Stanley Kramer Movies

For two decades, from the end of the 1940s until the end of the 1960s, Stanley Kramer was one of the best-known independent producers in Hollywood. He made his early reputation through a series of small-scale, serious, and unusual films that challenged audience's dramatic expectations, and later became known as a bold producer/director of large-scale "message" films that reflected an enlightened liberal point of view.
Stanley Earl Kramer was born in New York City, in the working-class Manhattan neighborhood known as Hell's Kitchen, in 1913. His parents were divorced and he was raised by his maternal grandmother. He had two family connections with the movie business growing up: his mother, who worked as a secretary at Paramount Pictures, and an uncle, Earl Kramer, who was employed in distribution at Universal and later became an agent in Hollywood. Stanley Kramer intended to go to law school, but an article that he wrote in his senior year at New York University got him the offer of a paid internship in the story department at 20th Century Fox. Kramer went to Hollywood and spent the next decade learning the movie business from the ground up, dressing sets and later cutting film at MGM, and then working in the story department at Columbia Pictures. By 1941, he was serving as a production assistant for producer/director Albert Lewin on the movies So Ends Our Night and The Moon and the Sixpence. He was drafted in 1943 and spent the next two years working with an army film unit in New York, where he first met Carl Foreman, a screenwriter who also had ambitions beyond working in the story department of some studio. In 1948, Kramer organized Screen Plays Inc., an independent production company, in partnership with writer/producer Carl Foreman, writer Herbie Baker, and publicist George Glass.
The company raised its money from private investors rather than banks, and made its debut with a total flop, a comedy called So This Is New York (1948), directed by Richard Fleischer. It was with his second movie, Champion, directed by Mark Robson with a lot of guidance and assistance from Kramer (who also directed the fight scenes and one key montage scene), that the producer put himself on the map. The movie, about an ambitious but self-destructive prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas, was a huge hit and also received six Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture and Best Actor. Champion transformed Kirk Douglas into a star, and suddenly Kramer seemed to the movie industry like a producer worth watching. His next movie Home of The Brave (1949), a drama dealing with racial prejudice during WWII, was so daring in its time that it had to be made in secret, but once it was released, it established Kramer as one of the more daring independent producers of the late '40s, and won accolades from the critics as well as finding success at the box office. Kramer followed this in 1950 with The Men (1950), an equally provocative story about disabled veterans, which also marked the screen debut of Marlon Brando. Its only misfortune was to open on the same day that America entered the Korean War, which made its subject matter impossible to sell to a nervous and uncertain public.
In 1951, Kramer was approached by Harry Cohn, the president of Columbia Pictures, with an offer to make movies for his studio. Kramer would have a free choice of what movies he made and they would finance those pictures, so long as none of them cost more than 980,000 dollars -- he could exceed that budget only with Cohn's approval. Kramer accepted and began work at the studio late that year while he was finishing one last independent production, the Western drama High Noon, directed by Fred Zinnemann and starring Gary Cooper. Released in 1952 by United Artists, High Noon became one of the most popular and heavily studied and analyzed Westerns ever made, its box-office numbers were matched by a pile of Academy Awards (including Best Actor for Cooper) and nominations. The movie also marked the end of Kramer's partnership with Carl Foreman -- the writer was under pressure to testify about his past involvement with the Communist Party, and Kramer parted company with him in October of 1951.
Even as High Noon was earning millions of dollars, Kramer's films at Columbia were all failing to break even. It wasn't that they weren't good movies or didn't engender attention from the critics -- they simply didn't match the public's taste. A few, such as Death of a Salesman, were very bleak in their subject matter (and the latter was picketed by right wing pressure groups for supposedly being an attack on free enterprise, and therefore communistic in is message), while others, such as The Sniper, The Juggler (which was the first feature film shot in Israel), Member of the Wedding, The Wild One, and The 5000 Fingers of Dr. T, were too offbeat and challenging for mass audiences to absorb. For all of their losses in Columbia's books, however, time has been kind to most of the movies that Kramer made there, which were among the best and most enduringly interesting movies that the studio generated in the early '50s. The Wild One was an astonishingly early look at some of the forces of social unrest and middle-class hypocrisy that would rise up full force a decade later (when the movie finally found its audience) to rip American society apart; The 5000 Fingers of Dr. T was a Technicolor fantasy about childhood and its frustrations, that might be one of the most charming musicals ever made in Hollywood. And Member of the Wedding is regarded today as a dramatic tour de force by Julie Harris and a directorial triumph by Fred Zinnemann. To Harry Cohn, however -- who disapproved of most of these projects but had no power to stop Kramer from making them so long as he remained within budget -- Kramer's movies all represented an ocean of red ink on the ledger books. By 1953, Cohn and Kramer alike were eager to call an early end to the five-year contract.
