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Witness (1985 film)

Witness is a 1985 American neo-noir crime thriller film[1] directed by Peter Weir, and starring Harrison Ford, Kelly McGillis and Lukas Haas, with Jan Rubeš, Danny Glover, Josef Sommer, Alexander Godunov, Patti LuPone and Viggo Mortensen in supporting roles. The film focuses on a police detective (Ford) protecting an Amish woman (McGillis) and her young son (Haas), who becomes a target after he witnesses a brutal murder in a Philadelphia train station.

Witness
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPeter Weir
Screenplay by
Story by
Produced byEdward S. Feldman
Starring
CinematographyJohn Seale
Edited byThom Noble
Music byMaurice Jarre
Production
company
Edward S. Feldman Productions
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • February 8, 1985 (1985-02-08)
Running time
112 minutes
CountryUnited States
Languages
Budget$12 million
Box office$116.1 million

Filmed in 1984, Witness was released theatrically by Paramount Pictures in February 1985. The film went on to become a sleeper hit, grossing over $116 million worldwide. At the 58th Academy Awards, it earned eight nominations, including Best Picture and Best Actor for Ford, winning Best Original Screenplay and Best Film Editing. It was also nominated for seven BAFTA Awards, winning one for Maurice Jarre's score, and six Golden Globe Awards. William Kelley and Earl W. Wallace won the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Original Screenplay and the 1986 Edgar Award for Best Motion Picture Screenplay presented by the Mystery Writers of America.

Plot Edit

In April 1984, an Amish community outside Lancaster, Pennsylvania, attends the funeral of Jacob Lapp, who leaves behind his wife Rachel and eight-year-old son Samuel. Rachel and Samuel travel by train to visit Rachel's sister, which takes them into Philadelphia. While at 30th Street Station waiting for a connecting train, Samuel goes into the men's room and witnesses the brutal murder of an undercover police officer.

Detective Sergeant John Book and his partner, Sergeant Elton Carter, are assigned to the case. They question Samuel, who is unable to identify the perpetrator from mugshots or a line-up. Samuel then sees a newspaper clipping in a trophy case of officer James McFee receiving an award, and points him out to Book. Book investigates and finds out that McFee was previously responsible for a seizure of expensive chemicals used to make black-market amphetamines, but the evidence has now disappeared. Book surmises that McFee sold the chemicals to drug dealers, and that the murdered detective had been investigating the theft. Book expresses his suspicions to Chief of Police Paul Schaeffer, who advises Book to keep the case secret so they can work out how to proceed. Book is later ambushed and shot in a parking garage by McFee and left badly wounded. Since only Schaeffer knew of Book's suspicions, he realizes Schaeffer is also corrupt and tipped off McFee.

Knowing Samuel and Rachel are now in danger, Book orders his partner to remove all traces of the Lapps from his files, and drives the boy and his mother back to their community where he passes out in front of their farm. Book insists that going to a hospital would allow him to be found and put Samuel in danger. Rachel's father-in-law Eli reluctantly agrees to shelter him.

Book slowly recovers in their care and begins to blend into the community. He and Rachel are also drawn to each other romantically, although they refrain from acting on their feelings. Meanwhile, Schaeffer searches for Book by contacting authorities in the Amish area but, as Amish communities have no modern means of communication and little contact with the outside world, he hits repeated dead ends.

Book eventually goes into town with Eli to use a pay phone to call his precinct, and learns that Carter has been killed. While in town, a group harasses the Amish. Book retaliates, breaking with the Amish tradition of non-violence. The fight is reported to the local police and eventually gets back to Schaeffer.

The next day, Schaeffer, McFee, and another corrupt cop, Ferguson, arrive at the Lapp farm, taking Rachel and Eli hostage. Book tricks Ferguson into the corn silo and suffocates him under tons of corn, then uses Ferguson's shotgun to kill McFee. Schaeffer holds Rachel and Eli at gunpoint, but Eli signals to Samuel to ring the farm's bell. Book confronts Schaeffer, who threatens to kill Rachel, but the bell summons the neighbors. With so many witnesses present, Schaeffer surrenders and Book arrests him.

Once the case is concluded, Book departs after saying goodbye to Rachel and Samuel, and Eli wishes him well "out there among them English".

Cast Edit

Themes Edit

In his book The Amish in the American Imagination (2001), scholar David Weaver-Zercher notes that Witness is primarily concerned with the intersection of contrasting cultures, a recurring theme in several of Weir's films, including The Last Wave (1977) and The Year of Living Dangerously (1982).[2] Weaver-Zercher notes that the conflict between Amish and non-Amish as depicted in Witness "reflect[s] well on the Amish ways" and also serves as a redemption story for Sergeant Book, who regains a new sense of humanity during his displacement in the Amish community.[3]

Production Edit

Development Edit

Producer Edward S. Feldman, who was in a "first-look" development deal with 20th Century Fox at the time, first received the screenplay for Witness in 1983. Originally entitled Called Home (which is the Amish term for death), it ran for 182 pages, the equivalent of three hours of screen time. The script, which had been circulating in Hollywood for several years, had been inspired by an episode of Gunsmoke that William Kelley and Earl W. Wallace had written in the 1970s, which had been based upon an idea by novelist Pamela Wallace.[4][5]

