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La porte s'ouvre

Original title: No Way Out
  • 1950
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
6.7K
YOUR RATING
La porte s'ouvre (1950)
Trailer for this epic drama
Play trailer2:36
1 Video
35 Photos
Film NoirCrimeDramaThriller

Two hoodlum brothers are brought into a hospital for gunshot wounds, and when one of them dies the other accuses their black doctor of murder.Two hoodlum brothers are brought into a hospital for gunshot wounds, and when one of them dies the other accuses their black doctor of murder.Two hoodlum brothers are brought into a hospital for gunshot wounds, and when one of them dies the other accuses their black doctor of murder.

  • Director
    • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
  • Writers
    • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
    • Lesser Samuels
    • Philip Yordan
  • Stars
    • Richard Widmark
    • Linda Darnell
    • Stephen McNally
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    6.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
    • Writers
      • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
      • Lesser Samuels
      • Philip Yordan
    • Stars
      • Richard Widmark
      • Linda Darnell
      • Stephen McNally
    • 89User reviews
    • 47Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    No Way Out (1950)
    Trailer 2:36
    No Way Out (1950)

    Photos35

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    Top cast86

    Edit
    Richard Widmark
    Richard Widmark
    • Ray Biddle
    Linda Darnell
    Linda Darnell
    • Edie Johnson
    Stephen McNally
    Stephen McNally
    • Dr. Dan Wharton
    Sidney Poitier
    Sidney Poitier
    • Dr. Luther Brooks
    Mildred Joanne Smith
    • Cora Brooks
    Harry Bellaver
    Harry Bellaver
    • George Biddle
    Stanley Ridges
    Stanley Ridges
    • Dr. Sam Moreland
    Dots Johnson
    Dots Johnson
    • Lefty Jones
    Robert Adler
    Robert Adler
    • Louie - Assistant Deputy in Hospital Prison Ward
    • (uncredited)
    Ernest Anderson
    Ernest Anderson
    • School Teacher
    • (uncredited)
    Jessie Arnold
    Jessie Arnold
    • Woman
    • (uncredited)
    Eleanor Audley
    Eleanor Audley
    • Wife
    • (uncredited)
    Polly Bailey
    • Woman
    • (uncredited)
    Betsy Blair
    Betsy Blair
    • Telephone Operator
    • (uncredited)
    Eileen Boyer
    • Telephone Operator
    • (uncredited)
    Harry Carter
    Harry Carter
    • Orderly
    • (uncredited)
    Ken Christy
    Ken Christy
    • Officer Ed Kowlaski
    • (uncredited)
    Charles J. Conrad
    • Doctor
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
    • Writers
      • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
      • Lesser Samuels
      • Philip Yordan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews89

    7.46.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8dragoneyez01

    Intelligent, Groundbreaking Film

    After watching this film on television a couple weeks ago (TMC is the best), I was surprised how obscure 'No Way Out' really is. However, I wasn't exactly surprised.

    The film follows Dr. Brooks (Sidney Poitier), an ER doctor whose first real-world experience is as intern in the prison ward of a New York hospital. While on duty, the brothers Biddle (the older of which is played by Richard Widmark), come in following a confrontation with the police. Both suffer from superficial injuries, but the younger brother's health is declining rapidly due to what Brooks diagnoses as a brain tumor. The kid dies while Brooks is operating, feet away from his brother. The racist Ray Biddle soon accuses Brooks of murder, but won't allow an autopsy to be conducted on his brother to determine the cause of death.

    Poitier turns in a great performance as the hard-working young doctor, who is debased by the hollow accusations of a bigot. They dig at his core and bring up insecurities that would be common to anyone in the medical field, but are aggravated by the pure hatred of Widmark's equally well-played character.

    While the script borders on stereotypes at times, you have to remember that these stereotypes were very real during the time it was written. The writer does a fantastic job of adding depth, personality, beyond the paper figures. Brooks is a practical man, who supports his family and tries to not let the circumstances bring him down. Behind the veneer of hatred, Biddle is a deeply insecure and misguided man who has let circumstance blacken his core. Mankiewicz and Samuels do an amazing job at bringing life to a situation that was taboo for the time.

    Aside from the competent acting and well-executed script, the film featured a moving and well-choreographed race riot that fully captures the raw hatred that can surface between groups of people who face the same everyday problems and circumstances, but are torn by one difference (color, or creed, or religion).

