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On The Waterfront (1954)
On the Waterfront (1954) is a classic, award-winning,
controversial film directed by Elia Kazan - a part drama and
part gangster film. The authentic-looking, powerful film is
concerned with the problems of trade unionism, corruption and
racketeering. And it is set on New York's oppressive waterfront
docks, where dock workers struggled for work, dignity, and to
make ends meet under the control of hard-knuckled, mob-run labor
unions that would force them to submit to daily 'shape-ups' by
cruel hiring bosses.
To add realism, it was filmed over 36 days on-location in
Hoboken, New Jersey (in the cargo holds of ships, workers' slum
dwellings, the bars, the littered alleys, and on the rooftops).
And some of the labor boss' chief bodyguards/goons in the film
(Abe Simon as Barney, Tony Galento as Truck, and Tami Mauriello
as Tullio) were real-life, professional ex-heavyweight boxers.
The low-budget film brought a depressing and critical, but
much-needed message about society's ills to the forefront, and
was hailed by most critics.
The film's morality tale of corruption ends with its ultimate
defeat and the saving of the community by a morally-redeemed
martyr (a common man with a conscience). With a naturalistic
acting style, Marlon Brando portrayed Terry Malloy, an
inarticulate, struggling, brutish hero and small-time, washed-up
ex-boxer who took a regrettable fall in the ring. Now an errand
boy and 'owned' by the union boss, he is unaware of his own
personal power. But eventually because of torment over his
actions and his realization of new choices in life, he joins
forces with a tough-minded, courageous and crusading priest
(Malden) and a loving, angelic blonde woman (Saint), a sister of
one of the victims, to seek reform and challenge the mob.
The similarity between Terry Malloy's whistle-blowing testimony
against his own corrupt group paralleled director Elia Kazan's
self-justifying admissions before the HUAC two years earlier (in
1952) regarding his membership in the Communist party and the
naming of others who were sympathizers. Kazan attempted to
vindicate himself politically with this semi-autobiographical
film - about naming names to expose the evils of corrupt unions.
Its screenplay by screenwriter Budd Schulberg (in collaboration
with Kazan) was taken from Schulberg's own original story - that
was based on New York Sun (now defunct) newspaper reporter
Malcolm Johnson's expose, found in a series of 24 articles
called Crime on the Waterfront. The series chronicled actual
dockside events, labor racketeering, and corrupt practices, and
won the 1949 Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting. It revealed
rampant bribery, extortions, kickbacks to union officials,
payoffs, theft, union-sponsored loan sharks, murder, and the
mob's tyrannical influence on New York's waterfront.
[Schulberg based Karl Malden's character on the tough and
profane-mouthed waterfront Catholic priest Father John M.
Corridan, and Pat Henning's character on a Father John disciple
named Arthur Browne. Terry Malloy was modeled after
whistle-blowing longshoreman Anthony De Vincenzo, and Johnny
Friendly was based on mobster Albert Anastasia, chief
executioner of Murder, Inc.]
The harsh, naturalistic, well-acted and uncompromising film was
hugely successful, critically and financially. Its budget of
slightly less than $1 million brought in almost $10 million at
the box-office. Boris Kaufman's gritty black and white
cinematography was singled out as superior, and the film
received a phenomenal number of Academy Award nominations -
twelve. It won eight Academy Awards including: Best Picture and
Director (Kazan), Best Story and Screenplay (Schulberg), Best
Actor (Brando), Best Supporting Actress (Saint in her film
debut), Best B/W Cinematography (Boris Kaufman), Best B/W Art
Direction-Set Decoration (Richard Day), and Best Film Editing
(Gene Milford). Three of its other four nominations were
supporting acting nods (for a total of four): Best Supporting
Actor (Lee J. Cobb, Karl Malden, and Rod Steiger), and Best
Scoring (Leonard Bernstein).