Feldman liked the concept, but felt too much of the script was devoted to Amish traditions, diluting the thriller aspects of the story. He offered Kelley and Wallace $25,000 for a one-year option and one rewrite, and an additional $225,000 if the film actually were made. They submitted the revised screenplay in less than six weeks, and Feldman delivered it to Fox. Joe Wizan, the studio's head of production, rejected it with the statement that Fox did not make "rural movies".[6]

Feldman sent the screenplay to Harrison Ford's agent Phil Gersh, who contacted the producer four days later and advised him his client was willing to commit to the film. Certain the attachment of a major star would change Wizan's mind, Feldman approached him once again, but Wizan insisted that as much as the studio liked Ford, they still were not interested in making a "rural movie."[7]

Feldman sent the screenplay to numerous studios, and was rejected by all of them, until Paramount Pictures finally expressed interest. Feldman's first choice of director was Peter Weir, but he was involved in preproduction work for The Mosquito Coast and passed on the project. John Badham dismissed it as "just another cop movie", and others Feldman approached either were committed to other projects or had no interest. Then, as financial backing for The Mosquito Coast fell through, Weir became free to direct Witness, which was his first American film. Starting the film immediately was imperative, because a Directors Guild of America strike was looming.[8] David Cronenberg was offered the role of director, but declined as he "could never be a fan of the Amish".[9]

Casting Edit

Lynne Littman had originally been in talks to direct the film, and though she ultimately did not, she recommended Lukas Haas for the part of Samuel because she had recently worked with him on her film Testament. The role of Rachel was the most difficult to cast, and after Weir grew frustrated with the auditions he had seen, he asked the casting director to look for actors in Italy because he thought they would be more "womanly". As they were reviewing audition tapes from Italy, Kelly McGillis came to audition, and the moment she put on the bonnet and spoke a few lines, Weir knew she was the one. The casting director recommended her old friend Alexander Godunov, who had never acted before, but she thought his personality would be right, and Weir agreed.[citation needed]

Viggo Mortensen was cast because Weir thought he had the right face for the part of an Amish man. Mortensen had just started his acting career, so this was his first film acting role, and he had to turn down another role as a soldier in Shakespeare in the Park's production of Henry V. He credited that decision and the very positive experience on the film as the start of his film career.[10]

Pre-production Edit

During the weeks before filming, Ford spent time with the homicide department of the Philadelphia Police Department, researching the important details of working as a homicide detective. McGillis did research by moving in with an Amish widow and her seven children, learning how to milk cows and practicing their Pennsylvania German dialect.[11]

Weir and cinematographer John Seale went on a trip to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, which was running an exhibition of 17th-century Dutch Masters. Weir drew attention to the paintings of Johannes Vermeer, which were used as inspiration for the lighting and composition of the film, especially in the scenes where John Book is recovering from a gunshot wound in Rachel's house.[10]

Filming Edit

The film was shot on location in Philadelphia and the city and towns of Intercourse, Lancaster, Strasburg, and Parkesburg. Local Amish were willing to work as carpenters and electricians, but declined to appear on film, so many of the extras were actually Mennonites. Halfway through filming, the title was changed from Called Home to Witness at the behest of Paramount's marketing department, which felt the original title posed too much of a promotional challenge. Principal photography was completed three days before the scheduled DGA strike, which ultimately failed to materialize.[12]

During the set-up and rehearsal of each scene, as well as during dailies, Weir would play music to set the mood, with the idea that it prevented the actors from thinking too much and let them listen to their other instincts. The barn-raising scene was only a short paragraph in the script, but Weir thought it was important to highlight that aspect of Amish community life. They shot the scene in a day and did, in fact, build a barn, albeit with the aid of cranes off-camera. To film the scene in the corn silo, corn was actually dropped onto the actor, while a scuba diving regulator with a compressed air tank was hidden on the floor so the actor would be able to breathe.[10]

Originally, the script ended with a scene of Book and Rachel each explaining their feelings for each other to the audience, but Weir felt the scene was unnecessary and decided not to shoot it. The studio executives were concerned that the audience would not understand the conclusion, and tried to convince him otherwise, but Weir insisted that the characters' emotions could be expressed only with visuals.[10]

Release Edit

Witness had its world premiere at the Fulton Opera House in Lancaster, Pennsylvania in on February 7, 1985.[13] The film was screened out of competition at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival.[14]

Box office Edit

The film opened theatrically in 876 theaters in the United States on February 8, 1985, and grossed $4,539,990 in its opening weekend, ranking number two behind Beverly Hills Cop. The film went on to become a sleeper hit, topping the charts in its fifth week of release.[15] It eventually earned a total of $68,706,993 in North America.[16] Internationally, it grossed $47.4 million for a worldwide total of $116.1 million.[17]

