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Graine de violence

Original title: Blackboard Jungle
  • 1955
  • 16
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
10K
YOUR RATING
Glenn Ford, Margaret Hayes, and Vic Morrow in Graine de violence (1955)
Trailer for this black and white film about classroom hooligans
Play trailer2:52
1 Video
99+ Photos
Psychological DramaCrimeDrama

A new English teacher at a violent, unruly inner-city school is determined to do his job, despite resistance from both students and faculty.A new English teacher at a violent, unruly inner-city school is determined to do his job, despite resistance from both students and faculty.A new English teacher at a violent, unruly inner-city school is determined to do his job, despite resistance from both students and faculty.

  • Director
    • Richard Brooks
  • Writers
    • Richard Brooks
    • Evan Hunter
  • Stars
    • Glenn Ford
    • Anne Francis
    • Louis Calhern
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    10K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Brooks
    • Writers
      • Richard Brooks
      • Evan Hunter
    • Stars
      • Glenn Ford
      • Anne Francis
      • Louis Calhern
    • 120User reviews
    • 43Critic reviews
    • 67Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 4 Oscars
      • 1 win & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

    Blackboard Jungle
    Trailer 2:52
    Blackboard Jungle

    Photos102

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    Top cast65

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    Glenn Ford
    Glenn Ford
    • Richard Dadier
    Anne Francis
    Anne Francis
    • Anne Dadier
    Louis Calhern
    Louis Calhern
    • Jim Murdock
    Margaret Hayes
    Margaret Hayes
    • Lois Judby Hammond
    John Hoyt
    John Hoyt
    • Mr. Warneke
    Richard Kiley
    Richard Kiley
    • Joshua Y. Edwards
    Emile Meyer
    Emile Meyer
    • Mr. Halloran
    Warner Anderson
    Warner Anderson
    • Dr. Bradley
    Basil Ruysdael
    Basil Ruysdael
    • Prof. A.R. Kraal
    Sidney Poitier
    Sidney Poitier
    • Gregory W. Miller
    Vic Morrow
    Vic Morrow
    • Artie West
    Dan Terranova
    Dan Terranova
    • Belazi
    Rafael Campos
    Rafael Campos
    • Pete V. Morales
    Paul Mazursky
    Paul Mazursky
    • Emmanuel Stoker
    Horace McMahon
    Horace McMahon
    • Detective
    Jamie Farr
    Jamie Farr
    • Santini
    • (as Jameel Farah)
    Danny Dennis
    • De Lica
    David Alpert
    • Lou Savoldi
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Richard Brooks
    • Writers
      • Richard Brooks
      • Evan Hunter
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews120

    7.410.2K
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    Featured reviews

    9bkoganbing

    "Hey Teach, you're in my classroom now"

    Blackboard Jungle is one of the seminal films in Glenn Ford's career. As Richard Dadier, newly minted teacher going into one of the inner city schools in New York City, he's nervous, but full of idealism and commitment that he can make a difference in the lives of these kids.

    One of the aspects of Blackboard Jungle that is never discussed is the problem, still very much with us today, of illiteracy. For me the key to the whole story is when Ford has to get down to the level of running a movie cartoon of Jack and the Beanstalk in order to communicate with them. That's when he reaches them and also takes control of the situation in his classroom away from the school thug as graphically portrayed by Vic Morrow.

    I was involved with someone for many years and his literacy level was very low. It made him angry and unable to handle the world and all the problems he had in life. He had a worse situation than the kids in The Blackboard Jungle. He was raised in a group home where they didn't care at all if you learned anything.

    Blackboard Jungle is also memorable for the use of a previously recorded song by Bill Haley and the Comets that sold a few records the year earlier, but didn't set the world on fire. Director Richard Brooks heard it in young Peter Ford's collection and decided it would be his theme. Rock Around the Clock became a rock and roll institution after The Blackboard Jungle was out in theaters.

    Blackboard Jungle also started another less fortunate trend. That of picking very obviously adult actors to play high school kids. A trend that has continued to this day with such shows as Beverly Hills 90210 carrying on the tradition. Capable players that they are and they certainly delivered fine performances, Sidney Poitier and Vic Morrow don't look like high school kids, especially not next to Rafael Campos who was in the correct age bracket when the film was being shot.

