Wilson received critical acclaim, earning ten nominations at the 17th Academy Awards and winning five, including Best Writing, Original Screenplay. However, it was a box office bomb due to its unusually high budget.[3] Zanuck was so disappointed over the failure of thie film that for years he forbade Fox employees from mentioning the film in his presence.[4]
Early in 1915, at around the same time of the sinking of the RMS Lusitania, he meets Edith Bolling Galt, a Washington D.C. widow, whom he marries in December 1915. He wins reelection in 1916, and as he starts his second term, the war finally comes to America. In 1918, the Allies defeat the Central Powers, and Wilson travels to France to have a hand in the Paris Peace Conference. He intends to establish his long-promised League of Nations, but many Republican senators, including Henry Cabot Lodge, feel the president is leaving the United States vulnerable to future wars, and decide to block whatever treaty he brings back.
President Wilson takes the issue to the people in a multi-state tour, but his health fails and days after returning to Washington, he suffers a stroke. Edith shields the president and screens visitors, leading some to question how powerful she is and how much Wilson is truly acting as president. In the end, Wilson recovers enough to see the election of Republican Warren G. Harding, who has promised to keep the country out of the League of Nations. As Wilson's administration ends, he laments his failure but remains hopeful that the League will, in some form or another, be successful in the future.
Wilson was initially intended as a historical drama about a fictional American family living during the Progressive Era before being rewritten by Lamar Trotti into a biopic about Woodrow Wilson.[3] Wilson's daughter, Eleanor Wilson McAdoo, served as an informal counselor.[10] Journalist Ray Stannard Baker, an authority on Wilson, served as an adviser.
The film received generally positive reviews[13] but was not without its detractors. The New Republic film critic Manny Farber was particularly unenthusiastic, calling the production "costly, tedious and impotent" while writing: "The effect of the movie is similar to the one produced by the sterile post-card albums you buy in railroad stations, which unfold like accordions and show you the points of interest in the city ... The producers must have known far more about the World War, the peace-making at Versailles, and Wilson himself, but that is kept out of the movie in the same way that slum sections are kept out of post-card albums ... About three-quarters of the way through, a large amount of actual newsreel from the first World War is run off and the strength of it makes the film that comes before and after seem comical."[14]
President Franklin D. Roosevelt, a protege of Wilson's, screened the film for guests at the Second Quebec Conference in 1944. British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, however, was no fan. He excused himself in the middle of the film and went to bed.
Awards
Despite the negative press and lackluster commercial performance, the film received ten nominations at the 17th Academy Awards, winning five:
^"Jess Lee Brooks, Actor, Succumbs". California Eagle. December 14, 1944. p. 1. Retrieved November 27, 2024. "His most recent part was an important bit in the hit picture, 'Wilson.'"
^"Obituaries: Jess Lee Brooks". Variety. December 20, 1944. p. 43. ProQuest1285872620. Jess Lee Brooks, 50, Negro stage and screen player, died Dec. 13 when stricken with a heart attack while driving to Paramount studio where he had a character role in 'The Lost Weekend.' [...] His recent screen appearances were in 'Sullivan's Travels' and 'Wilson.'
^Curioso, Jorge (Apr 16, 2008). "Go Down Moses - Sullivan's Travels (1941)". YouTube. Retrieved November 27, 2024. "Jess Lee Brooks performing the classic spiritual. From the 1941 Preston Sturges movie "Sullivan's Travels", starring Joel McCrea and Veronica Lake."
^marciamarciamarcie (November 7, 2009). "WlsnE". YouTube. Retrieved November 27, 2024.
^Knock, Thomas J. "History with Lightning": The Forgotten Film Wilson. American Quarterly, Vol. 28, No. 5 (Winter, 1976), pp. 523–543