Movie · 1967 · Drama, Crime · 2h 7m · PG · English
Curator score: 9.3/10 (313.9K ratings)
The man... and the motion picture that simply do not conform.
Overview
When petty criminal Luke Jackson is sentenced to two years in a Florida prison farm, he doesn't play by the rules of either the sadistic warden or the yard's resident heavy, Dragline, who ends up admiring the new guy's unbreakable will. Luke's bravado, even in the face of repeated stints in the prison's dreaded solitary confinement cell, "the box," make him a rebel hero to his fellow convicts and a thorn in the side of the prison officers.
Ratings
Curator score: 9.3/10
IMDb: 8.0/10
Letterboxd: 4.16/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 100%
Metacritic: 92
TMDB: 7.7/10
Director
Stuart Rosenberg
Production
Warner Bros.-Seven Arts, Jalem Productions
Cast
Paul Newman, George Kennedy, Luke Askew, Morgan Woodward, Harry Dean Stanton, Dennis Hopper, Lou Antonio, Robert Drivas, Strother Martin, Jo Van Fleet, Clifton James, Marc Cavell, Richard Davalos, Robert Donner, J.D. Cannon, Joe Don Baker, James Gammon, Wayne Rogers, Ralph Waite, Chuck Hicks
Curator Review
Verdict
A landmark prison drama with star power, swagger, and a surprisingly tender streak beneath its defiance. It blends hard-edged institutional cruelty with a charismatic antihero performance and iconic filmmaking that still feels alive.
Best for
Fans of classic American dramas
Viewers who like rebellious antiheroes
People drawn to prison stories with character focus
Fans of 1960s cinema and star performances
Viewers who appreciate quotable, iconic scenes
Skip if
You want a fast-paced modern thriller
You prefer bleak realism without mythic heroics
You dislike older studio-era filmmaking
You need a plot-driven escape movie
Overview
Cool Hand Luke is one of those movies that turns a simple prison premise into a full-blown American myth. What starts as a story of punishment and resistance becomes a study of charisma, masculinity, and the strange power of a man who refuses to bend, even when the system is built to break him.
Worth noting
Paul Newman gives the kind of performance that defines a career: relaxed, wounded, funny, and impossible to ignore. The film’s tone shifts between sweaty, hangout-movie ease and brutal institutional pressure, which makes the famous set pieces land even harder.
Bottom line
It’s also a beautifully made piece of 1960s cinema, with memorable images, a distinctive score, and a sense of style that keeps the movie from feeling like a mere message film. The ending gives it a haunting afterlife, turning rebellion into legend.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Tentin Quarantino ☭ (4★) · 2654 likes
Any man who doesn't like this movie gets a night in the box.
Chris 🍉 (4★) · 1797 likes
eat an egg every time something gay happens
zachhayes (5★) · 1377 likes
this movie is about everyone falling in love with paul newman.
Christopher McQuarrie · 979 likes
“I sure hope you’re not gonna be a hard case…”
Despite his own efforts as co-writer of the screenplay, Author Don Pierce hated the adaptation of his defining novel. He thought Paul Newman was miscast, he detested Lalo Schiffrin’s score (despite suggesting the banjo to Schiffrin) and he dismissed out of hand the notion that his story was a Christ allegory. Even after the Writer’s Guild Of America declared his screenplay one of the 100 greatest ever written (an award… more
Karsten (4.5★) · 905 likes
You think the egg sequence will be as good as it gets and then they immediately hit you with the banjo….15(?) minutes of newman at his peak