SPOILER ALERT! The plot will be discussed.
Elmer Gantry, a 1960 film, winner of the Oscar for Best Picture, was controversial for its time in examining Christian revivalism. It starts with opening notes that, although granting the importance of freedom of religion, state that right “is not license to abuse the faith of people.” The story argues that unscrupulous persons can exploit this basic freedom. The movie, which has multi-faceted characters, explores how American Christian evangelism sometimes uses the techniques of salesmanship and entertainment to further its aims.
The opening credits use the Christian symbol of the cross, but it, as well as the names of those making the movie, are askew, suggesting a warping of Christianity’s message. The story, based on the Sinclair Lewis novel, takes place in the 1920’s. Elmer Gantry (Burt Lancaster in an Oscar winning performance for Best Actor) is drinking in a bar close to Christmas while loudly telling a joke to other inebriated men about infidelity. His hair looks like an exaggerated version of the style worn by famed Evangelist Billy Graham. He eyes a beautiful blonde (wearing the passionate color of red) at the bar, so we already see a man who likes to pursue his less than religious inclinations. The men later refer to his “little black book” of names of his female companions. A man and a woman enter and as they appeal to the Christianity of the patrons for charitable donations they receive a negative response. However, Gantry, a charismatic salesman, gives a rousing speech, as he collects money from the tables for contributions, that extols how Jesus was a warrior who took on the Roman Empire with the power of love. The blonde seems impressed, and that may partly be Gantry's reason for the moving remarks. He flashes that oversized Lancaster smile that reveals many teeth, a combination of warmth and intimidation. He says, “Love is the morning and evening star,” words he repeats during the movie, which shows it is a rehearsed line used to appeal to the sentimental person. He says to her he was talking about “divine” love, not the carnal kind, but his words are just a disguise for his true intentions at this point. She thinks he is a “parson,” but learns from the other men as they leave that Gantry is not a cleric. We know he is not financially successful since he can’t even pay the bill (probably squandering his earnings) and tells the owner he’ll have to extend him some credit. For Gantry, charity begins at someone else’s home.
Disillusioned, the woman says that the world is devoid of love. He buys her a drink (so to speak), and the next scene shows the hungover Gantry waking up in his hotel sprawled out in the bed with the woman's shoes on the floor. The two may still be clothed, next to each other on the bed, but it is implied that, using his good looks and charm, he has provided sexual passion as a substitute for love to another in a long line of females. The bellhop, whose “Merry Christmas” generates no tip from the fake Christian advocate, says that Gantry’s mother called him. He talks to her on the phone and lies as he says he just returned from church and prayed for her. The man even cons his own mother. He pretends that he sent her a gift that must have been lost in the mail. He tells her not to cry, as he will not be returning home for Christmas, so we know he has broken promises to her many times. He leaves the sleeping blond and writes, appropriately with red lipstick, “Merry Xmas,” on the mirror, which reflects his superficial caring about others.
Gantry hops on a railroad car with other hobos, who, down on their luck, try to take his shoes while he sleeps. He wakes up, and thrashes the desperate men, followed by him throwing his suitcases and himself out of the car. The scene mirrors the hard times of the Great Depression, and Gantry’s first thoughts are for himself. As he walks with his belongings there is a sign in the background promoting a “revival meeting” with the picture of Sister Sharon Falconer (Jean Simmons) and the words that promise “she can save you.” As the film progresses, there is a question as to whether she needs to be saved. Her last name suggests someone who can tame birds of prey, which may refer to sinners. Gantry hears a hymn being sung and enters an African American prayer meeting. They are suspicious of the white man who has entered, but he knows the words to the song and sings them loudly. They join him in the spirit of Christianity, and their innocence contrasts with the dubious devotee among them. He acquires food for shoveling coal at the church. The reverend sees that Gantry has a picture of a scantily clad showgirl, and Gantry covers up his lust by denouncing the lascivious material, tossing the picture into the furnace. He knows the teachings of the Bible and equates the fire with that of God’s wrath. At this point he is that wolf in sheep’s clothing, the threat of danger beneath a pleasing exterior.
Gantry uses his high-powered sales pitch in an
attempt to get a storekeeper to buy his small appliances. The man is not
convinced, having bought some items before that didn’t sell. Gantry sees
another poster of Sharon and asks if she is a good preacher. The store owner
says he only goes to prayer meetings when times have been hard, which shows how
some are only interested in religion for selfish reasons and not out of true
devotion.
