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Le prête-nom

Original title: The Front
  • 1976
  • PG
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
10K
YOUR RATING
Woody Allen in Le prête-nom (1976)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer1:54
1 Video
44 Photos
Political DramaDrama

In 1953, a cashier poses as a writer for blacklisted talents to submit their work through, but the injustice around him pushes him to take a stand.In 1953, a cashier poses as a writer for blacklisted talents to submit their work through, but the injustice around him pushes him to take a stand.In 1953, a cashier poses as a writer for blacklisted talents to submit their work through, but the injustice around him pushes him to take a stand.

  • Director
    • Martin Ritt
  • Writer
    • Walter Bernstein
  • Stars
    • Woody Allen
    • Zero Mostel
    • Herschel Bernardi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    10K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Martin Ritt
    • Writer
      • Walter Bernstein
    • Stars
      • Woody Allen
      • Zero Mostel
      • Herschel Bernardi
    • 81User reviews
    • 66Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 5 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:54
    Official Trailer

    Photos44

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    Top cast65

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    Woody Allen
    Woody Allen
    • Howard Prince
    Zero Mostel
    Zero Mostel
    • Hecky Brown
    Herschel Bernardi
    Herschel Bernardi
    • Phil Sussman
    Michael Murphy
    Michael Murphy
    • Alfred Miller
    Andrea Marcovicci
    Andrea Marcovicci
    • Florence Barrett
    Remak Ramsay
    • Francis Hennessey
    Marvin Lichterman
    • Myer Prince
    Lloyd Gough
    Lloyd Gough
    • Herbert Delaney
    David Margulies
    David Margulies
    • William Phelps
    Joshua Shelley
    • Sam
    Norman Rose
    Norman Rose
    • Howard's Attorney
    Charles Kimbrough
    Charles Kimbrough
    • Committee Counselor
    Josef Sommer
    Josef Sommer
    • Committee Chairman
    • (as M. Josef Sommer)
    Danny Aiello
    Danny Aiello
    • Danny LaGattuta
    Georgann Johnson
    Georgann Johnson
    • T.V. Interviewer
    Scott McKay
    Scott McKay
    • Tom Hampton
    David Clarke
    David Clarke
    • Hubert Jackson
    I.W. Klein
    • Bank Teller
    • (as I. W. Klein)
    • Director
      • Martin Ritt
    • Writer
      • Walter Bernstein
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews81

    7.310K
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    Featured reviews

    8The_Void

    Classic drama, rife with paranoia

    I don't profess to know anything more about 'the McCarthy era' than any other non-American that wasn't around in the fifties, but this film serves as both a great slice of entertainment; and something of a history lesson. The film is said to be a comedy, although it would seem to be played out more for the drama side as aside from Woody Allen's usual neurotic quips; there aren't actually any jokes in the film. That certainly doesn't harm it, however, as Martin Ritt's film has more than enough in reserve, as the story is interesting enough on it's own; and themes of 'the witch-hunt', as well as the idea of being guilty until proved innocent shine through. The story follows Howard Prince (Woody Allen) a cashier who, when asked by his friend who is on the 'blacklist', poses as a TV writer so the blacklisted writer can still work. The film takes place in the time when paranoia over communism was rife in America, and anyone that is suspected of associating with communists was no longer allowed to work. The scam goes on, but the more Prince is dragged into it, the harder it is for him to get out.

    Like I say, I didn't know much about the era before going into the film; but I'm sure it's an important part of American history; if only for the fact that it's inspired a lot of great films, including the great original version of 'Invasion of the Body Snatchers'. I've been a big fan of Woody Allen ever since I first saw one of his films, and his performance here takes in all the best elements of his persona. The character; a talentless man garnering praise for someone else's work, suits Allen's personality like a glove, as the paranoid actor gets to show us how neurotic he can be. Support comes by way of the likes of Zero Mostel, Michael Murphy and Andrea Marcovicci; and all give nice supporting performances. Director Michael Ritt ensures that the themes of the story are always rife, as the film presents a great sense of foreboding, and scenes such as the one that see an innocent writer told that he can't be got off the hook because he hasn't done anything help to ensure this. On the whole, The Front is a great classic film, and sees Allen in one of his best roles.
    otter

    Powerful and affecting film about the Blacklist.

