On the Waterfront (1954)

Movie · 1954 · Crime, Drama, Romance · 1h 48m · NR · English

Curator score: 9.3/10 (314.9K ratings)

The man lived by the jungle law of the docks!

Overview

A prizefighter-turned-longshoreman with a conscience goes up against labor leaders to expose corruption, extortion, and murder among the union ranks.

Ratings

Director

Elia Kazan

Production

Columbia Pictures, Horizon Pictures

Cast

Marlon Brando, Eva Marie Saint, Karl Malden, Lee J. Cobb, Rod Steiger, Pat Henning, Leif Erickson, James Westerfield, Tony Galento, Tami Mauriello, John F. Hamilton, John Heldabrand, Rudy Bond, Don Blackman, Arthur Keegan, Abe Simon, Martin Balsam, Dan Bergin, Zachary Charles, Fred Gwynne

Curator Review

Verdict

A landmark American drama with muscular performances, vivid dockside atmosphere, and a still-potent story about conscience, loyalty, and corruption. Its moral force and Brando’s naturalistic acting remain hugely influential, even if the film’s politics and historical context invite debate.

Best for

  • classic Hollywood drama fans
  • viewers interested in labor corruption and moral dilemmas
  • fans of iconic performances
  • people who like tense, socially conscious crime stories

Skip if

  • you want a light or fast-moving crime film
  • you’re looking for a purely apolitical underdog story
  • you’re sensitive to films whose historical politics complicate the viewing experience

Overview

On the Waterfront is one of the defining American films of the 1950s: a tough, emotional drama that turns a labor-racket story into a bruising moral reckoning. The dockside setting feels lived-in and dangerous, and the film’s sense of pressure comes as much from the community’s silence as from the gangsters’ violence.

Worth noting

Marlon Brando’s performance is the center of gravity here, all wounded pride, hesitation, and sudden bursts of feeling. Eva Marie Saint and Karl Malden give the film real tenderness and tension around him, while the black-and-white cinematography gives the whole thing a stark, almost spiritual severity.

Bottom line

It’s also a film that invites argument. Its anti-corruption stance is powerful, but the historical baggage around its maker gives the movie an uneasy afterlife. That tension doesn’t erase the achievement; it makes the film feel even more like a document of American conscience under pressure.

Top Letterboxd reviews

eely (3★) · 2321 likes

me to my reflection in the microwave glass as i heat up vegan mac & cheese at two o’clock in the morning: i could’ve had class. i could’ve been a contender. i could’ve been somebody. instead of a bum. which is what i am.

Will Sloan (5★) · 1508 likes

Very powerful. “And what do I get? A one-way ticket to Palookaville.” My politics are that it’s okay to rat on your union boss if he is corrupt and murderous, but it’s not okay to rat on your former colleagues to the HUAC when you are already an Academy Award-winning director.

Karsten (3.5★) · 1103 likes

Brando's performance really did live up to my expectations. Not only ahead of its time but also capable of surpassing dramatic performances today. I can feel the rage boiling underneath this film which is why I see it staying with me for awhile. The ending felt much more spiritual than I was expecting. Lot of religious metaphors that I couldn't pick up on my first time around but that I look forward to revisiting. I don't really know how I… more Brando's performance really did live up to my expectations. Not only ahead of its time but also capable of surpassing dramatic performances today. I can feel the rage boiling underneath this film which is why I see it staying with me for awhile. The ending felt much more spiritual than I was expecting. Lot of religious metaphors that I couldn't pick up on my first time around but that I look forward to revisiting. I don't really know how I… more

Sally Jane Black · 1000 likes

Edit: so this film is a defense of Kazan's speaking to HUAC and it can go fuck itself It's hard for me to get behind this film, which I read as a call-to-action to cleanse unions of corrupting influences. Watching a film where a man, played with surprisingly quiet passion by Brando, stands up (eventually) to those corrupting influences in risk of his life, his freedom, or his love, watching this knowing that Kazan, perhaps out of spite, perhaps out… more

Mike Ginn (5★) · 720 likes

extremely funny that bitch-ass Kazan snitched on writers for being communists, which cost them their ability to work, then made this pro-union masterpiece defending himself. And Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible as a response to him! If they do another season of Feud it should be Miller / Kazan

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Topics

classic Hollywood, black-and-white, method acting, labor politics, crime drama, moral dilemma, 1950s, dockworkers, romantic tragedy, social realism

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