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Body and Soul

United States

1947

104 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
English
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
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DIR Robert Rossen

PROD Bob Roberts

SCR Abraham Polonsky

DP James Wong Howe

CAST John Garfield, Lilli Palmer, Hazel Brooks, Anne Revere, William Conrad

ED Robert Parrish

PROD DES Nathan Juran

MUSIC Hugo Friedhofer

SOUND Frank Webster

Synopsis

Charley Davis wins an amateur boxing match and is taken on by promoter, Quinn. Charley’s mother doesn’t want him to fight, but when Charley’s father is accidentally killed, Charley sets up a fight for money. His career blooms as he wins fight after fight, but soon an unethical promoter named Roberts begins to show an interest in Charley, and Charley finds himself faced with increasingly difficult choices. —IMDb

Director

Original

Robert Rossen

Robert Rossen (March 16, 1908 – February 18, 1966) was an American screenwriter, film director, and producer. Initially writing and directing for the stage, Rossen moved to Hollywood in 1937. His film career spanned almost three decades. Rossen was twice nominated for an Academy Award for best director and once for best adapted screenplay, winning the Golden Globe Award for Best Director for All the King’s Men (1949).Rossen was twice called before the House Un-American Activities Committee, in 1951 and in 1953. He exercised his Fifth Amendment rights at his first appearance, refusing to state whether he had ever been a Communist. As a result he was unofficially blacklisted by the Hollywood studio bosses. At his second appearance he named 57 people as current or former Communists and was removed from the unofficial blacklist. He returned to filmmaking, although his last film so disillusioned him that he did not work for the last three years of his life.

Early life and career… read more

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jsaez

3May12

John Garfield's got plenty of both, and he's brilliant here.

Johnny DuBiel

15Mar12

John Garfield was an underrated actor, and this is his greatest performance. Where most boxing movies use the sport to represent redemption, Rossen's film presents it as a corruptive force (the redemption comes from a personal choice at the end, not through the act of boxing itself). A searing indictment of unchecked greed and what can happen when people abandon integrity for personal gains.

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Dave

25May11

One of the finest boxing movies ever made. I don't know if John Garfield was ever better than as Charley Davis (perhaps in The Postman Always Rings Twice, but it's close). This is a great film...it's amazing to think how movies like this were turned out so regularly by the studios of the era.

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Daniel S.

1Mar10

The rise of a Jewish NYC boxer who will be soon confronted with the power of money and corruption. An indispensable masterpiece.

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Collective masterpiece

By Musycks on May 13, 2012

‘Body and Soul’ is one of the richest cinematic experiences in the Film Noir genre, and rather than being seen as the director’s auteurist vision it should be seen as a masterpiece of collective effort…  read review

CLASSIC FILM NOIR: "Body and Soul"

By Bobby Wise on March 10, 2010

“Body and Soul,” directed by Robert Rossen, written by Abraham Polonsky, and shot by James Wong Howe, is a boxing noir (Robert Aldrich served as assistant director on this film, and he would later…  read review

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