    It's the 1950's, and Senator Joseph McCarthy has whipped America and especially Hollywood into an anti-communitst frenzy. Anyone who ever had ties to the left wing is persecuted and denied employment. Which means a big opportunity for Woody Allen (acting only, he didn't write or direct) to make a few bucks selling scripts written by blacklisted writers, being the "Front" of the title. Little does he know what he's getting into. Woody's masquerade starts as a favor to a pal in trouble and a chance for easy money, but it quickly snowballs into serious involvement with some very ugly things.

    Great script and excellent performances by Allen and Andrea Marcovicci, but the film is lifted to terrifying heights by the magnificent Zero Mostel as a blacklisted comic. Every indignity and loss he faces is reflected in his wonderful face with a terrible sweet-natured dignity, you can see the weariness and hopelessness growing in his eyes scene by scene. His tragedy changes the lives of all the other characters, and makes the film the fine thing that it is.

    There's a lot of wit and black humor in this film, but overall it's a very affecting tragedy, one with a fine, strong, yet hopeful ending.
    9preppy-3

    Not funny but a great movie

    Fictionalized look about the 1950s blacklist. Woody Allen (in a rare dramatic role) plays a man who sells the scripts of blacklisted writers under his name. He splits the proceeds with the writers. He's apolitical--he's just doing it to help friends. Then he starts to see how horrible the blacklist is and how it's destroying people and careers. He wants to take a stand--but how can he?

    This is often mentioned as being a comedy. In that respect, it fails. There was nothing funny about the blacklist. But, as a drama with light moments, it works. It moves quickly, is well written (by a former blacklisted writer), well-directed (by another blacklisted man) and stars two blacklisted actors! Basically these people know what happened so that actually helps. Allen is surprisingly good in a dramatic role--who knew he had it in him? He tones down all his mannerisms and delivers a very controlled, nicely done job. Andrea Marcovicci (whatever happened to her?) is also good playing his girlfriend. And Michael Murphy is excellent as one of the blacklisted writers. And Zero Mostel is just superb as a blacklisted actor. The pain and confusion shows plainly on his face. This was also one of his last films---he died 2 years later of a heart attack. Also look for Danny Aiello in a small role. The 1950s era is captured beautifully, the film looks great and they have Frank Sinatra singing (ironically) "Young at Heart" at the beginning and end of the film. Great final line too.

    But I'm only giving this a 9. The script is good but a little too simplistic and painted in very broad strokes. The bad guys are evil to the core and all the blacklisted people are shown as being victims. That's NOT how it was. They were probably writing down to appeal to a mainstream audience but went too far.

    This bombed badly back in 1976--it's easy to see why. The subject matter is too strong for most audiences and the movie company (I heard) was completely at a loss on how to deal with this. Just a year before an entire blacklisting sequence was cut from "The Way We Were". Sadly Hollywood was STILL touchy about this subject in the 1970s.

    This should be seen by more people--it really deserves to be discovered. A lot of people don't even KNOW about the blacklist. Well worth seeing.
    Gyran

    A funny and savage indictment of a crazy era

    This film is directed by Martin Ritt from a screenplay by Walter Bernstein. Both director and writer, along with several members of the cast, were blacklisted during the 1950s. Woody Allen stars as Howard Prince a good-for-nothing restaurant cashier and part-time bookmaker. At the start of this film, Allen has the total schmuck persona that he used in many of his earlier films but as the film progresses he gradually develops a conscience until the ‘happy' ending when he performs an honorable act and is led away to prison. Ritt and Bernstein are highlighting the idiocy of the blacklist by having as their hero the money-grabbing, self-serving Prince. Eventually, even he cannot stomach what is going on in the name of decency and freedom. The film is darkly humorous and chilling in its depiction of an era when the owner of a small grocery store could dictate to a national network who it could and could not employ. At one point Prince has to rewrite a script about the holocaust because the programme sponsor is a gas company.

