DCSIMG
 
 

Jack Garfein Movies

Director Jack Garfein started his career acting and directing stage productions. Born in Mukaccvo, Czechoslovakia, young Garfein survived a stay in the Auschwitz concentration camp during WW II. In 1945, he emigrated to the U.S. and studied at the New School for Social Research before going to the theater. In 1953, he made his Broadway debut as a director with End as a Man. The following year he became part of the Actors Studio. Garfein only made two films, one, The Strange One (1957), was an adaptation of End as a Man and earned him considerable critical acclaim. The other Something Wild (1961) featured his first wife Carroll Baker and didn't do quite as well. In addition to his film and stage work, Garfein has directed television shows. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
1961  
 
A rape victim goes through inner turmoil in the days following her suffering the brutal assault. Mary Ann (Carroll Baker) leaves her middle class New York home to wander the mean streets of Manhattan. She is isolated and lonely in spite of being surrounded by people. A kindly garage mechanic befriends the troubled woman on the brink of self destruction - but soon
Mary Ann must ask herself if she can really trust him. Musical score provided by American legend Aaron Copeland. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Carroll BakerRalph Meeker, (more)
 
1957  
 
In his film debut, Ben Gazzara repeats his stage portrayal of Jocko De Paris, a manipulative psychotic who holds a Southern military school in thrall. With the help of his flunkies, cadets Harold Knoble (Pat Hingle) and Roger Gatt (James Olson), Jocko sadistically terrorizes the underclassmen, forcing them to do his bidding. Efforts made by Major Avery (Larry Gates) to expose Jocko are constantly thwarted by the students' conspiracy of silence and by Jocko's own efforts to destroy Avery. Finally, cadet Robert Marquales (George Peppard, likewise making his first film appearance) can stand no more: turning the tables on Jocko, Marquales reveals the monster for the snivveling coward he really is. This filmization of Calder Willingham's play and novel End as a Man almost didn't make it to the screen due to its pronounced homosexual subtext. The filmmakers managed to circumvent the censors by removing three minutes of allegedly offensive footage, and by making the film's most overtly gay character a slimy, repulsive creep (another implicitly homosexual character, played by Arthur Storch, is depicted as merely wimpish and withdrawn). As a box-office come-on, Calder Willingham added the superfluous character of good-time gal Rosebud (Julie Wilson). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Ben GazzaraPat Hingle, (more)