Home media Edit

Warner Bros. released Witness on VHS, with a DVD in 2005 and Blu-ray Disc in 2015.[18][19] British boutique label Arrow Films is scheduled to release the film in the United States on 4K Ultra HD disc and remastered Blu-ray on October 31, 2023.[20]

Reception Edit

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 93% based on 41 reviews, with an average rating of 8.4/10. The site's critics consensus states: "A wonderfully entertaining thriller within an unusual setting, with Harrison Ford delivering a surprisingly emotive and sympathetic performance."[21] On Metacritic, it has a weighted average score of 76 out of 100 based on 14 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[22]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times rated the film four out of four stars, calling it:

[F]irst of all, an electrifying and poignant love story. Then it is a movie about the choices we make in life and the choices that other people make for us. Only then is it a thriller—one that Alfred Hitchcock would have been proud to make... We have lately been getting so many pallid, bloodless little movies—mostly recycled teenage exploitation films made by ambitious young stylists without a thought in their heads—that Witness arrives like a fresh new day. It is a movie about adults whose lives have dignity and whose choices matter to them. And it is also one hell of a thriller.[23]

Ebert also praised Ford's work and claimed he had "never given a better performance in a movie." Vincent Canby of The New York Times:

It's not really awful, but it's not much fun. It's pretty to look at and it contains a number of good performances, but there is something exhausting about its neat balancing of opposing manners and values... One might be made to care about all this if the direction by the talented Australian film maker, Peter Weir... were less perfunctory and if the screenplay... did not seem so strangely familiar. One follows Witness as if touring one's old hometown, guided by an outsider who refuses to believe that one knows the territory better than he does. There's not a character, an event, or a plot twist that one hasn't anticipated long before its arrival, which gives one the feeling of waiting around for people who are always late.[24]

Variety said the film was "at times a gentle, affecting story of star-crossed lovers limited within the fascinating Amish community. Too often, however, this fragile romance is crushed by a thoroughly absurd shoot-'em-up, like ketchup poured over a delicate Pennsylvania Dutch dinner."[25]

Time Out New York observed, "Powerful, assured, full of beautiful imagery and thankfully devoid of easy moralizing, it also offers a performance of surprising skill and sensitivity from Ford."[26]

Halliwell's Film Guide chose Witness as one of only two films from 1985 to receive a four-star review, describing it as "one of those lucky movies which works out well on all counts and shows that there are still craftsmen lurking in Hollywood."[27]

Radio Times called the film "partly a love story and partly a thriller, but mainly a study of cultural collision – it's as if the world of Dirty Harry had suddenly stumbled into a canvas by Brueghel." It added, "[I]t's Weir's delicacy of touch that impresses the most. He ably juggles the various elements of the story and makes the violence seem even more shocking when it's played out on the fields of Amish denial."[28]

Accolades Edit

Award Category Recipient Result Ref.
Academy Awards Best Picture Edward S. Feldman Nominated
Best Director Peter Weir Nominated
Best Actor Harrison Ford Nominated
Best Original Screenplay Earl W. Wallace, William Kelley and Pamela Wallace Won
Best Art Direction Stan Jolley and John H. Anderson Nominated
Best Cinematography John Seale Nominated
Best Film Editing Thom Noble Won
Best Original Score Maurice Jarre Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Film Nominated
Best Original Screenplay Earl W. Wallace, William Kelley and Pamela Wallace Nominated
Best Actor Harrison Ford Nominated
Best Actress Kelly McGillis Nominated
Best Music Maurice Jarre Won
Best Cinematography John Seale Nominated
Best Editing Thom Noble Nominated
Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture – Drama Nominated
Best Director Peter Weir Nominated
Best Screenplay Earl W. Wallace, William Kelley and Pamela Wallace Nominated
Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama Harrison Ford Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Kelly McGillis Nominated
Best Original Score Maurice Jarre Nominated
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Best Film Won
Best Actor Harrison Ford Won
Writers Guild of America Best Original Screenplay Earl W. Wallace, William Kelley and Pamela Wallace Won
Directors Guild of America Outstanding Directing Peter Weir Nominated
Grammy Awards Best Score Maurice Jarre Nominated
American Cinema Editors Best Edited Feature Film Thom Noble Won
Australian Cinematographers Society Cinematographer of the Year John Seale Won
British Society of Cinematographers Best Cinematography Nominated

Controversy Edit

Leading up to and following its release, Witness was met with controversy from the Amish communities where it was filmed,[29] and was subject to debate from editors, scholars, and other parties regarding its depiction of the Amish.[30] Some accused the film of exploiting the Amish community for commercial purposes, while others felt that the depiction of Amish characters in an R-rated film featuring graphic violence was insensitive to the Amish's beliefs.[31]

A statement released by a law firm associated with the Amish claimed that their portrayal in the movie was not accurate. The National Committee For Amish Religious Freedom called for a boycott of the movie soon after its release, citing fears that these communities were being "overrun by tourists" as a result of the popularity of the movie, and worried that "the crowding, souvenir-hunting, photographing and trespassing on Amish farmsteads will increase." After the movie was completed, Pennsylvania governor Dick Thornburgh agreed not to promote Amish communities as future film sites. A similar concern was voiced within the movie itself, where Rachel tells a recovering Book that tourists often consider her fellow Amish something to stare at, with some even being so rude as to trespass on their private property.[32]

