On the Waterfront is a Piece of Propagandistic Sludge that Should Be Avoided at Alll Costs

And Elia Kazan is a Cowardly Rat Bastard Who Should Have Been Strung Up by His Tongue Instead of Awarded an Oscar

Timothy Sexton
Some movies just can't be adequately critiqued without invoking their politics. The fact that Elia Kazan made On The Waterfront in the first place makes it fair game for reviewing the film from the point of view of a political statement. The movie is a counter to the indictment against people like Kazan that writer Arthur Miller makes in The Crucible. (And by the way, the argument that The Crucible isn't appropriately analogus to the Communist Witch Hunt because while there were not witches in Salem, there were Communist in Hollywood simply doesn't fly; there may have been Communists in Hollywood, but they had about as much power to influence the public as an imaginary witch.)

In case you aren't aware, Elia Kazan was already a renowned film director by the time he willingly went before the House Un-American Activities Committee-the Witch Hunt Committee-and ratted out his friends with whom he had attended meetings of the Communist party. He basically did this to save his own Greek behind; there is certainly no indication that Kazan at any time really had any great belief that Communists were infiltrating Hollywood and were hell-bent on destroying the American way of life: you know, buying things you don't need and dying in faraway lands to contribute to a President's inferiority over the size of his own testicles.

Having destroyed several lives with his testimony, Kazan came under attack from certain quarters for his cowardly action. His response was a film that is so highly regarded it verges on the nauseating. (I'm not even going to get into the almost campy melodrama and the hysterical acting. I know it verges on a sacrilege to suggest that Marlon Brando was ever anything but brilliant during the 1950s, but in my opinion you won't see a more affected piece of acting in any other movie released during that decade). Brando's character in On the Waterfront Terry Malloy is supposed to be a stand-in for Elia Kazan, you see, cleaning out the filth so that a bum can become a contender. Well, here's the problem: The left-leaning writers, directors and actors whose careers Kazan helped to end weren't gangster or criminals. IT HAS NEVER BEEN ILLEGAL TO BE A MEMBER OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY.

So the analogy doesn't fit. To paraphrase Lloyd Bentsen: Elia Kazan is no Terry Malloy. Kazan wasn't bruised and beaten on his quest to become a hero by rooting out a criminal element. Kazan was a bum and a rat bastard who should have been strung up by his tongue instead of awarded Oscars. The fact that this piece of sludge won so many Academy Awards is itself a testament to the fact that the Communist element in Hollywood was minor at best.

Hollywood and movies are a business. They are owned and operated not to make art, but money. They exist to fulfill an Althusserian delivery of America's prevailing ideology-capitalism is the answer to all our society's ills and problems-and it would take more than ten or twenty or a hundred writers and directors to make a dent in that. Kazan did nothing to protect the minds of America from being infected by communist doctrine. (You know the kind of stuff I'm talking about: free health care, affordable higher education for everybody, higher wages for workers, and less inheritance for Paris Hilton.) It is unconscionable to reward Kazan and anyone else connected with On the Watefront with Oscars or any other kind of award.

Look at it from this point of view: Do you think a movie that explains why Benedict Arnold betrayed his fellow countrymen would ever receive such adulation? What about a movie that explained the murder of Sharon Tate from Charles Manson's point of view? Ah, I know what you're thinking: Who's making the fallacious analogy now? Not me. Manson and his freaky buddies ended Tate's life as well as several others and threw countless other lives into disrepair. Are you aware that many of those who were blacklisted committed suicide? Then there's John Garfield who died of a heart attack at the age of 39 after battling the stress of the blacklist. And those who didn't commit suicide had their careers taken away from them for no other reason than that they attended a perfectly legal meeting years before.

I'll go further with my analogy: Elia Kazan is worse than Charles Manson. Manson was insane; he can be excused to a certain extent. Kazan didn't have to name names. He didn't have to attend the hearings at all. He knew exactly what he was doing, he did it, and then he lived the rest of life never once expressing regret. Instead, he took hundreds of thousands of dollars and made a movie to justify his own cowardly, rat-bastard actions.

Do yourself a favor. Ignore this movie when Turner Classic Movies airs it as one of their "Essentials." The only essential thing about this piece of garbage is that it's essential we all learn the lesson that being a rat bastard with an Oscar still makes you a rat bastard!

Published by Timothy Sexton - Featured Contributor in Arts & Entertainment

Timothy Sexton was named this site's very first Writer of the Year. Today he has several columns on Yahoo Movies and a weekly column on The Simpsons on Yahoo TV. He has published over 8,000 articles coverin...   View profile

  • Elia Kazan was a coward who saved his own butt by giving up his friends.
  • The bad guys in the movie are gangsters who commit crimes; the guys Kazan ratted were not.
  • It has never been illegal to attend a meeting of the Communist party.

3 Comments

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  • Pat 2/19/2008

    You might want to try cutting down on all the parenthetical comments. (Really, it looks and reads better if you don't interrupt your story every five sentences with a long rampage about a peripheral point. A lot of these ideas could be worked into the main body of your review without detracting from the readability of your writing. You should really calm down a little. I sympathize with your feelings about HUAC, the Communist Party, and those like Kazan who betrayed others, but isn't the point that you're writing a film review? Certainly this is all important and a valid reason to dislike the film and the attitudes which led to its creation, but it could be said without caps lock) and all the parentheses.

  • bob 2/18/2008

    communist.

  • Mark Kochinski 6/29/2006

    Well that was fiesty.

    I 'm glad to see tha main point is made - it is not and was not a crime to attend a communist meeting, it was not and is not a crime to be a member of the communist party.
    Like religion, no American citizen should be persecuted for their political beliefs.

    But that didn't stop people's live from being ruined over it.

    You may notice similar techniques today, as member's of a certain party are accused of being traitors, of being terrorist sympathizers, of being Godless, of giving aid and comfort to the enemy.

    I also find it amusing when Hollywood gets up on its high horse about those days. Congress didn't blacklist these people, Congress didn't honor On The Waterfront - Hollywood did, bowing to the bullies in Congress.

    Hollywood, as a whole, kowtowed to the investigations, with only a few American heroes standing up to them.

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