The film continues to display Gantry’s character flaws. There is an almost empty bottle of whiskey that sits in front of him as he tries, without success, to revisit a romantic encounter with a married woman, and loses at gambling on a horse race. His disreputable behavior contrasts with the revivalist music played outside his hotel window. Gantry goes to the tent revival meeting that evening. William L. Morgan (Dean Jagger) hosts the event, which is filled with people singing hymns along with a choir. Sharon enters and Gantry is taken by her beauty and the crowd's adoration of her. She is a salesperson in her own right, except she is promoting religion. She is dressed in a milkmaid’s outfit and enters with a pale of the liquid she supposedly obtained from milking a cow. She relates to the rural people by saying she didn’t want to stay in a church, but instead wanted to see what these people saw every day which is God’s handiwork reflected in nature. She does not want to deliver a solemn sermon, but instead wants them to be joyous in their faith, which works as a selling point. She uses humor to tap into the congregation’s generosity as she passes out several buckets to collect donations, saying people can’t make milk and God doesn’t make money. As she speaks, the skeptical journalist, Jim Lefferts (Arthur Kennedy) casts a cynical eye at her.
Sharon’s smiling surface drops for a moment when
Gantry tries to get a private audience, and Morgan places the bucket in front
of Gantry, who has no money, which implies one has to pay a toll to interact
with the supposedly approachable preacher lady. The next scene adds to that
distance as she says she doesn’t have time for one of the worshippers and delegates
others to carry out ministerial duties. Another attendee demonstrates Sharon’s
strong influence when she says after Sharon’s prayer gathering her son saw the
Virgin Mary on the roof. Gantry pretends to be a preacher, but Sharon is able
to see through his guise when he can’t say which church he belongs to, She
quickly deduces that his problem is either booze or women, and he lies by
saying he indulges in neither. She leaves him standing there and the sarcastic
Lefferts, who also recognizes the ploy, tells him it was a nice try.
So, Gantry looks for someone more accessible,
and he zeroes in on the woman who sang at the beginning of the prayer meeting,
Sister Rachel (Patti Page). He flatters her about her singing and spouts talk
about God’s love and its association with music, appealing to her interest. He
acts like he only wants apple pie when they go to a restaurant, as he presents
a wholesome façade. He lies about being offered an elevated position in the
appliance company to impress her.
Sharon looks exhausted after literally putting on a happy face, and waves to the crowd at the train station. Gantry hops aboard the train, joins Rachel, who is smitten with him since she says she was concerned he wasn’t going to show. He then continues his devious behavior by pretending to be Lefferts, leaving a message with the conductor that he wants to see Morgan. Gantry continues to get at Sharon through those around her as he talks with Lefferts on the train’s observation platform. Lefferts is modeled after journalist H. L. Mencken (Gene Kelly played another version of the evolutionist devotee in Inherit the Wind, also analyzed in this blog). Gantry asks if he can be frank with Lefferts, who is witty and insightful when he responds, “Try,” knowing full well that Gantry is working an angle. He does admit to Gantry that he will have to get past Morgan to reach Sharon.
By getting Morgan to leave Sharon to see
Lefferts, Gantry is able to sit in Morgan’s seat (Lefferts interviews Morgan,
who is a believer in Sharon’s inspirational abilities, as he says she is
touched by God). Gantry, using what he learned from Rachel about a riot between
the evangelists and some “roughnecks” in Missouri, falsely says he was there at
the altercation and he is able to quote her fighting words, which were “Bust
‘em one for the Lord, brother,” back to her. The memory makes her laugh and
Gantry has broken through her defenses. He says he tried to be a cleric but
there was a girl that he became associated with, LuLu Bains (Shirley Jones, who
won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for this role). He says he went to pray
and found LuLu half-naked with a lover behind the altar and he gave up on
becoming a preacher. But, he says his faith was revived when he saw her at the
prayer ceremony (another lie), and he wants to see her socially. She admits she
likes his outrageous nature after being around “sanctimonious” people so much,
and that he is “amusing” and “smells like a real man.” So, he arouses her
physical nature, as opposed to the spiritual one.