Legacy Edit

Negotiation expert William Ury summarised the film's climactic scene in a chapter titled "The Witness" in his 1999 book Getting to Peace (later republished with the alternative title The Third Side: Why We Fight and How We Can Stop) and used the scene as a symbol of the power of ordinary citizens to resolve conflicts and stop violence.[33]

This scene from the popular movie Witness captures the power of ordinary community members to contain violence. The Amish farmers were present as the third side in perhaps its most elemental form, seemingly doing nothing, but in fact playing the critical role of Witness. Like the Amish, we are all potential Witnesses.

— William Ury, The Third Side[33]

Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa cited Witness as one of his favorite films of all time.[34][35]

References Edit

  1. ^ Silver & Ward 1992, p. 440.
  2. ^ Weaver-Zercher 2001, p. 154.
  3. ^ Weaver-Zercher 2001, pp. 154–155.
  4. ^ McGivern 2020, p. 2.
  5. ^ Feldman 2005, pp. 180–190.
  6. ^ Feldman 2005, p. 191.
  7. ^ Feldman 2005, pp. 190–191.
  8. ^ Feldman 2005, p. 188.
  9. ^ Rodley 1997, p. 116.
  10. ^ a b c d Keith Clark and Jon Mefford (2005). "Between Two Worlds: The Making of Witness". Witness (DVD). Paramount Pictures. OCLC 949729643.
  11. ^ McGillis, Kelly (January 24, 1985). . The Bobbie Wygant Archive (Interview). Interviewed by Bobbie Wygant. Archived from the original on June 4, 2022. Retrieved June 4, 2022.{{cite interview}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  12. ^ Feldman 2005, pp. 189–191.
  13. ^ Wright, Mary Ellen (February 12, 2015). "Throwback Thursday: 'Witness' premiered at Fulton 30 years ago". LPN. from the original on June 4, 2022.
  14. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Witness". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved July 8, 2009.
  15. ^ Smith, Jeremy (May 23, 2022). "It Took A Total Re-Write To Make Witness An Oscar Winner". /Film. from the original on May 25, 2022.
  16. ^ "Witness". Box Office Mojo. Amazon.com.
  17. ^ "UIP's $25M-Plus Club". Variety. September 11, 1995. p. 92.
  18. ^ "Witness (1985) Blu-ray (BD)". Retrieved October 10, 2023.
  19. ^ "Witness (1985) DVD". Retrieved October 10, 2023.
  20. ^ "WITNESS ULTRA HD LIMITED EDITION 4K ULTRA HD". Retrieved October 10, 2023.
  21. ^ "Witness (1985)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
  22. ^ "Witness Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
  23. ^ Ebert, Roger (February 8, 1985). "Witness". RogerEbert.com. Ebert Digital LLC. Retrieved June 30, 2018.
  24. ^ Canby, Vincent (February 8, 1985). "FILM: 'WITNESS,' A TOUGH GUY AMONG THE AMISH". The New York Times. Retrieved June 30, 2018.
  25. ^ "Witness". Variety. December 31, 1984.
  26. ^ "Witness Review". Time Out New York. Archived from the original on February 4, 2013.
  27. ^ Halliwell's Film Guide, 13th edition – ISBN 0-00-638868-X.
  28. ^ John Ferguson. "Witness review". Radio Times.
  29. ^ Hostetler & Kraybill 1988, pp. 220–235.
  30. ^ Weaver-Zercher 2001, p. 152.
  31. ^ Weaver-Zercher 2001, pp. 152–153.
  32. ^ "Amish ask boycott of movie 'Witness'". Pittsburgh Press. February 16, 1985 – via Google News.
  33. ^ a b Ury 2000, pp. 170–171.
  34. ^ Lee Thomas-Mason (January 12, 2021). "From Stanley Kubrick to Martin Scorsese: Akira Kurosawa once named his top 100 favourite films of all time". Far Out. Far Out Magazine. Retrieved June 10, 2021.
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 March 2010.

Sources Edit

Further reading Edit

  • Wahlbrinck, Bernd. WITNESS Revisited: An Appreciation of Peter Weir's Famous Film, Tumbleweed 2020, ISBN 978-3-9821463-5-5
  • Kelley, William and Earl W. Wallace (based on the screenplay by Earl W. Wallace and William Kelley). Witness, Pocket Books; Media Tie In, 1985 ISBN 978-0671545956