    Teacher burnout is also covered in Blackboard Jungle with Louis Calhern leading the pack of cynics Glenn Ford has as colleagues. In many ways Blackboard Jungle is the grandfather of a film like Stand and Deliver where Edward James Olmos is the dedicated math teacher of inner city kids a generation later. Other than ethnic, not too much difference between Richard Dadier and Jaime Escalante.

    Richard Brooks assembled and directed a cast that made a classic that's still agonizingly relevant today.
    7secondtake

    Rebel with a Cause

    Blackboard Jungle (1955)

    There is so much intensity and visual punch to this socially concerned schoolhouse narrative, it's hard to not overlook the pushiness of some of the plot and the blatant stereotyping of most of the characters. Glen Ford is, in fact, truly commanding here, and he becomes the movie. Most of the rest, really all the rest, are supporting roles, and not all of them do him credit. And this comes not from lack of talent, but from a script that has too many little agendas at work. Hey, but they are important and interesting agendas, so fear not. It's exciting going every step of the way.

    Even young Sydney Poitier, for all his charm and ease on screen, is forced into a role, as a reluctant but talented student, that makes him a two-dimensional, and his relationship with Ford is pushed on us at the expense of the others. Some of the other teachers are convincing in their own ways, most of all Louis Calhern as a grumpy and jaded older teacher who expects the worst and gets it. There are moments of high drama that work--mostly violence or the avoidance of violence--and there are moments too contrived and too foreshadowed to contribute very much. The female teacher is set up to tempt the determined Ford main character, and she plays out in expected ways.

    It might be a testament, actually, that the movie grabs you and won't let go even with these storytelling flaws. For one thing, it looks great (with photography by Russell Harlan) and is edited crisply, so technically it soars (and in a vivid widescreen black and white, not 4:3 like IMDb says). The director, Richard Brooks, clearly makes the most of the material. His career has left us a number of almost great movies, and this might be his greatest. It seems to have had the most impact in its time, sparking violence in the theaters where it was shown. And by using "Rock Around the Clock" it helped make Bill Halley and Comets and white rock and roll hugely popular.

    But as just a movie, on the screen, it is Ford who takes on the subtle turmoils going on in his character's head, and you read it in his face and his stiff body language, and you believe him.
    7krorie

    Was this movie really a shocker when released?

    A history professor once told me, "If you want to change history, become a historian." This statement might also apply to movie critics. I came of age (turned 13) when I saw this movie when it was first released in 1955. My buds and I liked the movie, not because it was a shocker, which it was not, but because it dealt fairly realistically with teenagers, much more so than say the old Andy Hardy series. To my knowledge no one was really shocked by this movie. There was no big hoopla by "concerned" citizens as there would be when Elia Kazan's "Baby Doll" played on the same screen a few years later. And "Rock Around The Clock" was not considered rock 'n' roll by most teens, only a pop hit along the lines of "Sh-boom." The first record actually considered rock 'n' roll by most teens was Chuck Berry's "Maybelline." When my buds and I first heard it on the radio, we stopped the car and listened intently to a new kind of teen music. That did not happen with anything Bill Haley and the Comets put on wax. Those who say "The Blackboard Jungle" was a shocker simply did not live through that period of history. Some of these same critics believe that the average family of the 50's was like the one portrayed on "Leave It To Beaver." I knew of no family in my neighborhood that lived like the Cleavers. We found "Rebel Without a Cause" and a somewhat neglected film "The Wild One" to be the ones that related to our rebellious side. "The Wild One," especially Marlon Brando's performance, was the standout film for us teens in those days. Another later Robert Mitchum flick, "Thunder Road," was also a movie that spoke to the teens of the period. Marlon Brando, James Dean, and Robert Mitchum were movie role models for many of us growing up in the turbulent 50's, not Glenn Ford or even Vic Morrow and Sidney Poitier.