For his final Columbia film, Kramer chose to adapt Herman Wouk's best-selling novel The Caine Mutiny, which dealt with life aboard a navy ship during WWII. The Navy Department had already rejected overtures by MGM and 20th Century Fox for cooperation in filming the novel, which the navy uniformly hated for what it considered an unfair and ridiculous portrayal of itself. It took some simultaneously bold and delicate negotiations by Kramer to secure the Navy's promise of assistance, which he achieved by promising, in turn, to make the story as fair to the United States Navy as he could. Once he had the Navy Department's promise of cooperation in hand, Kramer secured the services of an all-star cast of leading men: Humphrey Bogart, Van Johnson, Fred MacMurray, and Jose Ferrer. With them aboard, Kramer was able to go to Cohn in a position of strength, and the studio head was impressed. Cohn had his own agenda concerning the movie, however -- he was determined to use The Caine Mutiny to get back everything that Columbia had invested in Kramer's first ten movies. Future producer Walter Shenson, who was the film's publicist and one of Cohn's trusted employees, recalled 40 years later that Cohn personally saw to it that Kramer's budget was pared down to the bone, no more than two and a half million dollars, and a maximum running time of two hours, which Kramer negotiated upward very slightly; even at 125 minutes, nothing in the book that wasn't absolutely essential to the plot could be included in the movie. The resulting film, directed by Edward Dmytryk, was a hit, both critically and commercially, earning 11 million dollars in profits, wiping clear all of Kramer's losses in the studio books.
With the end of his Columbia contract, Kramer went back into independent production and decided to try the director's chair for size as well. He began with the serious, albeit soap opera-ish medical drama Not As a Stranger (1955), starring Robert Mitchum, Olivia de Havilland, and Frank Sinatra, which proved a box-office bonanza and reinforced his box-office credentials; its 135-minute running time was also a foretaste of the dimensions of future Kramer productions. He followed this up with the commercially satisfying, high-profile war drama The Pride and the Passion, starring Cary Grant, Frank Sinatra, and Sophia Loren. By 1957, Kramer once again felt comfortable spreading his wings into controversial areas of filmmaking. In the wake of the Red Scare and the resulting blacklisting of hundreds of movie industry employees, producers since the end of the 1940s had tended to shy away from material that was overly controversial or challenging to audience's assumptions. Despite his outspokenly liberal convictions, Kramer had never been touched by the blacklist or the Red Scare; his films had been picketed on occasion during the early '50s, but none of the accusations of his being a subversive had stuck; Kramer had never been of interest to the investigators in Washington, principally because he had never been a member of the Communist Party and had distanced himself from others who were, such as Foreman -- that fact made him suspect in leftist circles, but it allowed him to keep making movies.
When he re-emerged as a voice of cinematic liberalism in 1958, he had the field nearly to himself. Kramer's political sensibilities first manifested themselves anew with The Defiant Ones (1958), which starred Sidney Poitier and Tony Curtis in a tale of two convicts, one white and one black, forced to rely on each other for survival when they escape from a brutal southern chain gang. Its release and subsequent success heralded the most fruitful and acclaimed period of Kramer's career, as a producer (and usually director as well) of bold, ambitious, big-budgeted movies with high-profile casts, on difficult, serious subjects: On the Beach (1959), a depiction of what life might be like for the survivors left after a nuclear war; Inherit the Wind (1960), starring Spencer Tracy, Fredric March, and Gene Kelly, based on the play about the notorious 1925 trial of a Tennessee schoolteacher for violating a state law barring the teaching of evolution; and Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), the account of the late-era Nazi war crimes trials. He was able to convince the U.S. Navy to provide limited assistance in the shooting of On the Beach, despite their initially regarding him as a dangerous radical. Inherit the Wind elicited pickets protesting its supposedly anti-religious point of view, at many of the