Following the credits, drumbeats accompany a scene at the New
York waterfront, where a large ocean liner is docked. The angry
gangster union boss, Johnny Friendly (Lee J. Cobb) who callously
rules this section of the waterfront, walks up the gangplank
with his mobster entourage from the office (shack) of the
Longshoreman's local Union. Slow-witted, illiterate waterfront
bum Terry Malloy (Marlon Brando) follows behind, surviving as a
lackey by running odd jobs and errands for Johnny and doing
strong-arm work.
He is asked to lure to the rooftop of his tenement building a
young dockworker Joey Doyle, one of the informant union workers
who is planning to cooperate with crime investigators by
testifying (before the Waterfront Crime Commission) against
gangsters who tyrannically control the docks. Terry shouts to
fellow pigeon-lover Joey in his apartment, in the opening lines
of the film. He unwittingly becomes a pawn in setting a trap to
murder his fellow longshoreman dockworker:
Joey, Joey Doyle!...Hey, I got one of your birds. I recognize
him by the band...He flew into my coop. You want him?
Terry keeps pigeons in coops on his tenement apartment's
rooftop, and soon convinces Joey to meet him on the roof. When
he looks up to the rooftop, he sees the dark figures of two men
standing there. Instead of joining Joey on the roof, he releases
his pigeon into the air, and then walks down the street to a
seedy bar, Johnny Friendly's BAR. In front of the corner saloon
is Charley Malloy "The Gent" (Rod Steiger), Terry's
smartly-dressed older brother and manager. Charley, who works as
Johnny Friendly's crooked lawyer and chief lieutenant, is
flanked by two of Friendly's goons.
In shock, Terry witnesses Joey's murder, as he is hurled from
the rooftop to his death many stories below with a bloodcurdling
scream. One of the thugs coldly states: "I think somebody fell
off the roof. He thought he was gonna sing for the Crime
Commission. He won't." Unknowingly set up, Terry is stunned by
the murder, believing that the racketeers (and his brother)
would only threaten the man:
I thought they was gonna talk to him...I thought they was gonna
talk to him and get him to dummy up...I figured the worst they
was gonna do was lean on him a little bit...Wow! He wasn't a bad
kid, that Joey.
Two of the thugs make a joke about the 'squealer' who has
threatened to 'sing' to the crime commission and break the
waterfront's unspoken code to be 'D and D' (Deaf and Dumb):
A canary.
Maybe he could sing but he couldn't fly!
In the street, a shocked crowd gathers around Joey's body.
Introduced characters are local parish priest Father Barry (Karl
Malden) who delivers the last rites, Joey's father Pop Doyle
(John Hamilton), and Joey's fresh-faced sister Edie (Eva Marie
Saint). One of the neighbors, Mrs. Collins (Anne Hegira) knows
this was no accident: "Same thing happened to my Andy five years
ago...(about Joey) He was the only longshoreman that had the
guts to talk to them crime investigators ... Everybody knows
that." Pop laments that his son didn't follow his advice: "Kept
telling him. Don't say nothin'. Keep quiet. You'll live longer."
Angered by the senseless murder of the brother she was close to,
Edie screams: "I want to know who killed my brother!"
In the rough waterfront bar where some of the patrons watch a
prizefight on a TV above the bar, Big Mac (James Westerfield)
the waterfront hiring boss, brings beer-drinking Johnny Friendly
a thick wad of bills, revealing union racketeering, corruption,
strong-arm tactics and payoffs: "Here's the cut on the shape-up.
Eight hundred and ninety-one men at three bucks a head, that's,
uh, - twenty-six seventy-three...We got a banana boat at 46
tomorrow. If we could pull a walk-out, it might mean a few bucks
from the shippers. Them bananas go bad in a hurry." Friendly
responds sharply: "Ask two G's." A whole network of runners for
Friendly's mob are in the bar including a weasel-like banker
nicknamed "J.P." Morgan (Barry Macollum) and another conniving
mobster named Skins (Fred Gwynne).
