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Ten Films featuring Libraries, Librarians and the Book Arts
Compiled by Steven J. Schmidt
IUPUI University Library

Storm Center (Columbia, 1956) Not Rated
Director:
Daniel Taradash.
Screenplay: Elick Moll, Daniel Taradash.
Cast: Bette Davis, Kevin Coughlin, Kim Hunter,
Brian Keith, Paul Kelly, Katheryn Grant.
Storyline:
A powerful tale about Alicia Hull (Davis), a fiery small town librarian
who lives for the change her work gives her to introduce children
to the world of books. In return for the funding to build her long
desired children’s wing, the city council asks her to withdraw
the title "The Communist Dream" from the library at the
height of the “red scare.” When she defies their request,
members of the council question some of her past activities and
she is fired and branded as a subversive. Judge Ellerbe (Kelly)
thinks she has been treated unfairly and calls a town meeting. Paul
Duncan (Keith), an ambitious young politician and boyfriend to assistant
librarian Martha Lockeridge (Hunter), sees this meeting as an opportunity
to make a name for himself where he denounces Hull as a communist.
His fiery rhetoric turns the whole town against Hull, except for
Freddie (Coughlin), a young boy who had been her special pet. Freddie
becomes more and more upset as the town turns against Mrs. Hull,
until he sets fire to the library. While the library burns, the
townspeople have a sudden change of heart and ask her to come back
to work and supervise the building of a brand new library.
Library
focus: Storm Center is the quintessential
anti-censorship film, offering a very strong, positive image of
the librarians played by both Davis and Kim Hunter. Even though
the storyline is dated and the town’s emotional reversal is
somewhat unbelievable, Davis is convincing as the principled librarian,
especially as she ponders the question “How do you get rid
of a book?”
*Still
image taken from off the air broadcast of Storm Center.
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