theaters that ran it, much as Death of a Salesman had brought out right-wing pickets a decade earlier. He also produced but did not direct a pair of smaller-budgeted dramas that were equally extraordinary for Hollywood: Pressure Point (1962), about the treatment of mental illness, with Sidney Poitier cast as a psychiatrist trying to help Bobby Darin, portraying a virulent racist; and A Child Is Waiting (1963), directed by John Cassavetes and starring Burt Lancaster, Judy Garland, Gena Rowlands, and Steven Hill, about the treatment of mentally handicapped children. During this period, Kramer became the living symbol of newly emboldened Hollywood liberalism -- itself a new phenomenon in an industry previously dominated by conservatives and reactionaries -- and even quietly gave work to blacklisted screenwriter Nedrick Young in The Defiant Ones.
In 1963, Kramer decided to break up his string of message-driven dramas by directing and producing It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), an all-star, three-hour-long slapstick chase comedy. Although funny in many stretches, the movie -- which heralded a string of big-budget, epic length comedies, including The Great Race and Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines, and also anticipated the 1980s stunt-driven smash-up comedies such as Hal Needham's Cannonball Run -- greatly challenged fans and critics alike with its sheer length; it was difficult to fathom the need for such a gargantuan production, even with the availability of a cast, including Spencer Tracy, Milton Berle, Ethel Merman, Sid Caesar, Jonathan Winters, Buddy Hackett, Mickey Rooney, Phil Silvers, Dick Shawn, and Terry-Thomas, that would have been the envy of any three producers. A seriously devoted, major cult following has coalesced around the film, but many people who enjoy it on a more casual basis tend to think of It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World as a grotesquely proportioned movie. It was profitable but, ironically enough, it may also be Kramer's most controversial movie today on purely aesthetic grounds. It also marked his commercial high point -- he seemed to lose ground as the 1960s wore on; his 1965 release Ship of Fools was a well-intentioned but static filming of a best-selling novel, and although it broke even, it seemed to leave Kramer increasingly pegged by the public as a maker of elephantine screen subjects more than anything else.
In 1967, Kramer released the movie of which he was most proud, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner. It was notable at the time, both for its subject matter -- about the impending interracial marriage of characters portrayed by Sidney Poitier and Katharine Houghton -- and as the final screen teaming of Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy. As a modestly proportioned 108-minute romantic comedy, it also seemed intended in part as an answer to criticisms over the self-consciously oversized nature of Kramer's movies. It made a lot of money and earned Hepburn an Academy Award as Best Actress and, just as Home of the Brave and The Defiant Ones had broken some Hollywood racial taboos in previous decades, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner broached a racially-charged subject that no major studio had ever really taken on though it should be pointed out that Larry Peerce had done a low-budget film, One Potato, Two Potato, on the same subject in 1964. For all of its would-be daring, however, the movie also opened Kramer's basic sense of topicality to criticism. The film seemed dated in its casting (mostly made up of veteran performers going back to the 1930s or earlier) and pacing, and its genteel, upper-middle class setting came off as grotesquely out of sync with a reality in which black neighborhoods in America's inner cities were burning to the ground. When Kramer did try to bring his films' visions and content up to date, as with R.P.M. (1970), which dealt with political strife on America's college campuses, he still seemed hopelessly removed from the reality he sought to address. During the 1970s, he made some interesting but unsuccessful films, including Bless the Beasts and Children (1971) and Oklahoma Crude (1973). By then, Kramer was treated as a quaintly liberal anachronism by the film community and was thought of, along with most of his pictures, as a relic of a more stable, tamer era in American life. In 1977, Kramer relocated his family to Seattle, and he spent most of the next decade -- apart from his poorly received film drama The Runner Stumbles (1979) -- out of the movie business, writing and teaching. He returned to Hollywood in the early '90s with the intention of making movies again, but his plans never came to fruition. In 1997, four years before his death, he published his autobiography, A Mad Mad Mad Mad World, in which his fervent liberalism was undiminished, but where he also inadvertently revealed precisely how out of touch he'd gotten in the previous two decades, writing admiringly of college protesters and student activists -- with some sadness, one had to wonder precisely to which campus activists he was referring, in the present tense, during the mid-'90s. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
1952  
 