    This is definitely a film well worth seeing. For its time, the movie was groundbreaking for its portrayal of both racists and their victims. While today the movie may seem tame, it undoubtedly struck some sensitive nerves during its release. The film deserves to be more widely known, if only for its content.
    Ripshin

    Wow, what a knockout

    This film really surprised me, as I wasn't expecting something so raw and tense from 1950. The leads are excellent - nobody chews the scenery, as would be expected. Darnell is particularly effective. Honestly, being the cynical person I am, I never would have expected such an excellent film.

    How this made it past the Code, I'll never know. The language and drama are intense. 1950?????? Amazing. What a pleasure to see Ossie in an early role...he's already missed.

    Frankly, I rarely recommend a film. What a great experience....check this flick out.
    manuel-pestalozzi

    Refreshingly uncool - Poitier and Widmark at their very best!

    I watched this film soon after having seen the dreadfully stupid (but almost universally praised) American History X. The comparison does not make you very optimistic as far as the development of movies with a social message is concerned.

    No Way Out is a very good story about racism - maybe the best ever told on screen. It is mainly set in a hospital, where black and white doctors and nurses - among other things - patch up people who bashed each other's heads in in race riots. Sidney Poitier is a very young, upwardly mobile doctor with high ethic standards, Richard Widmark a nasty, racist piece of "white trash" from Beaver Canal who accuses the black doctor of having killed his brother while under his care. This sounds pretty plain, but the screenplay succeeds in giving the characters real personal traits, and the actors fully live up to their task.

    I have never seen Sidney Poitier better than here - and this apparently was his first screen appearance! The young doctor is, on the one hand, angry because of the racially motivated humiliations he has to endure. On the other hand, the accusations of the white bigot really shake him badly. He is having serious doubts about his abilities as a doctor because of it, although he is sure he did the right thing. In my opinion it was very wise to introduce these self doubts which are not race related. It makes of Poitier's character a well intentioned conscientious individual many people without regard of race (or gender or religion or whatever) can relate to.

    Richard Widmark as the black doctor's racist adversary gives an equally brilliant performance. We see him here at his slimiest, meanest. He really is pure hate - yet even his character is more than a stereotype. His hate is propelled by an encompassing self pity which is really nauseating! This becomes most evident in the dramatic final scene. "Little Black Simba!", he shouts again and again to the black doctor like a moron, and the stupid taunting gets more and more pathetic. Then, badly wounded, he dissolves into a whimpering bundle and the viewer comes to the conclusion that the worst punishment for that creature consists in just staying alive!

    It is my opinion that the ever more persistent culture of coolness will not make the world a better or more desirable place to live in. Therefore I really was delighted to see that No Way Out is refreshingly uncool. It addresses social and philosophical issues in a down to earth way. Unforgettable to me is the conversation between the girl from Beaver Canal, the racist's brother's former wife, and the black servant of a white doctor, the boss of Sidney Poitier's character. The servant tells the girl that in her free time she likes to invite friends and cook elaborate meals for them. That is a lot of work you're doing in your free time, the girl remarks. To this the servant says: I like doing it, and it makes me feel I am somebody. Outdated? Corny? What do I care! The statement is still valid.

    It should be noted that No Way Out is not a story of different groups of people pitted against each other but a story about individuals who have to find themselves in society and decide what stand they are taking towards civilisation. The movie states that civilisation and civilised behavior is not something you can take for granted and that it depends on the choice of every single human being.
    8evanston_dad

    Shocking

    I didn't think it was possible for me to be shocked by a film about racism released in 1950, but I was wrong.

    In "No Way Out," Richard Widmark plays an absolutely vile racist who spews the most hateful language I've heard in a narrative film in a long time. I found myself actually wincing every time he used some sort of racial epithet, which is frequently. His target is Sidney Poitier, the doctor who he thinks killed his brother while pretending to try to save his life. This specific story of racism plays out against the backdrop of a larger story of racist violence that occurs between a black neighborhood and the white trash enclave that has sworn vengeance against it.

    This is a harsh, angry, bitter pill of a movie, and deserves to be rediscovered in our current climate of renewed racial outrage. I'd like to think Widmark's character is a bit of a caricature, but after hearing and seeing some of the people living in our country today, it would seem not. Poitier plays his role the way he played every role he was ever in, while Linda Darnell, as Widmark's former sister-in-law, creates the film's most fascinating character, a woman whose actual experience with black people doesn't jive with what she's been taught to think about them.