At the next tent revival, the police tell Sharon
that the number of people in attendance will violate fire safety laws. She
counters by arguing that the illegal alcohol interests don’t want her preaching
intolerance and support of the current law of Prohibition. Gantry tries to
convince Sharon to let him share how religious beliefs are practical for the
businessman. He begins by fraudulently saying how he loves his job, was offered
a junior partnership, and how many customers know him by his first name. It is
the same spiel he used before. But, he can see that Sharon is too smart to buy
his sales pitch. He is now truthful when he says the work is terrible, “chasing
trains, “staying in “filthy” hotels, telling dirty jokes just to keep customers
“laughing,” and bringing booze to ingratiate himself with others. He comments
on his phony appearance by calling himself “a tramp in a silk shirt.” He then
gets the idea to tell the congregation about his miserable, lonely life and
then being saved when he found in a hotel drawer a copy of a Gideon Bible. This
story of personal redemption, although insincere, fits in well with Sharon’s
religious message.
The next scene nicely follows up on their conversation as Gantry tells the crowd what he pitched to Sharon. He says that after reading from a psalm in the Bible that God was his “fortress,” he was able to be honest with his clients and sell goods with God backing him for finding faith. (All of this is a fiction, but it sells). He is a natural at evangelical preaching as he tells those assembled that businessmen shouldn’t go to church on Sunday and then “cheat on Monday.” He duplicates his “religion is love” lines, which he told Rachel. There is a look on Rachel’s face which reveals that she probably realizes Gantry repeats stock phrases to win others over. He then courts the anti-elitist sentiment felt in the country’s heartland by saying how he is not a well-educated man but knows enough to see that Jesus saved him from the Devil. Morgan rolls his eyes at Gantry’s over-the-top theatrics, most likely feeling that they cheapen the richness of the sacred mission he is part of. Gantry appears surprisingly overwhelmed as a man admits he is a sinner and runs up to him for guidance. Others follow the man to thank Sharon for bringing Gantry to them, as they buy the desire to be blessed that he has sold them.
After the meeting, Gantry talks to a man
cleaning up. The janitor says he repeatedly gets “terrible drunk, and then I
get good and saved,” by various preachers, including Sharon. He suggests
selfish indulgence and finding salvation are both powerful forces. His words
can possibly imply that the pull between being unholy and being righteous
wrenches people back and forth. His character may also suggest that some people
do not have a strong moral center and are easily swayed. (I remember a Cheech
and Chong show I attended when one of the duo said he was once stoned on drugs
and then he was stoned on Jesus, revealing an addictive personality).
Lefferts is on the sidelines, recording what is
happening, almost like the writer of this story gathering material for his
work. Sharon sees Gantry on the stage and wonders to him if he plans to take
over. She is only half-joking, as she most likely is concerned about being upstaged.
She is impressed with how many people they added to their total of converts.
She informs him that Morgan thinks he is “vulgar,” and she agrees but confesses
to liking it. He kisses her in the moment. She seems to enjoy it and quickly
becomes alarmed by the intimacy. He apologizes and says she “hypnotized” him.
She says God chose her to have that power, and when he says he was also called
by God, she puts him in his place by saying that she, not God, chose him. She
is now all business, offering Gantry a position in her organization.
Lefferts talks with Gantry after Sharon leaves
and asks how he acquired his “style.” Gantry seems sincere when he says that
when he is in front of the gathering he just lets it “rip,” and he feels a
powerful connection between himself and the others. He says in the end he feels
as if he loves everybody. The cynical Lefferts says Gantry especially likes the
attention of the women. Gantry laughs heartily, since he knows that is a
weakness of his. Lefferts likens the tent to a circus and Gantry, not putting
up any false front with the journalist, laughs along with him when Lefferts
likens him to possibly becoming the most successful and “funniest clown of them
all.” So, this type of “old time religion” that Gantry praised can also be
thought of as a type of exaggerated entertainment, and the comparison is not
complimentary.
Sharon derides her followers’ expenditure of cash by saying those who play cards and the stock market will not get into heaven, but pledging money to her crusade will. Gantry chews up the religious scenery, bringing a chimp onto the stage to decry the evils of evolution. At one fire and brimstone sermon he stirs up the crowd into a religious frenzy to the point where a man howls like a dog as if expelling Satan.
Morgan tells Sharon all of these shenanigans are
in very poor taste, and he says that Lefferts is just using the ridiculous show
as material for his column which makes the religious movement appear
negatively. He likens the two of them as doing the bad cop-good cop routine,
with Gantry scaring them and then Sharon promising them salvation. Sharon
thinks that combination makes them a good team since people are confessing
their sins and are being saved. The film shows her as wanting to reach worthy ends
but with somewhat unsavory means. Morgan did some background checking, and
discovered that Gantry was dismissed from a theological seminary for seducing
the deacon’s daughter in the church where the father gave a Christmas sermon.