Jan de Hartog's two-person stage play The Fourposter has always seemed to attract married acting couples, a tradition established by the play's first Broadway stars Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy. The film version featured Rex Harrison and Lilli Palmer, who (you guessed it) were man and wife at the time. The story traces the history of a marriage from the wedding night in 1890 to the death of the wife in the 1930s; all crucial scenes are acted out in the couple's boudoir, near the fourposter bed they'd received as a wedding present. The passing years, and the triumphs and tragedies of the couple, are wittily represented by transitional animation sequences produced by the UPA cartoon studios. A musical version of The Fourposter titled I Do I Do opened on Broadway in 1966, breaking precedent by starring Mary Martin and Robert Preston, who were happily married but not to each other. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Rex HarrisonLilli Palmer, (more)
1952  
 
The Happy Time was adapted from the long-running Broadway play by Samuel Taylor, which in turn was based on the novel by Robert Fontaine. Set in Quebec during the early part of the 20th century, the film concentrates on the activities of a large French-Canadian family headed by Charles Boyer. Most of the humor arises from "coming of age" complications and sexual awakenings, especially when worldly prodigal son Louis Jourdan returns to the fold and exercises his influence on impressionable young Bobby Driscoll. Not permitted to include the racier portions of the play, director Richard Fleischer compensated by adopting a frenetic, farcelike pace, which works about half the time. Happy Time was later musicalized on Broadway in the 1960s, with Robert Goulet in the Louis Jourdan part. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Charles BoyerLouis Jourdan, (more)
1953  
 
A man finds himself running from both the police and his own troubling memories in this drama. Hans Muller (Kirk Douglas), a German Jew, was once a well-known juggler before he was committed to a concentration camp; Muller survived, but his wife and children did not. After the war, Muller and many other displaced people found themselves in a temporary camp in Israel; his experiences have left him upset and confused, and several of the guards notice that he's behaving oddly. Muller flees the camp after one day, but while running away, he's stopped by Kogan (Richard Benedict), an Israeli policeman. When Kogan asks to see Muller's papers, he immediately flashes back to an unsetting memory in which a Nazi officer asked the same question; Muller panics, attacks the cop, and flees for Mount Carmel. In the morning, Muller encounters a group of children who believe the story he tells them: that he's a tourist from the United States. One of them, Yehoshua (Joseph Walsh), is making his way to a kibbutz in Syria, and Muller, who hopes to get to some friends in Egypt, joins him. Muller entertains the young man by teaching him to juggle, and they become close friends. When Yehoshua is injured by a land mine, Muller rushes him to a hospital, where he meets Ya'el (Milly Vitale), a woman who lost her husband to Arabs. A romance soon blossoms between Muller and Ya'el, and he confesses to her that he's on the run from the police; meanwhile, Israeli Detective Karni (Paul Stewart) is combing the nation, searching for the juggler -- not to arrest him, but to convince him that he's not wanted for murder, and that others want to help him. Michael Blankfort, who wrote the original novel upon which The Juggler was based, adapted the screenplay and also served as executive producer. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Kirk DouglasMilly Vitale, (more)
1952  
 
25-year-old Julie Harris convincingly recreates her Broadway role of 12-year-old tomboy Frankie Addams in the 1952 screen version of Carson McCullers' play. Feeling rejected when her older brother goes off on his honeymoon without inviting her along, Frankie runs away from her middle-class southern home. She endures several other adolescent traumas, not least of which is the sudden death of her bespectacled young cousin John Henry (Brandon De Wilde). With the help of warmhearted housekeeper Berenice Sadie Brown (Ethel Waters), Frankie eventually makes an awkward transition to young womanhood. One of several Stanley Kramer productions released by Columbia in the early 1950s, The Member of the Wedding wisely used several of the original Broadway cast members. Co-starring as a drunken soldier who tries to take advantage of the vulnerable Frankie is former child actor Dick Moore, making his last screen appearance. The Member of the Wedding was remade for television in 1983 (and unofficially "reworked" into the 1991 sleeper My Girl). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Julie HarrisEthel Waters, (more)
1950  
 