External links Edit

witness, 1985, film, witness, 1985, american, noir, crime, thriller, film, directed, peter, weir, starring, harrison, ford, kelly, mcgillis, lukas, haas, with, rubeš, danny, glover, josef, sommer, alexander, godunov, patti, lupone, viggo, mortensen, supporting. Witness is a 1985 American neo noir crime thriller film 1 directed by Peter Weir and starring Harrison Ford Kelly McGillis and Lukas Haas with Jan Rubes Danny Glover Josef Sommer Alexander Godunov Patti LuPone and Viggo Mortensen in supporting roles The film focuses on a police detective Ford protecting an Amish woman McGillis and her young son Haas who becomes a target after he witnesses a brutal murder in a Philadelphia train station WitnessTheatrical release posterDirected byPeter WeirScreenplay byEarl W Wallace William KelleyStory byWilliam Kelley Pamela Wallace Earl W WallaceProduced byEdward S FeldmanStarringHarrison Ford Kelly McGillis Lukas Haas Jan Rubes Danny Glover Josef SommerCinematographyJohn SealeEdited byThom NobleMusic byMaurice JarreProductioncompanyEdward S Feldman ProductionsDistributed byParamount PicturesRelease dateFebruary 8 1985 1985 02 08 Running time112 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguagesEnglish Pennsylvania DutchBudget 12 millionBox office 116 1 millionFilmed in 1984 Witness was released theatrically by Paramount Pictures in February 1985 The film went on to become a sleeper hit grossing over 116 million worldwide At the 58th Academy Awards it earned eight nominations including Best Picture and Best Actor for Ford winning Best Original Screenplay and Best Film Editing It was also nominated for seven BAFTA Awards winning one for Maurice Jarre s score and six Golden Globe Awards William Kelley and Earl W Wallace won the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Original Screenplay and the 1986 Edgar Award for Best Motion Picture Screenplay presented by the Mystery Writers of America Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Themes 4 Production 4 1 Development 4 2 Casting 4 3 Pre production 4 4 Filming 5 Release 5 1 Box office 5 2 Home media 6 Reception 6 1 Accolades 6 2 Controversy 7 Legacy 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksPlot EditIn April 1984 an Amish community outside Lancaster Pennsylvania attends the funeral of Jacob Lapp who leaves behind his wife Rachel and eight year old son Samuel Rachel and Samuel travel by train to visit Rachel s sister which takes them into Philadelphia While at 30th Street Station waiting for a connecting train Samuel goes into the men s room and witnesses the brutal murder of an undercover police officer Detective Sergeant John Book and his partner Sergeant Elton Carter are assigned to the case They question Samuel who is unable to identify the perpetrator from mugshots or a line up Samuel then sees a newspaper clipping in a trophy case of officer James McFee receiving an award and points him out to Book Book investigates and finds out that McFee was previously responsible for a seizure of expensive chemicals used to make black market amphetamines but the evidence has now disappeared Book surmises that McFee sold the chemicals to drug dealers and that the murdered detective had been investigating the theft Book expresses his suspicions to Chief of Police Paul Schaeffer who advises Book to keep the case secret so they can work out how to proceed Book is later ambushed and shot in a parking garage by McFee and left badly wounded Since only Schaeffer knew of Book s suspicions he realizes Schaeffer is also corrupt and tipped off McFee Knowing Samuel and Rachel are now in danger Book orders his partner to remove all traces of the Lapps from his files and drives the boy and his mother back to their community where he passes out in front of their farm Book insists that going to a hospital would allow him to be found and put Samuel in danger Rachel s father in law Eli reluctantly agrees to shelter him Book slowly recovers in their care and begins to blend into the community He and Rachel are also drawn to each other romantically although they refrain from acting on their feelings Meanwhile Schaeffer searches for Book by contacting authorities in the Amish area but as Amish communities have no modern means of communication and little contact with the outside world he hits repeated dead ends Book eventually goes into town with Eli to use a pay phone to call his precinct and learns that Carter has been killed While in town a group harasses the Amish Book retaliates breaking with the Amish tradition of non violence The fight is reported to the local police and eventually gets back to Schaeffer The next day Schaeffer McFee and another corrupt cop Ferguson arrive at the Lapp farm taking Rachel and Eli hostage Book tricks Ferguson into the corn silo and suffocates him under tons of corn then uses Ferguson s shotgun to kill McFee Schaeffer holds Rachel and Eli at gunpoint but Eli signals to Samuel to ring the farm s bell Book confronts Schaeffer who threatens to kill Rachel but the bell summons the neighbors With so many witnesses present Schaeffer surrenders and Book arrests him Once the case is concluded Book departs after saying goodbye to Rachel and Samuel and Eli wishes him well out there among them English Cast EditHarrison Ford as Detective Sergeant John Book Kelly McGillis as Rachel Lapp Lukas Haas as Samuel Lapp Jan Rubes as Eli Lapp Josef Sommer as Chief Paul Schaeffer Alexander Godunov as Daniel Hochleitner Danny Glover as Lieutenant James McFee Brent Jennings as Sergeant Elton Carter Patti LuPone as Elaine Book Angus MacInnes as Sergeant Leon Fergie Ferguson Viggo Mortensen as Moses Hochleitner Frederick Rolf as Stoltzfus Timothy Carhart as Detective Ian Zenovich Richard Chaves as Detective Sykes Robert Earl Jones as HarryThemes EditIn his book The Amish in the American Imagination 2001 scholar David Weaver Zercher notes that Witness is primarily