somebody
by Douglas Messerli
Budd Schulberg (screenplay, based,
in part, by articles by Malcolm Johnson), Elia Kazan (director) On the Waterfront / 1954
The film, based on newspapers stories written by Malcolm Johnson in the New York Sun, begins with a somewhat
dim-witted but gentle tough, Terry Malloy (Marlon Brando), playing lackey to
the gangster union boss Johnny Friendly (Lee J. Cobb) who orders him to lure a
young dockworker, Joey Doyle, to his apartment rooftop. Doyle has evidently
informed on union workers to a new Crime Commission committee, and Johnny wants
him killed. The unsuspecting Molloy (who presumes Friendly's henchmen will only
rough him up) does what he's told, inviting Doyle, himself a bird lover, to
inspect his rooftop pigeons. In shock, Terry witnesses Doyle's murder as he is
hurled to the street below.
From that moment on, Elia Kazan's film takes its subject by the teeth
and refuses to let go. No matter what one thinks about Kazan—most of my older
Hollywood friends have refused to speak to or even of him since 1952 when he served as a friendly witness before the
House on un-American Activities—there is no question that On the Waterfront is a powerful and mesmerizing film, with
brilliant performances by Brando, Karl Malden, Rod Steiger, and Eva Marie Saint
and an original score by Leonard Bernstein. The film won eight Academy Awards,
including the Oscars for Best Picture and Best Director, and is listed on the
American Film Institute's list of most memorable movies.
It is useful to realize, however, that no matter how factual Schulberg
and Kazan's film was (and there is every reason to believe that they correctly
portrayed the brutality of the New York shipping docks) Kazan's intention was
to create a kind of allegory for his own position before McCarthy and others.
The original screenplay, "The Hook," was by Arthur Miller (who
refused to name names before the HUAC committee), but he was replaced by
Schulberg (who, like Kazan, testified as a friendly witness before the
committee). Pressure from the HUAC committee wanted the mob villains to also be
Communists, but fortunately Schulberg did not defer to their wishes.
Nonetheless, Kazan's film, with its emphasis on those who refuse to speak up
against the mob, his obvious disdain for those who remain "Deaf and Dumb
(D & D)," was clearly a statement against the criticism he had
received for speaking out at HUAC. *
Most of On the Waterfront,
accordingly is devoted to the long struggle by Father Barry (Karl Malden) and
Joey Doyle's sister, Edie (Eva Marie Saint), with whom Terry gradually falls in
love, to convince Terry to come clean and report what he has seen to the Crime
Commission. When the mob begins to suspect that Terry might squeal, they order
him killed, unless Terry's older brother Charley—deeply involved in the Union
mob—can convince him to remain silent. Through conversations with Edie and
Father Barry, Terry gradually begins to understand the difference between
survival and hope, as he develops a new set of moral values which reach back
into his own past.
In what is one of the most heart-wrenching scenes in the film, Charley
literally takes his brother "on a ride," trying to force Terry to
understand the danger of his potential acts. As they discuss Terry's past
career as a boxer, Terry admits that is has very little offer in his current
life. But whereas Charley blames his brother's manager ("That skunk we got
you for a manager, he brought you along too fast"), Terry suddenly blurts
out the truth:
It wasn't him, Charley! It
was you. You remember that night in the Garden,
you came down to my
dressing room and said: 'Kid, this ain't your
night. We're going for the
price on Wilson.' You remember that? 'This
ain't your night!' My
night! I coulda taken Wilson apart! So what happens?
He gets the title shot
outdoors in the ball park—and whadda I get? A
one-way ticket to
Palookaville.
Their final interchange represents
Terry's transformation from dim-witted lackey to a man of growing wisdom and
moral integrity:
Terry: You was my brother,
Charley. You shoulda looked out of me
a little bit. You
shoulda taken care of me—just a little—so I wouldn't
have to take them dives
for the short-end money.
Charley: I had some bets
down for you. You saw some money.
Terry (yelling and
heartbroken): You don't understand! I coulda had
class. I coulda been a
contender. I coulda been somebody, instead
of a bum, which is what
I am. Let's face it [pause]....It was you, Charley.
With such an intense scene between
brothers, Kazan needs to say little about the union Charley represents. The
relationship between the workers and the union is played out in On the Waterfront in terms of sibling betrayal,
saving the director from having to focus on the deeper issues concerning the
relationship between the two forces.
*It's interesting that Miller went on to write
two works that told a different story of behavior regarding public testimony: A View from the Bridge, about the family
loyalty of Italian immigrants, and The
Crucible, about the Salem witchcraft trials and the related testimony of
young girls and others against the so-called witches.
Los Angeles, October 14-17, 2009
Reprinted from World Cinema Review (October 2009), originally printed with reviews
of On the Waterfront and Norma Rae as
“It Comes with the Job.”
Reprinted from Reading Films: My International Cinema (Los Angeles: Green Integer,
2012).
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