MovieChat Forums > To Kill a Mockingbird (1963) Discussion > Very Poorly Made Film From Almost Every ...

Very Poorly Made Film From Almost Every Aspect


Yes, I know it's a much loved picture, considered a classic; and that the idea of a remake is "unimaginable" to many. But I've never understood the regard in which it's held.

I first read Lee's novel in the early '60's, when I was a teenage boy, and was blown away. It is truly splendid, about as perfect as a book can be. I was haunted by it for a long time, and couldn't wait to see the work come to life on the screen. Finally the big day arrived - and I was hugely disappointed in what is, in my opinion one of the worst adaptations of a book in history. I've decided the main problem was that by some unhappy fate, the rights to the book fell into the hands of the wrong people all the way around.

1) The picture is so relentlessly *grim.* Of course the main storylines were serious, but the total aura of the novel is not. This is basically a story of a couple of years in the lives of some kids. Lee infused their story with a mixture of pathos and happier experiences, and humor. None of this lightheartedness survives. The atmosphere is so leaden throughout.

2) The film is smotheringly studio bound. When I think of the 30's rural south, I think of cotton fields, country dirt roads leading to swimming holes, to run down houses and rutted streets and faded, somewhat tattered and wrinkled clothes, and to cicaeda and the wind in trees. Instead, we get streets that look like cement, lawns that resemble those in Beverly Hills, fake trees, garments that look like what they are: costumes fresh and new off the rack. Rather than feeling I was visiting the time and place of the book, I got an overwhelming impression of being on the Universal lot in the early '60's. The whole feel of the picture is one of inauthenticity.

3) Let's face it: many of the actors, especially those portraying Scout and Jem weren't that great. Much has been said about their "authentic Alabama accents." But authentic Alabama accents
can't make up for lack of charisma and believability. Mary Badham in particular seems not my idea of Scout. There is something cold and hard in her demeanor and appearence. I got the impression, not of a child, but of a 30 year old woman awkwardly cast as a young girl.

4) Gregory Peck, God bless him, no doubt a wonderful human being and a fine actor in the right role. Some people seem to think this is one of the greatest characterizations in film history; but I utterly fail to see it. From the book, I got the impression that Atticus was an ordinary, decent, good hearted person, with a good, dry sense of humor. A warmly recognizable human being who had another job to do and he did his duty the best he could, and then probably moved on. But what we have in Peck's interpretation is not an ordinary guy or really even a human; but a virtual archetype: The Great White Father Who Defends The Blacks. He comes across as pompous, impossibly larger than life, A Man On A Mission, grimly earnest and totally unbelievable. Is it any wonder that someone, viewing the film early on, remarked, "My God, he thinks he's Lincoln freeing the slaves!"?

5) Many memorable scenes from the novel were omitted, no doubt in the interest of economics. The entire episodes of the relationship of Jem and Mrs. Dubose was axed, except for a token appearence of her early on. I thought the way she got to Jem and his final breaking point was one of the most vivid and important scenes in the book. Shame, really. The rare snow and the pitiful snowman sequence would only have taken a few seconds to depict. The housefire could have been turned into a very moving scene. Calpurnia taking Scout and Jem to the black church was, for me, a major scene in the book. But God forbid in their PC mania to rid blacks of any semblance to ideosyncratic, colorful or interesting people, that episode was doomed. Calpurnia, so loved and respected in the novel, was so "de-blacked", made so bland that she virtually becomes a non existent entity.

6) The final scene where Scout walks Boo home and back was the finest in the book. A haunting a perfect ending. And I realize that it would be difficult, if not impossible to convey on screen the same poetic feel possible only through words. But, why in the name of God couldn't they have at least kept true to the visual aspect of the scene: we're talking the last day of October. But on the claustrophobic set, there was no sense of this fact. It might as well have been May. And Lee was specific in describing that a misty rain was falling. Dry as a bone. A little thing perhaps, but yet another of very many indications that this film was made, not by artists who loved and respected the material; but by people who only wanted to capitalize on the popularity of the book. Sad.

I could go on, (by observing things like how flat, unreal and utterly lacking in tension is the rabid dog episode, for example). But I've made my point.
I'd just like to add a couple of things: first Elmer Bernstein's haunting score. It is wonderfully apposite;and in my opinion the best thing about the film.
Second: to those who hold this movie as a favorite, I'm happy that you enjoy it.
But if the thought of a remake is anathema to you, it isn't to me. I realize remakes are historically inferior. But they need not be - if you have the right people at the helm.
And my hope is that we will be fortunate enough to have those people remake this great story. People who are interested in making a work of art, rather than making a buck.

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I would probably be downright annoyed at you if you hated the book as well. I recently read the book and adore it, and watched the movie recently, and I really see your points. This is a good movie, but nowhere near as good as the book and downright frustrating in parts.