    That's not to say that this movie is not worth seeing, for it is a good movie dealing in a somewhat no nonsense way with teaching rebellious and sometimes dangerous teens, who see nothing relevant in book learning and who don't want to be exposed to the higher levels of intellectual endeavors. How do you teach the unteachable? Still a challenge today in the American classroom.
    8jotix100

    Rock around the clock

    "Blackboard Jungle" marked a turn around in films coming from Hollywood. This was a film that dealt with a reality that movies had not dared to touch before in the way they always wanted to sugar coat every picture about teens in high school. The guys one sees here are the real thing, as though taken from any high school in the inner city of that time.

    The amazing thing this high school, at the center of the action, is not typical of any other schools in that one males attended and no females are to be seen around them. By making an old male high school, Richard Brooks updated Evan Hunter's novel to show the violent nature of most of those young men that are clearly from under privileged homes, perhaps, boys whose fathers had bolted and left their women to bring up the sons they didn't want to have anything with.

    The film is important in that it marked the arrival of a strong actor that would dominate the movies like no other one, Sidney Poitier. With his handsome looks, and his great screen presence, Mr. Poitier was instrumental in breaking into the main stream movies in ways others tried, but didn't make a dent. Perhaps it was in the cards that Hollywood began dealing with a reality they tried to ignore integrating their stories with Blacks that had taken a back seat to other, not so talented performers.

    The film works because of the strong performances by Glenn Ford, Vic Morrow and Sidney Poitier. Also, the theme song of the film, "Rock Around the Clock" went to become an anthem for viewers that filled the theaters for the thrill of hearing it play as the film started, putting them in the right frame of mind to accept what they were going to see.

    Richard Brooks is the one responsible for the adaptation and the inspired direction for the movie that still resonates because of its raw energy.
    yenlo

    None of these students will ever pitch for the Yankees.

    Certainly a classic American motion picture. Glenn Ford stars as a teacher who is proud of his profession and is dedicated to teaching others. He is assigned to an unruly inner city high school filled mostly with teen-age thugs. The general attitude of the schools staff is to just sit on the garbage can (referring to their student body) from year to year. Fords Richard Dadier character attempts to teach these penitentiary candidates is met with resistance led chiefly by the ultimate juvenile delinquent Artie West played masterfully by Vic Morrow.

    Well cast with a number of fine actors and actresses virtually all films that followed this one and dealt with unruly schools and students are born from this one. Sidney Poitier turns in a great performance as a student who has academic potential but is torn between his street ways and his desire to become educated and better himself. While watching this film it's hard to imagine any worse situation-taking place in a high school. Yet what has been happening in Americas high schools of recent makes the goings on in the classroom of Richard Dadier seem quite mild. A young Jamie Farr who would achieve fame as Klinger on the long running TV series MASH is cast as a simple minded student in the class of delinquents. None of whom will ever pitch for the Yankees by the way! After seeing this movie you might just say `Oh Daddy-O what a good film'

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Clare Boothe Luce, then U.S. Ambassador to Italy, prevented the film from being shown at the Venice Film Festival; and a Senate committee had decided that the film would not have beneficial effects on contemporary youth. Both incidents only served to increase publicity and ticket sales for the controversial movie.
    • Goofs
      In the garage scene, when Miller starts fixing the car, he says "nobody gives a hoot", but his lips indicates he really says "nobody gives a damn". The replacement of the profanity is made humorous by the director, who chose to play the sound effect of a car horn when the word "hoot" is uttered.
    • Quotes

      Richard Dadier: Now, pretty soon, you're gonna be reading in the newspapers want ads for jobs, apartments, something to buy. Advertising space is expensive so abbreviations are used. Now, write out the complete words to all the abbreviations in these problem ads. All right, get started.

      [Dadier notices Belazi coping anwsers from Morales paper]

      Richard Dadier: Belazi. Let's keep your eyes on your paper.

      Belazi: Me?

      Richard Dadier: Cheating won't help you learn those abbreviations, you know.

      Artie West: He won't look for no job. His old man owns a store.

      Belazi: Yeah, and I'm not gonna buy me me no Cadillac either.

      Artie West: No, It's cheaper to steal one. That's arithmetic for ya, teach.

      Richard Dadier: All right, Belazi. Bring me your paper up here.