    The film is a real achievement being both funny and a savage indictment of a crazy era, told with feeling by people who lived through it and suffered under it. The only misjudged performance is Zero Mostel's maudlin comedian. Michael Murphy turns up again as he does in many of Allen's early films. Andrea Marcovicci is effective as the beautiful and cerebral script editor who falls for Prince. Prince agonises over whether she loves the man or the artist, surely the inspiration for Allen's own exploration of the same theme in Bullets over Broadway nearly 20 years later.
    8blanche-2

    A bookie/cashier becomes involved in the '50s Red Scare

    Woody Allen is "The Front" for blacklisted television writers in the 1950s in a film also starring Zero Mostel, Herschel Bernardi, Andrea Marcovicci, and Michael Murphy. Several of the film's participants - director Ritt, writer Bernstein, actors Bernardi and Mostel, were themselves blacklisted.

    Woody's character, Howard Prince, has moments of humor, but "The Front" is a drama, and a very good one. Prince agrees to front for a writer-friend and later takes on other blacklisted writers for money. Then comes the day that Prince himself is subpoenaed by the committee, and he has to make a decision about where he stands.

    Along the way, Howard falls in love with a principled woman, Marcovicci, who becomes disgusted with the blacklist and quits her television job, and a pathetic comedian, Zero Mostel, who claims to have marched in a May Day parade and subscribed to a communist newspaper because he had a crush on a girl. Then he watches his career shrivel up.

    I grew up in the '50s and remember the Red Scare very well, as in school we were always told that the Communists were coming. In Hollywood and Washington, it was believed that the Communists were here infiltrating our government, films, and television. Whether it was true or not is a separate issue from the persecution and hysteria that took place. Actress Lee Grant, for instance, was blacklisted because she went to a funeral of someone who had been accused of being a Communist. John Garfield, Kim Hunter, Gale Sondergaard, Mady Christians, Larry Parks - just a few of the actors blacklisted. There are many examples of people whose careers and lives were ruined because they had once attended a meeting to see what this political ideology was all about, or had a friend who was a Communist. Land of the free indeed.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Woody Allen once said of this film: "From the beginning, I had enormous reservations about doing a film which I had not written and over which I would have no directorial control. The reason I did Le prête-nom (1976) was that the subject was worthwhile. Martin Ritt and Walter Bernstein lived through the blacklist and survived it with dignity, so I didn't mind deferring to their judgment."
    • Goofs
      The story takes place in 1953, but there isn't a male cast member in the film with a 1950s haircut. 1970s sideburns are on most, and heavy mustaches are seen on several.
    • Quotes

      Howard Prince: Swimming's not a sport, swimming's what you do so that you shouldn't drown.

    • Crazy credits
      The beginning of the end credits lists the people involved with the movie who were blacklisted and the year of their blacklist. They are:
      • Producer/Director Martin Ritt (1951)
      • Writer Walter Bernstein (1950)
      • Actor Zero Mostel (1950)
      • Actor Herschel Bernardi (1953)
      • Actor Lloyd Gough (1952)
      • Actor Joshua Shelley (1952)
    • Connections
      Featured in The Making of 'The Front' (1976)
    • Soundtracks
      Young at Heart
      Sung by Frank Sinatra

      Music by Johnny Richards

      Lyrics by Carolyn Leigh

      Arranged and Conducted by Nelson Riddle (uncredited)

      [Played over both the opening and end credits]

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 26, 1977 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Front
    • Filming locations
      • Radio City Music Hall - 1260 6th Avenue, Rockefeller Center, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Devon/Persky-Bright
      • Jack Rollins & Charles H. Joffe Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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