'Do you suggest coconuts migrate?' - Monty Python & The Holy Grail

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I have to say I agree with you a lot on this. For some reason everyone gets defensive and mean whenever someone talks bad about this movie, but let's be honest: How in the heck is this movie acclaimed. I can understand people liking it who have NEVER read the book. Sort of like how some people liked the movie The Last Airbender but because they never watched the show.

To Kill a Mocking Bird was a wonderful book, but the movie had this odd unauthentic feel to it. The streets, the houses, and all the people did not look like they were in the 1930s (hey wasn't their some sort of economic crisis back then?) they didn't seem poor, they didn't have the Alabama feel, and for some terrifying reason Scout has no charisma and seems absolutely obnoxious compared to the original.

The characters were all wrong in the movie, and Atticus seemed too... godly? I guess I imagined him more worn out, still has a good sense of right and wrong, but he isn't a guy who is out to make a point. Scout looked much too old for her character and looked much older than Jem.

There is one part I will never forgive this movie for... Boo Radley. He looked absolutely nothing like how he was described in the book. The book described him as scrawny, bony, pale, and just frightened of all light, not speaking, hiding in the shadows. In the movie her is quite the opposite and he might even have a little bit of a tan as well.

I just really don't understand how this movie can be called a classic. Also, when the author "Harper Lee" said that this movie was the greatest movie adaptation of a novel isn't really saying much. Look at it this way, To Kill a Mocking Bird the movie came out in 1962. Movies based on books didn't really come out until 1935-1940. So really for movies to be adapted from books was not nearly as common as it is today. So saying something is the great book to movie adaptation at the beginning of the 60s is not saying much at all.

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To Kill a Mocking Bird was a wonderful book, but the movie had this odd unauthentic feel to it. The streets, the houses, and all the people did not look like they were in the 1930s (hey wasn't their some sort of economic crisis back then?) they didn't seem poor, they didn't have the Alabama feel, and for some terrifying reason Scout has no charisma and seems absolutely obnoxious compared to the original


A lot of people who were actually FROM that time say that it was pretty authentic

The characters were all wrong in the movie, and Atticus seemed too... godly? I guess I imagined him more worn out, still has a good sense of right and wrong, but he isn't a guy who is out to make a point.


So...Atticus is wrong because he's not how YOU imagined him to be? I'm pretty sure he was pretty accurate as well. Even the author of the book thought so.

Scout looked much too old for her character and looked much older than Jem.


The book takes place in a 2-4 year timespan. Scout is about 5 when the story starts. A five year old...even an 8 year old wouldn't have understood the depth as well as innocence that Scout is supposed to have.

There is one part I will never forgive this movie for... Boo Radley. He looked absolutely nothing like how he was described in the book. The book described him as scrawny, bony, pale, and just frightened of all light, not speaking, hiding in the shadows. In the movie her is quite the opposite and he might even have a little bit of a tan as well.


Wow. I really had to facepalm over this. You're entire argument is nitpicks but this is just plain stupid. Robert Duvall was perfect for the role. He never said a word but he could tell an entire story of emotion with his eyes. And you're just going to ignore that by saying he's not pale enough?

I just really don't understand how this movie can be called a classic. Also, when the author "Harper Lee" said that this movie was the greatest movie adaptation of a novel isn't really saying much. Look at it this way, To Kill a Mocking Bird the movie came out in 1962. Movies based on books didn't really come out until 1935-1940. So really for movies to be adapted from books was not nearly as common as it is today. So saying something is the great book to movie adaptation at the beginning of the 60s is not saying much at all.


So you're going to write off the author's opinion (and really she'd know if they nailed the characters better than anyone.) because movies had been adapted into books for only about 30 years? What? It's not even the quantity of movies she was referring to, it was the quality of this one.

But maybe if you stopped nitpicking and focused on the story as a whole like people should do then you'd know that.


Carl: I stabbed him 37 times in the chest
Paul: Carrlll that KILLS people!

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Look, I'm nitpicking if it actually bothers me. Nitpicking means things that aren't important. To me the characters did not have the same feel as the book. That is my opinion, I still love the book and read it, yet the movie just seems to miss out on the characters.

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Nitpicking means things that aren't important.


Saying Robert Duvall wasn't pale enough ISN'T important. Does him being albino have anything to do with the story? How does Atticus looking 'worn' have to do with anything to the story? Because other than character looks or set looks (which people have said was authentic) you really aren't explaining how the characters missed it in the movie. Harper Lee was satisfied, and she was the one that wrote the book and lived in the time period. And she has more of an emotional connection with it that you and I will ever have. Oh but wait, you're going to write off her opinion because pretty much, "she didn't know any better."




Carl: I stabbed him 37 times in the chest
Paul: Carrlll that KILLS people!

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Ok... I have just had an epiphany... no matter what you say, even if I state it as my humble opinion, you are still going to freak out. So I should probably stop replying to ignorant, simple minded people and go to some other forum. Good day!