concerned with the intersection of contrasting cultures a recurring theme in several of Weir s films including The Last Wave 1977 and The Year of Living Dangerously 1982 2 Weaver Zercher notes that the conflict between Amish and non Amish as depicted in Witness reflect s well on the Amish ways and also serves as a redemption story for Sergeant Book who regains a new sense of humanity during his displacement in the Amish community 3 Production EditDevelopment Edit Producer Edward S Feldman who was in a first look development deal with 20th Century Fox at the time first received the screenplay for Witness in 1983 Originally entitled Called Home which is the Amish term for death it ran for 182 pages the equivalent of three hours of screen time The script which had been circulating in Hollywood for several years had been inspired by an episode of Gunsmoke that William Kelley and Earl W Wallace had written in the 1970s which had been based upon an idea by novelist Pamela Wallace 4 5 Feldman liked the concept but felt too much of the script was devoted to Amish traditions diluting the thriller aspects of the story He offered Kelley and Wallace 25 000 for a one year option and one rewrite and an additional 225 000 if the film actually were made They submitted the revised screenplay in less than six weeks and Feldman delivered it to Fox Joe Wizan the studio s head of production rejected it with the statement that Fox did not make rural movies 6 Feldman sent the screenplay to Harrison Ford s agent Phil Gersh who contacted the producer four days later and advised him his client was willing to commit to the film Certain the attachment of a major star would change Wizan s mind Feldman approached him once again but Wizan insisted that as much as the studio liked Ford they still were not interested in making a rural movie 7 Feldman sent the screenplay to numerous studios and was rejected by all of them until Paramount Pictures finally expressed interest Feldman s first choice of director was Peter Weir but he was involved in preproduction work for The Mosquito Coast and passed on the project John Badham dismissed it as just another cop movie and others Feldman approached either were committed to other projects or had no interest Then as financial backing for The Mosquito Coast fell through Weir became free to direct Witness which was his first American film Starting the film immediately was imperative because a Directors Guild of America strike was looming 8 David Cronenberg was offered the role of director but declined as he could never be a fan of the Amish 9 Casting Edit Lynne Littman had originally been in talks to direct the film and though she ultimately did not she recommended Lukas Haas for the part of Samuel because she had recently worked with him on her film Testament The role of Rachel was the most difficult to cast and after Weir grew frustrated with the auditions he had seen he asked the casting director to look for actors in Italy because he thought they would be more womanly As they were reviewing audition tapes from Italy Kelly McGillis came to audition and the moment she put on the bonnet and spoke a few lines Weir knew she was the one The casting director recommended her old friend Alexander Godunov who had never acted before but she thought his personality would be right and Weir agreed citation needed Viggo Mortensen was cast because Weir thought he had the right face for the part of an Amish man Mortensen had just started his acting career so this was his first film acting role and he had to turn down another role as a soldier in Shakespeare in the Park s production ofHenry V He credited that decision and the very positive experience on the film as the start of his film career 10 Pre production Edit During the weeks before filming Ford spent time with the homicide department of the Philadelphia Police Department researching the important details of working as a homicide detective McGillis did research by moving in with an Amish widow and her seven children learning how to milk cows and practicing their Pennsylvania German dialect 11 Weir and cinematographer John Seale went on a trip to the Philadelphia Museum of Art which was running an exhibition of 17th century Dutch Masters Weir drew attention to the paintings of Johannes Vermeer which were used as inspiration for the lighting and composition of the film especially in the scenes where John Book is recovering from a gunshot wound in Rachel s house 10 Filming Edit The film was shot on location in Philadelphia and the city and towns of Intercourse Lancaster Strasburg and Parkesburg Local Amish were willing to work as carpenters and electricians but declined to appear on film so many of the extras were actually Mennonites Halfway through filming the title was changed from Called Home to Witness at the behest of Paramount s marketing department which felt the original title posed too much of a promotional challenge Principal photography was completed three days before the scheduled DGA strike which ultimately failed to materialize 12 During the set up and rehearsal of each scene as well as during dailies Weir would play music to set the mood with the idea that it prevented the actors from thinking too much and let them listen to their other instincts The barn raising scene was only a short paragraph in the script but Weir thought it was important to highlight that aspect of Amish community life They shot the scene in a day and did in fact build a barn albeit with the aid of cranes off camera To film the scene in the corn silo corn was actually dropped onto the actor while a scuba diving regulator with a compressed air tank was hidden on the floor so the actor would be able to breathe 10 Originally the script ended with a scene of Book and Rachel each explaining their feelings for each other to the audience but Weir felt the scene was unnecessary and decided not to shoot it The studio executives