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| The Front [1976] (REGION 1) (NTSC) | ![The Front [1976] (REGION 1) (NTSC)](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51N37DC150L._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Director: Martin Ritt Actors: Woody Allen, Zero Mostel, Herschel Bernardi, Michael Murphy, Andrea Marcovicci Studio: Columbia TriStar Category: DVD
Buy New: £30.95
New (2) from £30.95
Avg. Customer Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 50510
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Colour, Dvd-video, Extra Tracks, Full Screen, Ntsc, Subtitled, Widescreen Languages: English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Japanese (Subtitled), Georgian (Subtitled), English (Original Language) Running Time: 95 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.5
ISBN: 0767889150 UPC: 043396085701 EAN: 9780767889155 ASIN: B00013D580
Theatrical Release Date: September 17, 1976 Release Date: February 17, 2004 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: **BRAND NEW** FACTORY SEALED. Please allow 7-15 business days for delivery. Ships by Airmail from New York. No VAT or extra charges. Excellent Customer Service. Email confirmation of order.#
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"Take care of yourself. The water is full of sharks." November 23, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The McCarthy-inspired Blacklist in the late 40s and 50s is such a shameful incident in America's history that film and TV has largely steered clear of the subject altogether: you can count the films dealing with it directly on the fingers of one hand, so it sounds like damning with faint praise to say that the rarely revived The Front is the best of them all. That it's the `Woody Allen film' that time forgot hasn't helped it's reputation, but in truth, although many regular Allen collaborators from co-star Michael Murphy to producers Jack Rollins and Charles H. Joffe are involved, this isn't an Allen film: some of the wisecracks may be tailor-made for him, but this is Martin Ritt and Walter Bernstein's film and Allen's just playing a role, that of a cashier and small-time bookie who finds himself `fronting' for blacklisted writers for 10% of whatever they get for their scripts.
Kicking off with a superb scene-setting montage of the 50s at its best and worst, from baseball and apple pie to the Korean War and the execution of the Rosenbergs while Frank Sinatra sings Young at Heart on the soundtrack, it's a film that certainly speaks from personal experience. Along with writer Walter Bernstein and director Martin Ritt (who had both touched upon the blacklist more obliquely in 1970's The Molly Maguires) many of the cast - Zero Mostel, Herschel Bernardi, Lloyd Gough, Joshua Shelley - were blacklisted, while the daughter of one of the blacklist's most tragic victims, John Garfield, also appears. Yet surprisingly it's not a whitewash: the blacklisted writers make it clear that they weren't put on the list by mistake but because they are communists, while Allen's front may start out on his new career as a favor to a friend but quickly shows his true opportunistic colors. No sooner has he seen how much money he can make than he's taking on more writers at higher rates, seducing Andrea Marcovicci's production assistant who is really in love with the words that aren't even his own rather than the man himself and getting ideas above his station, refusing to hand in scripts he thinks aren't up to his standards because "It's my name that goes on the script." In that he's really no different from anyone else in a world where club owners take advantage of the blacklist to get performers like Mostel's increasingly suicidal Hecky Green at bargain rates and then still knock them down even further after a sell-out show. But it's not long before he becomes a political suspect himself...
Set in the fledgling TV industry where gas company sponsors insisted on rewriting concentration camp dramas to avoid giving their product a bad image and where businessmen who only owned a couple of stores could demand - and get - the right of veto over any cast members they thought are `too red' for their customers' liking by threatening to withdraw a single commercial (both true incidents), it doesn't really need to resort to comic invention, but it's more of an absurd yet dry black comedy that's often too dark NOT to laugh at. The final scene where Allen comes up against the committee and tries to bluff his way out of a contempt charge is really just a piece of wish fulfilment, the kind of thing you wish you had said long after the moment has passed, but it's hard to begrudge Ritt and Bernstein their moment: they earned it. Running a tight hour-and-a-half and with great photography by Michael Chapman, it's well worth investigating.
Woody Allens almost serious side. July 11, 2004 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
Don't buy this film expecting to see a madcap comedy from Allen. This is not a film full of one-liners and slapstick mayhem. On the other hand it is also not as serious as some of the dramas that he's made over the years either. It stars him as the centrepiece to a plot in which Allen fronts for blacklisted writers deemed by the state to be communist or unpatriotic. The trouble for Allen starts when there are too many writers to front for. I think you have to be Woody Allen fan to enjoy this film as much as I did, but even if you're not it's still worth seeing.
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