This rendition is not the tall tale Gantry told Sharon about his fiancée
cheating on him. Before he can provide more information, Gantry enters the area
like a performer coming through a theater curtain. He even shouts, “Ta Da!”
which sounds like the music played to accompany a performance. Gantry announces
that they have been invited to the city named Zenith, which Morgan does not
think they should visit. He says that their movement is for common, rural folk,
not big city audiences. He calls Gantry a “crude, vulgar showoff.” Gantry
counters by saying Morgan is “too good for the people. I am the people.” He is
“common” and that is what most of the people are, so he is saying he can
connect with the average citizen. But, the movie explores what happens when
that connection is exploited and people are manipulated by someone who only
appears to be doing good. Sharon says that Christianity started with common
people, and wonders what God wants, as opposed to the desires of individual
people. Morgan decides to go along with the plan to go to Zenith, a name that
means reaching the highest position. Here, the name will carry with it a sense
of irony.
There is a meeting in Zenith that includes
George Babbitt (Edward Andrews), his last name being the title of another Lewis
novel. He is a loud businessman, and the topic of discussion here involves
church finances. As Rev. Philip Garrison (Hugh Marlowe) and Rev. John Pengilly
(John McIntire) grudgingly bemoan the cash shortages, Gantry, now looking slick
in a new suit, brings his salesmanship skills to the business aspect of
religion. He says they need to get more people to attend church, and Sharon’s
(and his) actions have brought pledged converts in increasing numbers, which
means more monetary contributions. Sharon is quiet, at first, suggesting
quarreling over money matters cheapens the crusade to save people’s souls. She
then complains about how monetary concerns drag down the spiritual mission she
is on. She basically says that her independent work goes to pay expenses and
contribute funds to their churches. She is looking for them to help her by
embracing her efforts. Before walking out, she tells the men that they are not
really interested in a religious “revival,” and that means she is not the
person they want.
There is a debate afterwards as to how to spread
their religion. Babbitt likens religion to entertainment, saying bingo and
baseball games raise money, so why not use Sharon’s enterprise to bring in the
crowds? He warns the men of the cloth there that they will lose their positions
if their church boards don’t see increased church attendance. Pengilly says
that there were only Christ’s disciples that started Christianity, so numbers
don’t measure a religion’s success. Garrison argues that having people howl
like dogs and transforming what’s supposed to be devout gatherings into circus
events is not what they should be encouraging. He tells Babbitt that religion
is not a business. But, he further distances himself from Sharon’s, and thus
Gantry’s, tactics, by saying “revivalism is not religion,” implying that
theatrical performance should not be a part of Christianity. After he leaves,
Babbitt implies they have an opportunity to get people excited about religion
with revivalism, since the country is grounded in Christianity. He points out
that all the presidents have been religious men and Congress opens sessions
with quotes from the Bible. The film here suggests there is a lack of
separation between church and state.
Babbitt wins the remaining members over, and
they will not hold church services on Sundays when Sharon’s traveling tent
operation is in Zenith. The implied goal here is to maximize attendance at
revival meetings, and thus add donating converts to the evangelical branch of
Christianity. Sharon looks relieved and revived herself since probably she
hopes raising money to continue her mission will not be so burdensome.
Zenith conducts a welcoming parade with cheering
citizens for Sharon and her organization. The depiction is satirical as the
event looks like a circus event as there are acrobats and clowns. The spectacle
is a mashup of the patriotic and the religious to arouse enthusiasm. There are
marching Boy Scouts, and Gantry walks with Babbitt who is dressed in a military
uniform. After the pageant, Gantry briefs the staff like a general giving
orders to his soldiers, making sure they get written pledge forms in the hands
of attendees. Later there is a large staff answering phones which looks like a
corporate operation. Sharon appears overwhelmed by her star status, with many
reporters firing questions at her as flashing cameras take her picture and
asking about what she is going to wear as opposed to spiritual matters.
Lefferts arrives and alerts her that again she is having an issue with the fire
department about the size of the crowd that will be attending her meeting. It’s
as if this problem is an omen about how people create uncontrollable situations
which will punish them for their overzealous ambitions.