Add The Men to QueueAdd The Men to top of Queue
Fred Zinnemann's sensitive film on the plight of paraplegic WWII veterans features Marlon Brando in his superbly moving screen debut. He plays Lt. Bud Wilozek, one of a group of veterans recovering in the paraplegic ward of a hospital in his hometown. His former fiancée, Ellen (Theresa Wright), explains to his physician, Dr. Brock (Everett Sloane), her concern about his isolation and apparent depression since he has broken their engagment and refuses to see her. He counsels her to be patient, but when he decides to broach the issue with Bud, the embittered patient reacts angrily to the doctor's intrusiveness, and continues to refuse to see Ellen. The doctor cajoles the withdrawn paraplegic into the life of the ward, where fellow patients Richard Erdman, Jack Webb, and Arthur Jurado begin to pull Bud out of his spiritual miasma. At length, his sense of hope starts to return, and after seeing Ellen for the first time in months, he begins to contemplate the possibility of marriage. Zinnemann and screenwriter Carl Foreman spent a month in a veteran's hospital researching the film, and Brando lived in the paraplegic unit for a time as part of his preparation. ~ Michael Costello, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Marlon BrandoTeresa Wright, (more)
1943  
 
The Moon and Sixpence, W. Somerset Maugham's account of the life of artist Paul Gauguin, was brought to the screen as a labor of love by writer/director Albert Lewin. George Sanders plays Charles Strickland, a staid London broker who kicks over the traces to become an artist. Strickland pursues his dream to the extent of leaving his family, betraying his friends and associates, and living a life of unending hedonism in Tahiti. An undeniably brilliant painter, Strickland is also a thoroughgoing louse, until he is forced to confront himself on the threshold of death. Herbert Marshall plays the Somerset Maugham character (as he would later in The Razor's Edge), who narrates the story as he attempts to make some sense of Strickland's rakish ways. Director Lewin's obsessive fascination with extraneous exotica -- notably feline statuary and obscure poetry -- is ideally suited to the subject matter of The Moon and Sixpence. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
George SandersHerbert Marshall, (more)
1957  
 
Add The Pride and the Passion to QueueAdd The Pride and the Passion to top of Queue
As was his custom, producer/director Stanley Kramer made some iconoclastic casting decisions when mounting his $5 million production The Pride and the Passion. Adapted from The Gun, a novel by C. S. Forester, the film is set in Spain during the Napoleonic wars. Captain Anthony Trumbull (Cary Grant), a British military officer, is ordered to retrieve a large and unwieldly abandoned cannon, then transport the weapon to the British lines, where it will be used to attack the French garrison at Avila. Hotheaded guerilla leader Miguel (Frank Sinatra) agrees to help Trumball move the cannon over hill and dale, even though he hates the Englishman's guts. Tagging along on the arduous odysseys is Miguel's fiery mistress Juana (Sophia Loren), who develops a yearning for the stolid Trundall (then-lovers Loren and Grant would later be teamed in Houseboat). Pride and the Passion made a mint at the box-office for both Kramer and United Artists. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Cary GrantFrank Sinatra, (more)
1979  
PG  
Director Stanley Kramer ended his career with this absorbing drama, adapted from the play by Milan Stitt and based on a real-life event from 1927. Dick Van Dyke stars as Father Rivard, an intellectual priest in a small, impoverished mining town in the state of Washington. A lonely man with low self-esteem, Rivard is depressed by the arduous and dreary lives of his flock, until the arrival of Sister Rita (Kathleen Quinlan), a bright, spirited young nun who joins his parish to teach at its school. Rita appreciates Rivard on a level that few others in the community can, and soon the priest falls in love with her. But when Sister Rita is murdered, Rivard's infatuation is revealed and the love-struck priest is put on trial. Only Rivard's housekeeper, Mrs. Shandig (Maureen Stapleton), knows the truth about Sister Rita's death. Kramer broke up the staginess of his source material by structuring The Runner Stumbles (1979) into three acts that unfold not sequentially but simultaneously, revealing Rivard's developing relationship with Rita, his prison stint, and his murder trial all at the same time. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Dick Van DykeKathleen Quinlan, (more)
1969  
PG  
Add The Secret of Santa Vittoria to QueueAdd The Secret of Santa Vittoria to top of Queue
Italo Bombolini (Anthony Quinn) is the mayor of the hillside village of Santa Vittorio. The wine-loving town leader erases a pro-Mussolini slogan when he hears of the fascist being killed and hanged from a meathook. His wife Rosa (Anna Magnani) throws him out of their wine shop when he and his friends celebrate and he gives away too much wine. When he hears the retreating Nazi Army will soon be in town, hundreds of villagers turn out to hide the wine in an old Roman cave. The people work day and night, hiding 1 million bottles just before the Nazis enter the town. SS officers threaten death to anyone who withholds the wine. Italo presents a single bottle to the irate general (Hardy Kruger), as the hapless Germans are powerless to force the villagers to produce the coveted bottles. Not even a pistol to the head of their beloved mayor is effective as the town stands by, watching in complete silence. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Anthony QuinnAnna Magnani, (more)
1952  
 