      [Belazi gets up and hands over his paper to Dadier]

      Belazi: Five points off. What for?

      Richard Dadier: For having loose eyes.

      Richard Dadier: [Dadier notices that West is cheating also] West!

      Artie West: You talking to me, teach?

      Richard Dadier: Bring your paper up here West.

      Artie West: What for?

      Richard Dadier: I said bring your paper up here.

      Artie West: And I said , what for?

      Gregory W. Miller: Come on, Artie. Bring him the paper.

      Artie West: Now , look, you keep your rotten mouth out of this, black boy.

      [Miller stands up ready to pounce on West]

      Richard Dadier: Miller!... Hold it... All right. All right, Miller. It's all right. Now, bring your paper up here, West.

      [West crumbles the paper and throws it on the floor]

      Richard Dadier: All right, we're going down to see the principal.

      Artie West: We are? You gonna make me, Daddy-O? How'd you like to go to hell?

      Belazi: What's the matter, Daddy-O?

      Artie West: Yeah, how about it, teach? You got a big mouth. Tell me to do this, do that. Are you big enough to take me to the principal's office? Beacause that's what you're gonna have to do. Take me. So, come on! Take me! Come on!

      [Dadier approaches West and West pulls out a switchblade. This stops Dadier in his tracks and the rest of the class gets up and out of the way]

      Artie West: Come on. For a bright boy, you didn't learn nothing. Well, take me down. Come on. Step right up and taste a little of this , Daddy-O.

      Richard Dadier: Give me that knife, West.

      Artie West: Where do you want it? You want it in the belly? Or how about in the face, huh? Here it is. All you gotta do is take it. Come on, take it! Come on!

      Gregory W. Miller: Take it easy, chief. He's crazy, he's high, he's floating on Sneaky Pete wine.

      Pete V. Morales: He's gonna kill him.

    • Crazy credits
      "We, in the United States, are fortunate to have a school system that is a tribute to our communities and to our faith in American youth. Today we are concerned with juvenile delinquency -- its causes -- and its effects. We are especially concerned when this delinquency boils over into our schools. The scenes and incidents depicted here are fictional. However, we believe that public awareness is a first step toward a remedy for any problem. Is is in this spirit and with this faith that BLACKBOARD JUNGLE was produced."
    • Alternate versions
      The film was originally rejected in the UK for containing "unbridled, revolting hooliganism" and having a "damaging and harmful effect (on teenagers)". Following protests from the distributor, it was viewed again but there was an even split between examiners in favor of banning it again or cutting it for an X (16) certificate. After further meetings where the distributor claimed it had a sincere moral purpose, a cuts list was drawn up which removed around five minutes of footage. This included the following:
      • The foreword which absolved the US of blame regarding its realistic depiction - this was added specifically for foreign releases following the huge controversy it caused back home. It reads: "We, in the United States, are fortunate to have a school system that is a tribute to our communities and to our faith in American youth. Today we are concerned with juvenile delinquency -- its causes -- and its effects. We are especially concerned when this delinquency boils over into our schools. The scenes and incidents depicted here are fictional. However, we believe that public awareness is a first step toward a remedy for any problem. It is in this spirit and with this faith that BLACKBOARD JUNGLE was produced."
      • Male pupils leering at women.
      • A boy assaulting a female teacher.
      • Dadier being attacked.
      • Dadier being threatened by a knife-wielding pupil.
      • The planning and execution of a van robbery.
      • Dadier fighting back against a pupil.
      Despite the heated conflict involving the BBFC and mixed reviews, the release of this X-rated cut version passed without incident and very little public feedback. No councils who viewed it chose to ban it. In 1996, it was submitted for a video release and passed uncut with a 12 certificate.
    • Connections
      Edited into Heavy Petting (1989)
    • Soundtracks
      Rock Around the Clock
      Written by James E. Myers and Max Freedman

      Performed by Bill Haley and the Comets

      Courtesy of Decca Records, Inc.

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    • On what does Miller say Artie is high?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 23, 1955 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Semilla de maldad
    • Filming locations
      • El Segundo, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $1,168,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 41 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.75 : 1

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