    What I liked most about "No Way Out" was the way it refuses to condescend to black people and portray them all as too good to be true noble sufferers, the way other movies from the time period do. The scenes set in Poitier's household portray them as just normal people, painfully aware at all times of the burden of being black in America, but otherwise just wanting to go about their lives. The character of a black maid who works for a white doctor was one of my favorites in the movie. She has a warm employee/employer relationship with the doctor, and he even treats her at times like one of the family, but a word or glance she throws out here and there make clear that she never forgets the difference between them, even if he thinks he does.

    "No Way Out" brought Joseph L. Mankiewicz and Lesser Samuels an Oscar nomination for Best Story and Screenplay in the same year that Mankiewicz won the awards for Best Director and Best Screenplay for "All About Eve." Good year for him.

    Grade: A
    8bkoganbing

    Taking On a Life Of It's Own

    Sidney Poitier made his screen debut in No Way Out about a young black doctor accused of 'murder' by Richard Widmark. Seeing the two of them you would hardly believe that they in fact became lifelong friends in real life.

    The Biddle Brothers, a pair of white trash rednecks, from a neighborhood called Beaver Canal in a large American city, get brought into an emergency room with gunshot wounds. They tried to stick up a gas station and got caught. Sidney Poitier is a young intern on duty and he suspects something more wrong with the younger Biddle's condition. While doing a spinal tap his patient dies and the rabidly racist Widmark playing the older Biddle, accuses Poitier of murder.

    No matter how off the wall his charges are, some people listen and some have to investigate. In Poitier's corner is his supervisor Stephen McNally. But Widmark manages to spread his poison and it results in a race riot.

    Widmark is something else. Down to this day it's so easy for some to believe they're in a bad situation because someone else or some group else is somehow given preferential treatment. Widmark believes this and he lives in an area where it's taken as gospel. We've rarely seen a portrayal of hate as vivid as this on screen.

    Hate whether it's individually or group directed can sometime take on a life of its own. Even when he's confronted with the truth about the ludicrousness of his charges, Widmark still won't let go. It's what's most frightening in No Way Out.

    Linda Darnell is excellent also as the former wife of Widmark's brother. She buys into Widmark's hate at first, but she shows a capacity to learn. It can be found in most of us or there would be no hope for the human race.

    Joseph Mankiewicz directed and wrote No Way Out. He was at the height of his career winning two best Director Oscars back to back for A Letter to Three Wives and All About Eve. He probably didn't win anything for No Way Out because the Academy voters didn't want to give him everything at that time. He was nominated for Best Screenplay.

    Sixty Six years later No Way Out is still a powerful portrayal of racism and its ugly effects on the soul.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Richard Widmark was apparently very uncomfortable with some of the racist comments his character, Ray Biddle, made, especially given his friendship with Sidney Poitier. As a result, after some of the takes involving particularly venomous remarks, Widmark apologized to Poitier.
    • Goofs
      The Deputy asks Dr. Brooks if he's going to need any instruments, and he replies, "You keep them locked up." The deputy's answer is, "This ain't no maternity ward, doc" implies they can be used by any criminal as weapon against the staff. However, they are not locked in a secure cabinet in a nondescript room; they're locked in cases with glass doors that line the hallway of the ward - cases that could easily be smashed, giving access to instruments that could be used as weapons.
    • Quotes

      Edie Johnson: It's none of your business what I do. It's a respectable job and I pay my own way.

      Dr. Dan Wharton: And you are not living in Beaver Canal anymore?

      Edie Johnson: Yeah I've come up in the world. I used to live in a sewer and now I live in a swamp. All those babes do it in the movies. By now I ought to be married to the governor and paying blackmail so he don't find out I once lived in Beaver Canal.

    • Crazy credits
      The 20th Century Fox logo appears without its familiar fanfare. Instead, the film's music theme begins when the logo is displayed.
    • Connections
      Featured in 20th Century-Fox: The First 50 Years (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Don't Get Around Much Anymore
      (uncredited)

      Music by Duke Ellington

      Lyrics by Bob Russell

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    FAQ17

    • How long is No Way Out?Powered by Alexa
    • Although never mentioned, was the locale or city in which No Way Out took place ever indicated?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 22, 1951 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • American Sign Language
    • Also known as
      • No Way Out
    • Filming locations
      • 20th Century Fox Studios - 10201 Pico Blvd., Century City, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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