The night of the meeting attracts all sorts of
people, including those that warn of the end of the world, while others hold
signs for and against revivalism (“Even Jesus drank wine” is one that urges
repeal of Prohibition). College students try to drown out the hymn being sung
by chanting the words of the Star-Spangled Banner, which stresses the
church/state separation issue. The scene lends itself to confrontation. Babbitt
wants to arrest the disrupters, but Gantry quiets him down, not wanting to
incite adversity. Morgan tells Gantry that Gantry has succeeded in drawing an
angry mob, and he doesn’t want Sharon to confront the rowdy audience. But,
Gantry sees it as an opportunity, and gives Sharon a pep talk, basically saying
city people are just as emotionally accessible underneath since all people fear
“death.” So, the thrust here is that one can reach people through their fears.
Gantry keeps repeating that Sharon “can” save them, and his voiced support of
her abilities seems to cast a spell that allows him to escort her to the
meeting.
Sharon is quiet as she joins the congregation. She says that many have come to judge her motives, but she says that if she has sinned, then God will judge her. By extension, she also says that she has no right to judge her detractors. She quotes from the Bible that says that Jesus showed generosity toward enemies, winning them over with love. By saying these words, she deflects attacks by people against her and diffuses hostilities. She tells the choir not to sing, and her tranquil urging for prayer transforms what would be a loud revivalist commotion into a quiet contemplative meeting. Her sincerity even gets the atheist Lefferts to bend a knee, although he may be succumbing to peer pressure. After the event, her winning over the crowd just escalates her celebrity as throngs surround her car on the way out and at the hotel where she is staying. Gantry is actually protective of her, telling the reporters and others that Sharon needs quiet and rest. Even Morgan can appreciate his efforts here. Sharon collapses into sleep and Gantry sweetly places a rose next to her and tucks her in for the night.
Lefferts dictates his next newspaper column,
saying that Sister Sharon tamed the crowd with “simple prayer,” but he
questions how that change in approach in the long run will win over more people
than established churches can accomplish. His didactic approach has him asking
what defines revivalism: “Is it a church, is it a religion, or is it a circus
sideshow complete with freaks, magic and rabble-rousing?” He goes on to explore
why a revival attracts so many. He wonders if the appeal is “to see a miracle,
to be saved from a lifetime of sin in five minutes,” or to be embraced in
“salvation” during a time that seeks physical gratification. The implication is
that it contains all of the elements he raises, and offers the possibility of a
spiritual uplifting when people seem mired in transient, everyday pursuits. His
questioning article points out that there are no qualifications to be a
revivalist, and no laws to “protect the public” from those who would exploit
religion for personal gain. He argues that those involved in the revivalist
movement get the legal benefits of running a tax-free enterprise and collect
money “without accounting for how it is used.”
The scene shifts to a brothel, where prostitutes read Lefferts’s column, which cynically asks if there will be a decrease in “lust” and “adultery” if one contributes money to the revivalist cause. One of the women humorously says, “I hope not.” LuLu is there hearing about Gantry’s manipulative abilities which Lefferts says can make the innocent feel like sinners, and vice versa. LuLu’s repetition of the same words Gantry uses repeatedly to win over women about God’s love is ironic given this setting. She recounts how he seduced her physically while contradictorily sounding religious. When she says that he “rammed the fear of God” into her, in a church no less, the irony is compounded by the sexual innuendo mixed with holy references. She laughs about how her “bare soul” (another combining of contrasting words) was thrown out into the cold by her father, the reverend. Did these hypocritical actions by Lancaster and her cruel father alienate her from religion and lead her to her present state?
There is a popular backlash against Sister
Sharon’s movement because of Lefferts’s article. Babbitt confronts Gantry and
says that Lefferts revealed that he bankrolled the revivalist group to enhance
his real estate business. He withdraws his financial support. The local Zenith
churches also receive complaints based on Lefferts’s writings. The power of the
press is demonstrated here, as well as how quickly the public can be swayed.
Gantry visits Babbitt’s real estate office and has evidence that some of his
properties contain an illegal liquor club and a house of prostitution, and
there is an illegal card game going on right at that moment in the back of the
building. So much for Babbitt’s proclaimed religious adherence. Gantry is there
to blackmail the hypocrite to regain his support, so corruption is lurking beneath
the righteous exterior of these men.