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While a lot of great parts of the book were left out of the film, I can't really think of a better way to cut it to two hours.
Sure, an eight to ten hour miniseries could do a better job of telling the complete story, but the film does as good a job in film length as is possible.

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Ok, I guess I feel a movie shouldn't really have been made in the first place. I think a mini-series or just a CRAZY long movie would work. Books like "To Kill a Mockingbird" I kind of hard to make into movies.

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[deleted]

I have read this whole thread. Have I seen and loved a different movie than what some of the "reviewers" have expressed here? Maybe "The Hangover 2" for some is more your speed. I am being sarcastic of course, hopefully not condescending but what are some of you missing here? Rarely has there been a greater novel adaptation to cinema as this. If "The Help" could get all the acclaim it did this year...Mockingbird was and remains MILES ahead and THIS IS THE FILM which has deserved all the attention, acclaim it had and has, Oscar nominations and wins. If you are not weeping by the end with that wonderful Elmer Bernstein score, Boo hiding behind the door... Peck's performance, the detail of each performance and the INCREDIBLE performances of the children, I would like to know what moves you...or maybe I would rather not!!! The film had author Harper Lee's blessing...and knowing that this story was told so closely from her heart and being, I am sure she would not have settled for anything less than what her work of art was adapted to in the film and acting medium here. This film is perfection and as an example, I don't think a more recent film as "The Help" could or should be mentioned in the same sentence.

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I'm about a year older than Mary Badham, so when the movie first came out, I was only two or three years older than she was during filming. I had recently read the book, and the principal characters and actions were all pretty fresh in my mind at the time, that summer of 1963.

This movie just blew me away. Of course, at that age, I liked almost every movie I saw, but "Mockingbird" was an exception. It wasn't just impressive, it was astoundingly, amazingly impressive. I still choke up when I see the scene in which Scout recognizes Boo Radley.

I'm all in favor of cultivating sophisticated tastes, but not if one just plain "sophisticates" oneself right out of that childlike sense of wonder at being able to peer into the lives of other people, in other times and places, and to feel like you're a part of their story.

"I don't deduce, I observe."

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Harper Lee would disagree with you. She thought the studio town was authentic. She thought Gregory Peck was a perfect replica of her father, who was an inspiration for Atticus, and she thought the children were perfectly cast.

--The day I hold too tightly to my opinion is the day I stop learning. May that day never come.

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Sorry "somerelief2-859-146886" as much as I disagree with your original post I respected that it was well thought out but you lost some serious credibility when you speculated on why Harper Lee would have been compelled to lie about her reasons for secretly hating the film. You just can't speak on someone's behalf with so much conjecture. Especially to use it in defense of your own argument. This isn't an empirical debate. This discussion ends better as a simple agree-to-disagree kind of outcome where each party is equally right and equally wrong and residually allowed to live with their feelings in lieu of resolution.

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Well said Sami.

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"When I think of the 30's rural south, I think of cotton fields, country dirt roads leading to swimming holes, to run down houses and rutted streets and faded, somewhat tattered and wrinkled clothes, and to cicaeda and the wind in trees."

So one of your main objections is that the film didn't pander to your Hollywood-created stereotypes about what a "realistic" South SHOULD have looked like.

Yet many who would KNOW-- like, say, Harper Lee, or dozens of my relatives-- think they nailed the authenticity.

I know who I'm going to believe is right...

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Uhm ... yeah, gonna disagree with pretty much everything you said. I understand your opinion, but you should know that you're pretty much in a tiny minority.

Not only did Harper Lee say it was a great adaptation, she also said Gregory Peck's performance was so close to that of her own father that she broke down in tears at times when seeing his portrayal.

Gregory Peck won the oscar for best actor (okay, we all know that). Your criticism of the kids performances are way off the mark; did you even realize that Mary Badham was also nominated for a supporting actress oscar? it doesn't appear so.

Atticus' defense of Tom Robinson is not some grandiose, pompous and/or heroic mission. It was as he told Scout about 55 minutes into the film; sometimes a person has to do something in life that they do not wish to do. It was about responsibility and integrity. As it turns out, that is one of the main moral messages of the film. it's unfortunate that you apparently missed it.

I could go on, but then again, I've made my point. You didn't like it and that's fine, but to say it's "very poorly made from almost every aspect" is just a statement from just one person and it does not reflect the great majority.


Losers always whine about doing their best; winners go home and "eff" the prom queen

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Just watched it again, and it's still one of the greatest movies of all time and it holds up tremendously well over time. Acting, script, story, music, cinematography - all outstanding. I tend to think a lot of old movies don't hold up well over time - but this one does. It's a masterpiece. Frankly, in the #60's on IMDB might be too low. It's in my own top 20 at least, if not top 10.

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