As a man in his 30s who is exploited like a pawn by others,
ex-prizefighter and has-been Terry knows that he owes his
waterfront career and livelihood to Johnny Friendly, head of the
racketeers, and to his brother Charley, although he was forced
to take a 'fall' in a boxing fight. But he also realizes that he
is dull-witted and inarticulate, and not even capable of
accurately counting a wad of bills. Big Mac good-naturedly
comments on Terry's lack of education:
The only arithmetic he ever got was hearing the referee count up
to ten.
But Terry is hot-tempered, and reacts harshly to the criticism.
Charley excuses his brother's a-typical behavior: "It's just the
Joey Doyle thing. You know how he is. He exaggerates the thing.
Just too much Marquis of Queensbury. It softens 'em up."
Johnny raises his voice and explains how he became head of the
local union and continues to maintain a lucrative (but illegal)
operation. He also calmly rationalizes to Terry about the death
of Joey Doyle - a waterfront dockworker who might have
threatened the entire business:
When I was sixteen, I had to beg for work in the hold. I didn't
work my way up out of there for nuthin'...You know, takin' over
this local took a little doin'. There's some pretty rough fellas
in the way. They gave me this (he displays an ugly scar on his
neck) to remember them by...I got two thousand dues-payin'
members in this local - that's $72,000 a year legitimate and
when each one of 'em puts in a couple of bucks a day just to
make sure they work steady - well, you figure it out. And that's
just for openers. We got the fattest piers in the fattest harbor
in the world. Everything moves in and out - we take our
cut...You don't suppose I can afford to be boxed out of a deal
like this, do ya? A deal I sweated and bled for, on account of
one lousy little cheese-eater, that Doyle bum, who thinks he can
go squealin' to the Crime Commission? Do ya? (pause) Well, DO
YA?
Terry is given "a present from your Uncle Johnny," a
fifty-dollar bill, and then promised a prime work area at the
docks at the next morning's shape-up: "Put Terry up in the loft.
Number one. Every day. It's nice, easy work, you see. You check
in and you goof off on the coffee bags. OK?" Charley reinforces
Johnny's kind gesture to his brother with a warning: "Hey, you
got a real friend here. Now don't forget it."
Up on his rooftop at daybreak the next day, Terry tells a
fourteen-year old neighborhood boy named Tommy (Thomas Handley)
that he thinks his pigeons have the life:
Boy, they sure got it made, huh? Eatin'. Sleepin'. Flyin' around
like crazy. Raisin' gobs of squabs.
The faint sound of ship's whistle brings Terry back to reality
and he hurries to the docks, where hundreds of men mill around
on the pier. [The film effectively uses authentic sounds from
its environment: foghorns, ship's whistles, etc. to heighten the
realism.] Some of the longshoremen are muttering about the
unfortunate Doyle death, because he "couldn't learn to keep his
mouth shut." Two of Friendly's goons threaten Timothy J. "Kayo"
Dugan (Pat Henning): "Why don't you keep that big mouth of yours
shut?...What are you, a wise guy?" Dugan replies: "If I was
wise, I wouldn't be no longshoreman for thirty years. I'm poorer
now than when I started." Pop Doyle passes the mantle of Joey's
jacket to Kayo.
While waiting for the morning's work, Terry is approached by
Glover (Leif Erickson) and Gillette (Marty Balsam),
representatives from the Waterfront Crime Commission. The
commission is "getting ready to hold public hearings on
waterfront crime and underworld infiltration of longshore
unions." When questioned by them about what he knows, being the
last one to see Joey alive, Terry pleads ignorance:
I don't know nothin', I ain't seen nothin', I'm not sayin'
nothin'.