Sharon goes to the Zenith newspaper publisher
Eddington (Dayton Lummis), who carried Lefferts’s syndicated column, to
complain about what she considers Lefferts’s unfair writing. Gantry and Babbitt
show up there, too. She tells Lefferts, who is in attendance, that he implied
that she misused funds, and she has only preached the word of God. Since
neither she nor Gantry have any qualifying ordainment credentials, Lefferts
asks her how they have the right to preach to anyone. She feels that she must
have been chosen by God to do His work. He asks her if she had a “burning bush”
moment where God spoke to her, and he is knowledgeable to point out that in the
New Testament, God only spoke to Jesus. He then quotes a misogynist passage
which instructs that women should be silent in religious matters to show how
her own religion can be used to silence her. He is using religious texts to
undermine Sharon’s self-justification to spread her manner of Christianity.
But, Gantry gets Lefferts to admit that he only sees the Bible as great poetry
and wisdom, but not that Jesus, through his divinity, can offer “life
everlasting.” By getting Lefferts to admit his atheism, which refutes the basic
tenets of Christianity, Gantry can persuade Eddington that Lefferts is not a
fair and objective reporter, whose beliefs run counter to most Americans. He
says he will refute Lefferts on the radio, with Babbitt extorted into paying
for the airtime.
On the ride away from the meeting, Sharon is demonstrably
excited by Gantry’s performance in Eddington’s office. She then sends mixed
signals, hugging and kissing Gantry. When he stops the car and responds, she
pushes him away and says God sent him to her to be an “instrument” not a
“lover.” He admits to being baffled by her and says he only wants her, not
other women. She says she knows he had sex with Rachel, who he coldly
constantly ignores after their physical encounter. She calls him out as a liar
when he denies being with Rachel. He says he wants to “tear those holy wings
off” and “make a real woman” of her. He says that he can provide her with a
heaven of physical “ecstasy.” His words are a contrasting mixture of religious
and carnal language, even to the point of suggesting a rape. He says that she
wants to consummate their passion, and that all men and women are driven by
this drive, and she should admit it to herself.
She drives him to a construction site for a
tabernacle, and says that is what she really wants, a place where she can do
her good work without running around, like a “circus” (even she compares what
they have been doing to a sort of carnival act, which is what Lefferts called
it). She says she wants a place for worship for all religions with a soup
kitchen to help ailing bodies. She calls that “home” her “first love,” in
contrast to what Gantry advocates. He admits that her dream is greater than
what he can offer, and he is only a hick from nowhere. She confesses that she
invented her current persona, and she is really from “shanty town.” But God
brought the two of them together so that she can finish her constructing not
only the place of worship, but presumably herself. He calmly agrees that it was
God that joined them, and she then warms to him, now feeling that he is not
trying to undermine her mission. She follows him under the building’s
foundations, and the implication is that they have sex, again the lustful
activity hidden ironically in a religious place. Gantry here plays the Eve role
of tempting the more spiritual partner into indulging in earthly delights.
As Sharon dreamily pours sand out of her shoes the next day, reminding her of the previous night’s physical pleasure, Gantry is on the radio ranting against Lefferts. He gives him the first name of “Lucifer,” attacking the man instead of his arguments. (Lefferts takes the attacks with smiles and laughs because he seems to know that Gantry is just using him to magnify Gantry’s brand). Gantry offers examples of a morally decaying society in need of a religious revival by holding up sexy French postcards, and stating he was propositioned by diseased prostitutes on Zenith’s main street. He offers no objective evidence of what he holds up as factual, and we know from his behavior that he is a fraud who projects his own failings onto others. He also attacks “foreigners” for bringing sinful ways to Americans, using those who are different as people to be targeted, a stance in opposition to Sharon’s speech echoing Jesus’s advocating the use of love as a way of dealing with enemies. In fact, Gantry gives his speech in a boxing ring, conveying his pugilistic stance. He again taps into that dislike of Ivy League elitism by saying they are his opponents, and thus, by extension, the foes of the rural citizens. As he speaks we also have LuLu listening and laughing, because she knows from personal experience Gantry’s hypocrisy.
At an outdoor rally, which is a place he can use
his loud voice to incite and turn a crowd into a frenzied mob, Gantry slams
bottles of whiskey onto the ground to denounce booze (showing more of his
hypocrisy). He implies the police are not cracking down on those that he
declares are committing immoral acts. Gantry, accompanied by law enforcement
officials, raid “speakeasies” (for dramatic purposes, Gantry knocks down doors)
where alcohol is served, and houses of prostitution. At one of these he
discovers Lulu, who laughs at his fakery, and Gantry is momentarily taken
aback. He recovers enough to tell the cops to arrest her, probably so he can
shut her up. He then thinks better of his action, and persuades Captain Holt
(Barry Kelley) to release the hookers, probably deciding not to increase the
likelihood that LuLu might expose him. To protect himself further, he secretly
tells Holt to make sure the prostitutes will leave town quickly so he can cover
his lying tracks.
