| Brotherhood of Man | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Robert Cannon |
| Story by | John Hubley Phil Eastman Ring Lardner, Jr. Maurice Rapf |
| Based on | The Races of Mankind by Ruth Benedict and Gene Weltfis [1] |
| Produced by | John Hubley Stephen Bosustow (executive) |
| Music by | Paul Smith |
| Animation by | Robert Cannon Ken Harris Ben Washam |
| Layouts by | John Hubley Paul Julian |
| Color process | Color |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | United Auto Workers |
Release date |
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Running time | 11 minutes |
| Language | English |
Brotherhood of Man is a 1945 industrial film; a 11-minute animated short produced by United Productions of America (UPA). [2] The short, considered by some as UPA's breakthrough production, is based upon The Races of Mankind, an anti-discrimination pamphlet written by Ruth Benedict and Gene Weltfis and printed and distributed by the Public Affairs Committee. [1]
Brotherhood of Man attempts to debunk and delegitimize racial prejudices based upon skin color and country of origin. [3] It was commissioned by United Auto Workers, an American labor union, in hopes of helping to solve race-relation problems among its automobile factory employee members, particularly in the southern United States and in Detroit, Michigan. [1] [4]
The short was directed by Robert Cannon and produced by John Hubley, who collaborated on the screenplay with UPA's Phil Eastman and live-action Hollywood writers Maurice Rapf and Ring Lardner, Jr. [3] In addition to its pro-integration messaging, Brotherhood of Man was unusual for an animated film of the 1940s in its uses of stark geometrical shapes, flat colors, and stylized movement, [3] elements that would become commonplace in the industry as UPA moved into entertainment films such as Gerald Mc Boing-Boing and the Mister Magoo series. [3]
The film was attacked by anti-communist factions after being screened at the Museum of Modern Art in 1947. This was in part due to the participation of "known leftists" Lardner and Rapf. [1] In addition, the source Races of Mankind pamphlet was decried as "leftist propaganda" as the Second Red Scare began to take hold in the United States; the pamphlet was banned by the United States Army. [5] The Brotherhood of Man film itself was named in a 1948 California State Senate report on potential communist activities in the state. [5] [6]
Lardner, Rapf, Hubley, and Eastman would all end up blacklisted due to testimonies given to or evidence from the House Un-American Activities Committee a few years after this production. [7] Lardner became one of the infamous Hollywood Ten, and Hubley was forced out of UPA, which he was a ten-percent co-owner of, in 1952. [7]
Brotherhood of Man has been preserved by the Library of Congress through the National Film Preservation Foundation. [1]