At the 8 am whistle announcing the shape-up at the pier entrance
(for 5 gangs and 100 banana carriers), Big Mac calls forward men
to work for the day. Terry Malloy is favored and one of the
first to be called. From the side, Edie and Father Barry watch,
as he tells her: "This is my parish. I don't know how much I can
do, but I'll never find out unless I come down here and take a
good look for myself." When Big Mac is surrounded by the men, he
throws the work tabs over their heads, causing a mad,
animalistic, free-for-all scramble.
Terry meets the sister of the murdered union worker when he
grabs a tab that Edie's father had seen first. When she wrestles
with him for the tab, he first teases her, withholding the tab
from her. But when he learns she's "Joey Doyle's sister," he
gives her the working tab. She gives it to her humiliated father
so he can work. Father Barry asks the rejected men who have been
denied work: "What do you do now?...Is this all you do, just
take it like this?...Huh? What about your union?" He is told
that the lawless local union is mob-controlled by Johnny
Friendly: "The waterfront's tougher, Father, like it ain't part
of America." Father Barry offers the men "the bottom of the
church" as a safe haven so that they can discuss their
grievances - it can be one place where it's safe to talk.
At work, Charley finds Terry lying comfortably on a pile of
coffee bags while reading a photo magazine filled with
bikini-clad women. He sends Terry on an "extra detail" to sit in
on tough, insistent Father Barry's meetings (with the "Doyle
girl") that he is organizing in his parish to expose union
racketeering. Terry is to keep "a run-down" on the "names and
numbers of all the players." Terry argues that he doesn't want
to stool, but Charley straightens him out:
Let me tell you what stooling is. Stooling is when you rat on
your friends, the guys you're with. Johnny wants a favor. Don't
think about it. Do it.
In the church meeting with only a handful of longshoremen in
attendance, Father Barry speaks out against the controlling
power of the mob and stands up for moral principles against the
corrupt bosses. He preaches about the reality of the situation:
Isn't it simple as one, two, three? One. The working conditions
are bad. Two. They're bad because the mob does the hiring. And
three. The only way we can break the mob is to stop letting them
get away with murder.
He attempts to determine who killed Joey Doyle, asking: "Who
killed Joey Doyle?" The reaction to the Father's question is
total silence - the men either look down, blankly stare away, or
look embarrassed. Then the priest asks a second, more pointed
question: "How can we call ourselves Christians and protect
these murderers with our silence?" Terry sits at the back of the
parish during the meeting, viewed suspiciously: "The brother of
Charley the Gent. They'll help us get to the bottom of the
river." Father Barry cuts through the talk and returns to the
crucial question:
Now listen. You know who the pistols are. Are you going to keep
still until they cut you down one by one? Are ya?
The priest is told by Kayo Dugan that there is a code of
silence, called "D 'n D" on the docks: "Deaf and dumb. No matter
how much we hate the torpedoes, we don't rat." Father Barry
persuasively argues that they must break the code of silence and
testify, but he feels defeated when the men don't respond to his
words:
There's one thing we've got in this country and that's ways of
fightin' back. Gettin' the facts to the public. Testifyin' for
what you know is right against what you know is wrong. Now
what's ratting to them is telling the truth for you. Now can't
you see that? Can't you see that?
The meeting is suddenly broken up when rocks shatter the church
windows. As Father Barry pairs off the men, Terry suddenly grabs
Edie and leads her to safety down a fire escape. Thugs who wield
long clubs and baseball bats mercilessly ambush and beat the
men.
Walking Edie home through a park, Edie asks Terry about where
his affiliation lies:
Edie: Which side are you with?
Terry: Me? I'm with me, Terry.
After he identifies his self-interest, Terry is confronted for a
handout by an old rummy, one-armed derelict longshoreman named
Mott Murphy (John Heldabrand). The man recognizes Edie and
Terry, and accuses him of being there the night Joey was killed.
Although bought off by the toss of some coins by Terry, Murphy
spitefully calls him a "bum." Terry tells Edie to pay no
attention to the "juice-head" who hangs around the neighborhood.
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