Gantry’s public crusade gains much attention.
Flowers, communications from political figures, and people from the city arrive
at the revival’s headquarters. Sharon just wants to have a quiet picnic for her
and Gantry. She appears to hope for a romantic relationship, but he is wrapped
up in expanding her organization’s influence. He charms her and says their
personal celebration can wait until after the day’s promotional agenda is over.
His position is in jeopardy when Lulu calls, who has not left town, and thanks
him for getting her released, implying she knows that he did it as a favor to
keep her quiet. After hanging up she says she wants to contact Benny (Peter
Brocco), a photographer, which can only mean she is planning some sort of
exploitation.
She has Benny positioned on the fire escape so he can take pictures of Gantry being seduced. When Gantry shows up she is wearing a sexy negligee. He looks around, and he smartly suspects that the scene is planned for a “shakedown.” She admits that she was angry when he came in the previous evening with the cops to arrest her after he had dumped her long ago. She says she thought of blackmailing him, but when she saw him now, she remembered how much she cared for him. He admits to running out of her. She says her father contacted her and compared her to Jezebel in the Bible. She wonders why people see “hate” in holy scripture. What she says suggests the danger in how some can twist the meaning of words that carry with them divine justification. She refuses some traveling money and asks that he kiss her goodbye. Benny gets a picture of the kiss. But then Lulu shuts out the light and seems to want to abandon the blackmail plan as her desire for him revives. As she sits on the bed, she asks for him to stay a while, and says for him to tell her “lies” that she can “believe.” That comment points to how people believe what they want to believe, regardless of the truth, which they find they can’t accept. But he turns the light back on, showing how he isn’t going to give into his dark, lustful inclinations. She realizes that he will not be intimate with her, and is angry about Sharon winning him over. She then decides to get her revenge by accepting the money he offered, and she sexily stashes it into her garter-securing stockings, revealing a great deal of leg. A definite photo opportunity.
Looking like a rich man with a yacht, not a man
of God who has forsaken worldly temptations, Gantry enters Sharon’s room
wearing a naval outfit. He tells her he will take her on a picnic cruise. Even
though his entrance is full of his usual bluster, when she embraces him, he
reveals genuine feelings for her. As Sharon goes to get dressed, that joy is
short-lived as Morgan arrives with photos of his encounter with Lulu. She wants
$25,000 in cash brought to her by Sharon to where she worked as a prostitute
before it was raided. Lulu most likely wants to stress Gantry’s duplicity and
the damage he can cause to women he seduces.
Despite her humiliation, Sharon agrees to the
meeting, probably because she doesn’t want to publicize Gantry’s scandalous
activity and have her movement associated with it. She arrives per Lulu’s
instructions, and a screeching cat greets her and then pokes around some liquor
bottles to stress the unseemly location. (Is the feline there to make a
reference to the place having been a “cat” house?). There is a contrast between
Sharon’s conservative clothing and Lulu’s sexually enticing outfit, but they
have both been seduced by the same man. Sharon drops the money on the table and
asks for the negatives of the pictures. Lulu just laughs and kicks the money.
She apparently just wanted to delight in a form of revenge by embarrassing the
supposedly upright Sharon for being complicit in a cover-up and becoming
involved with a fake religious zealot.
The compromising pictures show up in the
newspaper. Eddington confronts Lefferts about his turning down Lulu’s offer of
supplying the pictures to him. Lefferts argues that a free press can refuse to
aid a blackmailer by publishing unscrupulous stories. He concluded that the
photos were taken secretly to attack an individual, and he says they only
revealed that Gantry is “human,” subject to temptations as others. He
apparently does not go along with a counterargument that, despite the
motivations of the informant, the press must expose hypocrisy to alert the
public not to be taken in by con artists.
