Genre:
Drama / Author’s Favorites
Directed
by: Elia Kazan
Starring:
Marlon Brando, Karl Malden, Eva Marie Saint
Running
time: 108 minutes
Terry Malloy is a former boxer who had lots
of potential, but he took a dive against an opponent he could have beaten after
mob-connected union boss Johnny Friendly asked him to do so, so he could bet
against him and cash in. Years later, Terry works on the dock and does various
jobs for Friendly, who has Malloy’s brother Charley for right-hand man. When
one of those jobs gets a man killed, Malloy starts to have doubts that will
amplify greatly once he falls for the victim’s sister.
Marlon Brando was in top form here. Young,
thin, good-looking and motivated, the man bursts out of the screen as Terry Malloy.
His character’s “I could have been a contender” speech directed at brother
Charley is among the best set of lines in cinema history. Such intensity and
believability; it is a great thing to witness.
Eva Marie Saint, who made her big screen
debut in On The Waterfront, is very good as Edie, a young woman determined to
find out what happened to her brother. The rest of the cast members, from top
to bottom, held their own also; not a bad note acting-wise.
This 1954 black-and-white drama has been
deemed culturally, historically or aesthetically significant by the Library of
Congress, and deservedly so. This needs to be seen, more than once even. I
highly recommend it.
Rating: «««««
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