were concerned that the audience would not understand the conclusion and tried to convince him otherwise but Weir insisted that the characters emotions could be expressed only with visuals 10 Release EditWitness had its world premiere at the Fulton Opera House in Lancaster Pennsylvania in on February 7 1985 13 The film was screened out of competition at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival 14 Box office Edit The film opened theatrically in 876 theaters in the United States on February 8 1985 and grossed 4 539 990 in its opening weekend ranking number two behind Beverly Hills Cop The film went on to become a sleeper hit topping the charts in its fifth week of release 15 It eventually earned a total of 68 706 993 in North America 16 Internationally it grossed 47 4 million for a worldwide total of 116 1 million 17 Home media Edit Warner Bros released Witness on VHS with a DVD in 2005 and Blu ray Disc in 2015 18 19 British boutique label Arrow Films is scheduled to release the film in the United States on 4K Ultra HD disc and remastered Blu ray on October 31 2023 20 Reception EditOn Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 93 based on 41 reviews with an average rating of 8 4 10 The site s critics consensus states A wonderfully entertaining thriller within an unusual setting with Harrison Ford delivering a surprisingly emotive and sympathetic performance 21 On Metacritic it has a weighted average score of 76 out of 100 based on 14 critics indicating generally favorable reviews 22 Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun Times rated the film four out of four stars calling it F irst of all an electrifying and poignant love story Then it is a movie about the choices we make in life and the choices that other people make for us Only then is it a thriller one that Alfred Hitchcock would have been proud to make We have lately been getting so many pallid bloodless little movies mostly recycled teenage exploitation films made by ambitious young stylists without a thought in their heads that Witness arrives like a fresh new day It is a movie about adults whose lives have dignity and whose choices matter to them And it is also one hell of a thriller 23 Ebert also praised Ford s work and claimed he had never given a better performance in a movie Vincent Canby of The New York Times It s not really awful but it s not much fun It s pretty to look at and it contains a number of good performances but there is something exhausting about its neat balancing of opposing manners and values One might be made to care about all this if the direction by the talented Australian film maker Peter Weir were less perfunctory and if the screenplay did not seem so strangely familiar One follows Witness as if touring one s old hometown guided by an outsider who refuses to believe that one knows the territory better than he does There s not a character an event or a plot twist that one hasn t anticipated long before its arrival which gives one the feeling of waiting around for people who are always late 24 Variety said the film was at times a gentle affecting story of star crossed lovers limited within the fascinating Amish community Too often however this fragile romance is crushed by a thoroughly absurd shoot em up like ketchup poured over a delicate Pennsylvania Dutch dinner 25 Time Out New York observed Powerful assured full of beautiful imagery and thankfully devoid of easy moralizing it also offers a performance of surprising skill and sensitivity from Ford 26 Halliwell s Film Guide chose Witness as one of only two films from 1985 to receive a four star review describing it as one of those lucky movies which works out well on all counts and shows that there are still craftsmen lurking in Hollywood 27 Radio Times called the film partly a love story and partly a thriller but mainly a study of cultural collision it s as if the world of Dirty Harry had suddenly stumbled into a canvas by Brueghel It added I t s Weir s delicacy of touch that impresses the most He ably juggles the various elements of the story and makes the violence seem even more shocking when it s played out on the fields of Amish denial 28 Accolades Edit Award Category Recipient Result Ref Academy Awards Best Picture Edward S Feldman NominatedBest Director Peter Weir NominatedBest Actor Harrison Ford NominatedBest Original Screenplay Earl W Wallace William Kelley and Pamela Wallace WonBest Art Direction Stan Jolley and John H Anderson NominatedBest Cinematography John Seale NominatedBest Film Editing Thom Noble WonBest Original Score Maurice Jarre NominatedBAFTA Awards Best Film NominatedBest Original Screenplay Earl W Wallace William Kelley and Pamela Wallace NominatedBest Actor Harrison Ford NominatedBest Actress Kelly McGillis NominatedBest Music Maurice Jarre WonBest Cinematography John Seale NominatedBest Editing Thom Noble NominatedGolden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture Drama NominatedBest Director Peter Weir NominatedBest Screenplay Earl W Wallace William Kelley and Pamela Wallace NominatedBest Actor Motion Picture Drama Harrison Ford NominatedBest Supporting Actress Kelly McGillis NominatedBest Original Score Maurice Jarre NominatedKansas City Film Critics Circle Best Film WonBest Actor Harrison Ford WonWriters Guild of America Best Original Screenplay Earl W Wallace William Kelley and Pamela Wallace WonDirectors Guild of America Outstanding Directing Peter Weir NominatedGrammy Awards Best Score Maurice Jarre NominatedAmerican Cinema Editors Best Edited Feature Film Thom Noble WonAustralian Cinematographers Society Cinematographer of the Year John Seale WonBritish Society of Cinematographers Best Cinematography NominatedControversy Edit Leading up to and following its release Witness was met with controversy from the Amish communities where it was filmed 29 and was subject to debate from editors scholars and other parties regarding its