There is now a dwindled crowd attending one of
the tent meetings, and there are hostile members among them. Lulu also shows
up, apparently to gloat. One man pulls out a whip and starts to crack it and
others yell derogatory remarks as they throw eggs and other food at Sharon,
Gantry, Morgan, Rachel and others. Lefferts is there, but he is disgusted by
the ugly response of those in attendance, apparently advocating that two wrongs
don’t make a right. As the man with the whip tears down Sharon’s revivalist
sign, Gantry is plastered with garbage and one woman spits on him. Lulu did not
expect the intensity of the negative response and runs out of the tent,
presumably feeling guilty. The mob trashes the congregation meeting area. When
Sharon and Morgan reach their offices there is the clamor of ringing phones
from people shouting hateful messages. Sharon wonders why God has “forsaken”
her. She apparently is not sensing any divine mercy for her human indulgences
and mistakes.
Lulu returns to her place only to be met by her
pimp who beats her up for not getting money for the story and the photos. He
asks if she did it because she hates Gantry or loves him that much. The answer
is that both are probably true, since Gantry hurt her by abandoning her and
then she wanted retaliation by exposing him and stopping him from being with
Sharon. Gantry arrives and beats Lulu’s attacker and then knocks him out.
Despite her ruining his success with the religious movement and with Sharon,
Gantry acts like a true Christian here as he tends to Lulu and says he is sorry
for everything, which includes how he wrecked her life.
Back at the tent space which is in shambles, and which mirrors the condition of the movement, Lefferts and Gantry share a drink of whiskey, exhibiting no hard feelings toward each other. Gantry probably sees it as one of his many enterprises that just didn't work out. He is even funny how he pretends to demonize drinking booze by saying there ought to be a law against it, since Prohibition just says one can’t sell the intoxicant. Gantry wonders why people became so angry. Lefferts says that people don’t like their Gods to be so human. His observation comments on how “fan” is short for “fanatic,” so hero-worship is a sort of madness to which people capitulate their reason. Gantry admits to truly believing in God and religion, which universally comforts people from all walks of life who are “scared or sick, because they got no money, or have too much money, or before a war, or after a war.” He adds that “praying is the cheapest first-rate medicine I know.” After Gantry praises Sharon, Lefferts says Gantry ought to marry the woman. Gantry feels that it’s too late for that. But, Lefferts shows him a copy of the next edition of the newspaper which has Lulu saying that she framed Gantry, and he is cleared of any moral’s charges. Gantry’s good deed toward Lulu engendered one in return.
The crowd is back, thirsting to worship their hero and heroine again. But, Gantry has been missing for three days (a Cristian number associated with resurrection), and Sharon is convinced he will return for the night’s proceedings at the finished tabernacle. He does show up behind the venue and suggests they leave the movement, go off and get married, have children and lead a private life. She feels her destiny is a public one to help her followers along the spiritual path. But fate works in mysterious ways. One of the men behind the stage tosses a still lit cigarette into a pile of rags and cans, accidentally starting a fire. Sharon says the Holy Ghost is in the building, but so apparently is the destructive nature of existence. A man, who lost his hearing, begs for Sharon to help him. She prays, places her hands over his ears, and he regains his sense of hearing. The crowd shouts praise, and others with various afflictions head up the center aisle seeking a spiritual cure for physical ailments.
At that moment, the place bursts into flames. Sharon shouts that the tabernacle is a place of the Lord and those who believe in him will be saved. It is ironic that the place she built because of her love for God and which was to be a home for the faithful is destroyed. Gantry and others try to save some of those there, but the gathering is a mob now as the people panic. A man smacks Sharon’s Bible out of her hands most likely because he feels cheated by her words, and she is knocked to the ground. Gantry, pulling a woman out of the water near the pier, sees the tabernacle explode into an inferno, killing Sharon.
The next morning, in the rubble again, Lefferts
hands Sharon’s bible to Gantry, which can be seen as a token of remembrance of
their connection. Outside, people ask if Sister Sharon’s departed soul will
forgive them for running out of the burning building. He says there is nothing
to forgive since they did the right thing to escape. He starts to sing a hymn
and Rachel picks up the tune. Morgan probably sees Sharon’s bible as the baton
that Gantry should take to continue the evangelical marathon. But Gantry quotes
St. Paul, saying that as an adult he must put off childish ways. He leaves,
foregoing the selfish ways of a child clamoring for attention, and maybe his
latest actions of charity have changed him from being a selfish man to becoming
a true Christian.
Did Sharon actually cure the deaf man, or was it
a temporary condition that psychosomatically was alleviated through his own
healing abilities? Was the fire the result of demonic forces undermining the
righteous? If so, why would God allow it to happen? Or was it just an ironic
coincidence that the blaze occurred? The film raises all of these questions,
and presents a complex world with many possible answers.
The next film is The
Last Seduction.
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