On the Waterfront

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On the Waterfront
Directed by Elia Kazan
Produced by Sam Spiegel
Written by Budd Schulberg
Starring Marlon Brando,
Karl Malden,
Lee J. Cobb,
Eva Marie Saint,
Rod Steiger
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) July 28, 1954 (USA)
Running time 108 min
Language English
Budget $910,000 USD (estimated)
IMDb profile

On the Waterfront is an American 1954 film about mob violence and corruption among longshoremen, and it has become a standard of its kind. The film was directed by Elia Kazan and stars Marlon Brando, Eva Marie Saint, Rod Steiger, Karl Malden and Lee J. Cobb. The film deals with social issues which paralleled the emerging organization of labour. It was based on a series of articles in the New York Sun by Malcolm Johnson.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Terry Malloy (Marlon Brando) is a washed-up ex-prizefighter in his mid-twenties working on the docks for the local gang boss, Johnny Friendly (Lee J. Cobb). He feels depressed over his rag-to-riches rise to the top and eventual fall from the ring. The death of an old childhood friend, ordered by Johnny Friendly, fills him with terrible guilt, because he was unwittingly involved in the murder.

Terry meets the murdered man's sister (Eva Marie Saint), and they begin a relationship. She and a local priest (Karl Malden) try to convince him to work against the mob. But Terry only turns against the mob after Johnny Friendly orders the death of his brother (Rod Steiger), a mobster himself, who had refused to kill Terry after his treachery is discovered.

Terry testifies publicly and becomes a pariah on the docks but, in the end, triumphs over Johnny Friendly after a dramatic fight with him on the docks that reunifies the workers. Terry then heads back to work with all the workers and makes Johnny Friendly look like a fool in the eyes of them all.

Spoilers end here.

On the Waterfront was based on a 24-part series of articles in the New York Sun by Malcolm Johnson, "Crime on the Waterfront." The series won the 1949 Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting. The stories detailed widespread corruption, extortion and racketeering on the waterfront of Manhattan and Brooklyn.

Brando as Terry Malloy
Brando as Terry Malloy

In On the Waterfront, protagonist Terry Malloy's (Brando's) fight against corruption was in part modeled after whistle-blowing longshoreman Anthony DiVincenzo, who testified before a real-life Waterfront Commission on the facts of life on the Hoboken docks and had suffered a degree of ostracization for his deed. DiVincenzo sued and settled, many years after, with Columbia Pictures over the appropriation of what he considered his story. DiVincenzo recounted his story to Schulberg during a month-long session of waterfront barroom meetings—which some claim never occurred—even though Shulberg attended Di Vincenzo's waterfront commission testimony every day during the hearing. Johnny Friendly was based on mobster Albert Anastasia, chief executioner of Murder, Inc.

  • see discussion for reference.

Karl Malden's character of Father Barry was based on the real-life "waterfront priest" Father John M. Corridan, a graduate of Regis High School who operated a Roman Catholic labor school on the west side of Manhattan. Father Corridan was extensively interviewed by screenwriter Budd Schulberg, who wrote the foreword to a biography of Father Corridan, "Waterfront Priest" by Allen Raymond. The story was filmed in Hoboken, New Jersey, although it is a fictionalized version of events on the New York waterfront.

In 1952, director Elia Kazan was a "friendly" witness before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), in which he identified many alleged Communists in the film industry. That brought him severe criticism.

The original film's screenwriter was playwright Arthur Miller, who was blacklisted as an alleged Communist. He was replaced by Budd Schulberg, also a "friendly" witness before HUAC. [1]

On the Waterfront, being about a heroic mob informer, is widely considered to be Kazan's answer to his critics, showing that there could be nobility in a man who "named names". In the movie, variations of that phrase are repeatedly used by Terry Malloy. The film also repeatedly emphasizes the waterfront's code of "D and D" or "Deaf and Dumb," remaining silent at all costs and not "ratting out" one's friends. In the end, Malloy does just that and his doing so is depicted sympathetically.

  • The finale of Raging Bull by Martin Scorsese is a homage to On the Waterfront.
  • The film has been adapted into Hindi as Ghulam.
  • In the early draft of the script, Terry Malloy was written as a man in his early to mid forties. Kazan changed him into a younger man of 23-24, so as to emphasis his rise and fall and how fast one man can become famous and lose it all soon afterwards.
  • Billy Joel makes a reference to the film in his song "Great Wall of China"
  • The cab scene between Terry and Charlie is one of the most famous in American cinema in which Brando speaks these famous lines, "I could have had class. I could have been a contender. I could have been somebody (instead of a bum)." Also, the scene was not shot in a real cab and because they did not have rear screen projection, they placed a Venetian blind in the rear window of the cab to hide this fact.

The film later was deemed "culturally significant" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. It is ranked 8th Greatest American film of all time by the American Film Institute and is constantly placed in top 100 of Internet Movie Database's Top 250. Terry Malloy's line in the film,

You don't understand! I coulda had class. I coulda been a contender. I could've been somebody, instead of a bum, which is what I am.

was voted in a 2005 poll, AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movie Quotes, by the American Film Institute as the third most memorable line in cinema history [2].

It was the winner of eight Oscars:

The film also received an additional four Oscar nominations:

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:



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