Rebel Without A Cause [1955]
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Binding : DVDEAN : 7321900140690Label : Warner Home VideoManufacturer : Warner Home VideoPublisher : Warner Home VideoRelease date : 2006-06-01Title : Rebel Without A Cause [1955]Actor : ArrayAudience rating : Parental GuidanceFormat : ArrayLanguages : ArrayNumber of items : 1Original release date : 1955-01-01Region code : 2Running time : 106Studio : Warner Home VideoTheatrical releaseDate : 1955-10-27Number of discs : 1
Editorial reviews
Amazon.co.uk ReviewWhen people think of James Dean, they probably think first of the troubled teen from
Rebel Without a Cause: nervous, volatile, soulful, a kid lost in a world that does not understand him. Made between his only other starring roles, in
East of Eden and
Giant,
Rebel sums up the jangly, alienated image of Dean, but also happens to be one of the key films of the 1950s. Director Nicholas Ray takes a strikingly sympathetic look at the teenagers standing outside the white-picket-fence 50s dream of America: juvenile delinquent (that's what they called them then) Jim Stark (Dean), fast-girl Judy (Natalie Wood), lost-boy Plato (Sal Mineo), slick hot-rodder Buzz (Corey Allen). At the time, it was unusual for a movie to endorse the point of view of teenagers, but Ray and screenwriter Stewart Stern captured the youthful angst that was erupting at the same time in rock 'n' roll. Dean is heartbreaking, following the method-acting style of Marlon Brando but staking out a nakedly emotional honesty of his own. Going too fast, in every way, he was killed in a car crash on September 30, 1955, a month before
Rebel opened. He was no longer an actor, but an icon, and
Rebel is a lasting monument. --
Robert Horton, Amazon.com
Customer reviews
review by: brendoclarke date: 2008-10-04 rating:
Dated MovieJean-Luc Godard said about the director of Rebel Without a Cause "Nicholas Ray is cinema."
Well now, risking Pseuds' Corner, I wager James Dean is movie stardom personified on the strength of his three great performances in his three 1950's movies. With Dean dead for more than 53 years, this dvd underlines that the only sense we have of him is on celluloid.
Brando may have been a better actor but even before that car crash ensured Deans iconic afterlife, Dean was the more complete celebrity.
Even though Rebel is a classic, it is extremely dated.
Another criticism is that it is a pretty wooly affair with some hammy performances and gloppy sentimentality.
To begin with, Nicholas Ray never could say anything with much subtlety -- he's like one of those beat poet cliches from the 1950s who take themselves oh-so-serious and are like down with system, man. So, from the first frame Rebel Without a Cause slathers on the message with a cake spatula. We are supposed to be totally sympathetic to the troubled James Dean character and his existential plight through being a 20-something teenager and coming from a wealthy background - nice car, nice house and nice parents.
Dean (Jim Stark) sees the ridiculous marriage of his parents as a stark warning of the horrors that surely await in his bourgeois future. If this were handled really well it could have a lot of traction, but unfortunately it is played sporadically and is too hyperbolic (in all the wrong ways) to have much resonance.
8/10.
review by: rowbo date: 2007-03-22 rating:
nobody talks to children, they just tell them..due to being released shortly after dean's death, this films success was virtually guaranteed and it certainly does not disappoint.
Dean's performance is utterly captivating, not forgetting great supporting roles from Sal Mineo and Natalie Wood. The plot and script are perfect, and feature so many memorable scenes and locations- the knife fight, the 'chickee run', the abandoned house, and the final sequence to name just a few.
a film i can relate to and never get tired of viewing, Rebel without a cause remains one of my favourite films.. sheer quality.
review by: MGPB1936 date: 2006-12-20 rating:
16yr old reviewerSorry to say that I didn't really enjoy this film. I'd heard a bit about James Dean eg. icon etc. Being a fan of old films, especially 30's to 60's, and iconic actors eg. Marilyn Monroe and Audrey Hepburn etc I watched this film.
I thought James Dean to be an excellent and extremely good looking guy to say the least but I honestly didn't enjoy it.
It didn't give the viewer of teenagers an honest portrayal and it wasn't really very gripping and couldn't relate with the characters.
Liked it for the fit lead and acting but..not much else.
Just thought I'd mention - am 16 yrs old and female.
Wouldn't recommend to people who were expecting something good because it's just a James Dean film.
review by: purple-dream date: 2005-10-19 rating:
James Dean shinesIn each of James Dean's few films the effort and talent is always outstanding. His performance in a film allows it to be worth watching on that single merit. This is one of the earliest films that tackles high school life and being one of the originals in having the main focus on teenagers. The studio felt the need to have it be in colour for it to stand out but even to keep it black and white as many mid fifties films were, it would have still stood the test of time. This film displays the talent they did possess. Dean proves easily that he is a compelling leading man and it is also interesting to see an early performance from Dennis Hopper as one of the gang who react against Jim.
To watch the film once would be part of anyones rites of passage but i guarnantee you will watch it again.
review by: grovelsjon date: 2004-12-03 rating:
It is never out of dateHaving a visual insight into a culture at a particular point in time is an excellent way of understanding what was happening. This film, because of the iconic status of James Dean, does just this. The film gives an informed view of the changing nature of families and young people in the 1950s. It expresses the desire of young people to change society without them knowing what they wanted the new society to be like, but recognising that a new order needed to be established. This film signals the development of Youth Culture as a force of change and gives an insight into the changing relationships within families that were being experienced at the time.
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