Adam's Rib

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Adam's Rib
Directed by George Cukor
Produced by Lawrence Weingarten
Written by Ruth Gordon
Garson Kanin
Starring Spencer Tracy
Katharine Hepburn
Music by Miklós Rózsa
Cinematography George J. Folsey
Editing by George Boemler
Distributed by MGM
Release date(s) November 18, 1949
Running time 101 min.
Language English
IMDb profile

Adam's Rib is a 1949 film starring Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy and directed by George Cukor. The film was well received upon its release and is considered a classic romantic comedy. Judy Holliday, who went on to fame in 1950's Born Yesterday, received her first substantial role in this film. The music was composed by Miklós Rózsa, except for the song "Farewell, Amanda" written by Cole Porter.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Prosecutor Adam Bonner (Tracy) is assigned the case against a woman (Holliday) who tried to scare her adulterous husband (Tom Ewell) by shooting him repeatedly. Bonner's wife, Amanda (Hepburn), also a lawyer, decides to defend the woman in court. As the two use every technique they know to win the case, the courtroom tension carries over into the couple's household.

The defendant, Doris Attinger, when narrating to Amanda Bonner her version of the events on the day she shot her husband, describes recognizable symptoms of a dissociative episode. These include a divorcement from the reality of her actions and even psychogenic amnesia concerning her actual wounding of her husband. Given that, one might have expected Amanda to ask the jury for a verdict of not-guilty-by-reason-of-insanity, because the defendant had been seized by an irresistible impulse.

But instead, Amanda asks for a simple verdict of not guilty, because all the defendant did was to "try to defend her home," and a man acting similarly might be acquitted. In short, she asks for jury nullification--and wins it.

Spoilers end here.

Ruth Gordon (later of Rosemary's Baby fame) and Garson Kanin were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Screenplay in 1950. In the decades since the film's release, it has attracted the esteem of many critics. It was selected for preservation in the United States by the National Film Registry in 1992.

"Is that what they taught you at, ah, Yale Law School?"
"Tell me something. What is marriage? I'll tell you what it is: Marriage is a contract. It's the law."
"What blow you think you were striking for women's rights, I am sure I don't know, but you've certainly fouled us up beyond all recognition."
"Lawyers should never marry other lawyers. This is called inbreeding, from which comes idiot children and more lawyers."

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