: The films director, William Dieterle, also directed Hugos Hunchback of Notre Dame and Rands Love Letters, while its top-billed star, Paul Muni, hailed from Misess hometown of Lemberg/Lvov/Lviv.
One of the pleasures of reading this blog is the chance to discover a wide range of fairly random things through your eyes. Thanks for this review, which I thoroughly enjoyed.
Maximilian’s case for the independence of kings from faction is both an historical and a theoretical absurdity…
Cool link. I’d agree insofar as he imagines a monarch as a “neutral power.” Grammatically, that doesn’t make much sense. I like how you shift neutrality into inertia — probably more like what Constant was after.
But insofar as a king will not stay above the fray, I’m not convinced. I want to say that a king can stay above the fray. So long as he recognizes his only role to be a collective interlocutor, he cannot possibly pick a side.
That still leaves untouched how the Socratic (or grammatic) method necessarily holds power. How does a bobbing cork direct the waves?
I’d say that a collective interlocutor cannot direct events but can direct attention. And so long as that attention is not divided into factions — which an interlocutor cannot do — then the king is the dialectic method itself.
It’s hard to argue with your conclusion — that the option of inertia naturally rests with the consumer.