The "regeneration" of blacklisted director Edward Dmytryk was expedited when he was hired by producer Stanley Kramer to helm the location-filmed melodrama The Sniper. In the interests of political expediency, Dmytrk was required to direct Adolphe Menjou, one of the most virulent Red-baiters of the HUAC hearings. Shorn of his trademarked mustache, and with his famous expensive wardrobe replaced by a humdrum business suit, Menjou turns in one of his best performances as a world-weary San Francisco detective assigned to track down a mad sniper. From the beginning, the audience knows that the criminal is psycho Eddie Miller (Arthur Franz), who is possessed of the notion that he must kill every beautiful brunette woman who crosses his path. Some audience sympathy is elicited by Miller's pathetic attempts to rid himself of his obsession, but this never gets in the way of the film's suspense. The excellent supporting cast includes Richard Kiley as a police psychiatrist, Marie Windsor as Miller's first victim, and Mabel Paige as the sniper's snoopy landlady. An unbilled Wally Cox shows up briefly. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Adolphe MenjouArthur Franz, (more)
1954  
NR  
Add The Wild One to QueueAdd The Wild One to top of Queue
"What are you rebelling against?" asks someone. "What've you got?" responds surly, leather-jacketed motorcycle punk Marlon Brando. It comes as a disappointment to discover that The Wild One, the quintessential Brando "rebel" film, is at base a traditional "misunderstood youth vs. the nasty system" effort, with a particularly banal finale. Based on a true incident, the film begins with Brando and his motorcyle gang invading a small town after having been kicked out of a cycle competition (but not before stealing the second-prize trophy). Brando's bikers raise hell all day, but some of the townsfolk are shown to be little better than the invaders. Sheriff Robert Keith, whose daughter (Murphy) has gone fond of Brando, finally responds to the bikers' destructiveness by jailing Lee Marvin, leader of a rival gang. When Marvin's buddies goes on a rampage, Brando exhibits his essential decency by safely escorting the sheriff's daughter out of the melee. The townsfolk misunderstand, assuming that Brando intends to rape the girl. He is attacked by a vigilante mob led by town hothead Ray Teal, who uses this excuse to exercise his own sadistic tendencies. Keith breaks up the mob and suggests that Brando leave; he tries to do so, but another angry response from the mob causes him to inadvertently strike and kill a pedestrian. At the subsequent hearing, the girl rushes to Brando's defense. Though grateful for the unexpected kindness, Brando is constitutionally unable to say "thank you" and rides out of town alone. The image of Marlon Brando astride his Triumph has entered movie folklore, just like King Kong on the Empire State Building or the billow-skirted Marilyn Monroe standing over a subway grating; it's too bad that The Wild One isn't a more worthy vehicle for Brando's talents. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Marlon BrandoMary Murphy, (more)

BLOCKBUSTER name, design and related marks are trademarks of Blockbuster Inc. © 2009 Blockbuster Inc. All rights reserved.

Portions of Content Provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC.© 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.