depiction of the Amish 30 Some accused the film of exploiting the Amish community for commercial purposes while others felt that the depiction of Amish characters in an R rated film featuring graphic violence was insensitive to the Amish s beliefs 31 A statement released by a law firm associated with the Amish claimed that their portrayal in the movie was not accurate The National Committee For Amish Religious Freedom called for a boycott of the movie soon after its release citing fears that these communities were being overrun by tourists as a result of the popularity of the movie and worried that the crowding souvenir hunting photographing and trespassing on Amish farmsteads will increase After the movie was completed Pennsylvania governor Dick Thornburgh agreed not to promote Amish communities as future film sites A similar concern was voiced within the movie itself where Rachel tells a recovering Book that tourists often consider her fellow Amish something to stare at with some even being so rude as to trespass on their private property 32 Legacy EditNegotiation expert William Ury summarised the film s climactic scene in a chapter titled The Witness in his 1999 book Getting to Peace later republished with the alternative title The Third Side Why We Fight and How We Can Stop and used the scene as a symbol of the power of ordinary citizens to resolve conflicts and stop violence 33 This scene from the popular movie Witness captures the power of ordinary community members to contain violence The Amish farmers were present as the third side in perhaps its most elemental form seemingly doing nothing but in fact playing the critical role of Witness Like the Amish we are all potential Witnesses William Ury The Third Side 33 Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa cited Witness as one of his favorite films of all time 34 35 References Edit Silver amp Ward 1992 p 440 Weaver Zercher 2001 p 154 Weaver Zercher 2001 pp 154 155 McGivern 2020 p 2 Feldman 2005 pp 180 190 Feldman 2005 p 191 Feldman 2005 pp 190 191 Feldman 2005 p 188 Rodley 1997 p 116 a b c d Keith Clark and Jon Mefford 2005 Between Two Worlds The Making of Witness Witness DVD Paramount Pictures OCLC 949729643 McGillis Kelly January 24 1985 Kelly McGillis for Witness The Bobbie Wygant Archive Interview Interviewed by Bobbie Wygant Archived from the original on June 4 2022 Retrieved June 4 2022 a href Template Cite interview html title Template Cite interview cite interview a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Feldman 2005 pp 189 191 Wright Mary Ellen February 12 2015 Throwback Thursday Witness premiered at Fulton 30 years ago LPN Archived from the original on June 4 2022 Festival de Cannes Witness festival cannes com Retrieved July 8 2009 Smith Jeremy May 23 2022 It Took A Total Re Write To Make Witness An Oscar Winner Film Archived from the original on May 25 2022 Witness Box Office Mojo Amazon com UIP s 25M Plus Club Variety September 11 1995 p 92 Witness 1985 Blu ray BD Retrieved October 10 2023 Witness 1985 DVD Retrieved October 10 2023 WITNESS ULTRA HD LIMITED EDITION 4K ULTRA HD Retrieved October 10 2023 Witness 1985 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved February 20 2021 Witness Reviews Metacritic Retrieved February 20 2021 Ebert Roger February 8 1985 Witness RogerEbert com Ebert Digital LLC Retrieved June 30 2018 Canby Vincent February 8 1985 FILM WITNESS A TOUGH GUY AMONG THE AMISH The New York Times Retrieved June 30 2018 Witness Variety December 31 1984 Witness Review Time Out New York Archived from the original on February 4 2013 Halliwell s Film Guide 13th edition ISBN 0 00 638868 X John Ferguson Witness review Radio Times Hostetler amp Kraybill 1988 pp 220 235 Weaver Zercher 2001 p 152 Weaver Zercher 2001 pp 152 153 Amish ask boycott of movie Witness Pittsburgh Press February 16 1985 via Google News a b Ury 2000 pp 170 171 Lee Thomas Mason January 12 2021 From Stanley Kubrick to Martin Scorsese Akira Kurosawa once named his top 100 favourite films of all time Far Out Far Out Magazine Retrieved June 10 2021 Akira Kurosawa s Top 100 Movies Archived from the original on 27 March 2010 Sources EditFeldman Edward S 2005 Tell Me How You Love the Picture New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 34801 4 Silver Alain Ward Elizabeth eds 1992 Film Noir An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style 3rd ed Woodstock New York The Overlook Press ISBN 978 0 879 51479 2 Hostetler John A Kraybill Donald B 1988 Hollywood markets the Amish In Gross Larry P Katz John Stuart Ruby Jay eds Image Ethics The Moral Rights of Subjects In Photographs Film and Television Communication and Society Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 195 36184 1 McGivern Alicia March 2020 Witness A Study Guide PDF IFI Education Irish Film Institute Archived PDF from the original on May 27 2021 Ury William 2000 1999 The Third Side Why We Fight and How We Can Stop Revised ed New York Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 140 29634 1 Weaver Zercher David 2001 The Amish in the American Imagination Baltimore JHU Press ISBN 978 0 801 86681 4 Rodley Chris ed 1997 Cronenberg on Cronenberg Faber and Faber ISBN 0571191371 Further reading EditWahlbrinck Bernd WITNESS Revisited An Appreciation of Peter Weir s Famous Film Tumbleweed 2020 ISBN 978 3 9821463 5 5 Kelley William and Earl W Wallace based on the screenplay by Earl W Wallace and William Kelley Witness Pocket Books Media Tie In 1985 ISBN 978 0671545956External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Witness 1985 film Witness at the American Film Institute Catalog Witness at IMDb Witness at AllMovie Witness at the TCM Movie Database Witness at Box Office Mojo Witness at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Witness 1985 film amp oldid 1179559178, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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