Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThe struggle of a lady's garment workers' organization to unionize a New York clothing sweat shop; the owner of which is determined to keep the union out of his business at any cost.The struggle of a lady's garment workers' organization to unionize a New York clothing sweat shop; the owner of which is determined to keep the union out of his business at any cost.The struggle of a lady's garment workers' organization to unionize a New York clothing sweat shop; the owner of which is determined to keep the union out of his business at any cost.
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- Sceneggiatura
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- Joanne
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- Worker
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Recensioni in evidenza
The Garment Jungle is rare film , but well worth the effort to track it down.
The cast is uniformly good, with Cobb leading in one of his best performances. The blending of two directors' work here unusually doesn't detract from the impact of this one. Look for it on television, or the hard-to-find, out-of-print video, whenever possible.
Cobb plays Walter Mitchell, who owns a fashion house, Roxton Fashions, that sells to the trade in New York's garment district. Thanks to a partnership with mobster Artie Ravidge (Boone), he has managed to keep the union, ILGWU, out of his shop. The union has been gaining ground in the industry. One union worker, Tulio Renata (Loggia) is determined to unionize the sweat shop.
When Walter's partner wants to unionize, he is murdered, and though it's made to look like an accident, no one is fooled.
When Alan (Mathews), Walter's son, returns to New York after being away for several years, he's shocked by what is going on and that his father seems to be condoning violence to keep the union out.
Some of this is quite good showing the problems that the union had breaking into the garment industry, as well as the brutality some of the unionists faced.
Viewed today, some of the film is over the top. I found Loggia and Gia Scala, as a passionate Italian couple, too exaggerated. In fact, theirs and Cobb's performances were too theatrical. Compared to them, in fact, Kerwin Mathews seemed bland until the end of the movie. Mathews found success in costumers later on.
Boone and the actor playing his enforcer, Wesley Addy, gave restrained performances, playing against gangster personalities. The beautiful Valerie French had a smaller role as Cobb's girlfriend, a major buyer.
One thing that was a little out there was a funeral scene - footage from something else was used - maybe Valentino's funeral? It didn't seem plausible for the character who passed away.
All in all, a good film, though it doesn't stand up against a film like Waterfront.
This film is a throwback to that struggle and has a message packed with a powerhouse persona of greed, violence, and suppression. It utilizes realistic on location street photography to give a hard boiled and bitter verisimilitude. There are other flashes of "realism" not usually found in typical Hollywood films.
Some very slick indoor photography and gripping performances throughout deliver this expose in a package marked "stay out of it, or its your baby's legs next". Tough stuff for the conservative, establishment, 1950's.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizA good depiction of a "sweat shop" that used the "piece work" method of pay. An employee was paid a very low hourly wage in the "piece work" system that paid by the unit. If the worker made enough "pieces" at a certain rate, they would be paid the higher of the two: the hourly rate or the rate based on the number of pieces they produced. They system encouraged employees to work fast and to not take breaks. The "piece work" system was common across the manufacturing industry until unions put an end to it.
- BlooperAbout half way through, when the truck drives forward into the alley past the union 'picketers' towards the elevator. After they kill Tulio the truck is inexplicably turned-around (without room in the alley to turn around) and drives forward out of the alley the same way it came in.
- Citazioni
Lee Hackett: [commenting, in a Long Island Lock-jaw accent, on clothes modeled in a fashion show] Do notice the movement in the back. It really talks. Backtalk is terribly important this season.
Buyer: Do you think that back will talk?
Lee Hackett: Even in Scranton.
- ConnessioniReferenced in The Exiles (1961)
- Colonne sonoreO Sacred Head, Now Wounded
Written by Hans L. Hassler (d. 1612)
Performed on the organ at the second funeral
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Siti ufficiali
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- The Garment Jungle
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Manhattan Center - 311 West 34th Street, Manhattan, New York, New York, Stati Uniti(exterior shots of the funeral)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 1.050.000 USD (previsto)
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 28min(88 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1