Knock on Any Door

1949 "It will shock you but it will hold you spellbound to the end!"
6.6| 1h40m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 22 February 1949 Released
Producted By: Columbia Pictures
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

An attorney defends a hoodlum of murder, using the oppressiveness of the slums to appeal to the court.

Genre

Drama, Crime

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Director

Nicholas Ray

Production Companies

Columbia Pictures

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Knock on Any Door Audience Reviews

Scanialara You won't be disappointed!
Sexyloutak Absolutely the worst movie.
Chirphymium It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional
Philippa All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.
ellenirishellen-62962 If not for the inspired casting of George Macready as DA Kerman,I'd give this no more than 5/10.He's just absolutely smoking as the prosecutor.And if he'd been prosecutor in To Kill A Mockingbird,just imagine how that would've been.Pretty Boy Romano is a poor excuse for a man,and Morton,his atty wastes his time trying to get him off murdering a cop.He was given every opportunity to straighten up and fly right,but as usual,the world owed him an apology for his tough life.He seemed to come from an okay family,but he was bound to associate with the wrong type.Morton was his equal in youth,and you can imagine the kind of youth Atty Kerman had in comparison to Morton,but the two were worthy opponents,the difference being that the law was right,and no matter what Morton argued in Romano's defense,it was a lost cause.This really was Macready's film!
Edgar Allan Pooh . . . This question from sociopath Nick "Pretty Boy" Romano is the crux of KNOCK ON ANY DOOR. If you paraphrase what Nick's defense lawyer, "Andrew Morton" (Humphrey Bogart) says to the judge before Nick is sentenced to fry on an upcoming "Fri-day" (you can't make this stuff up!), it sounds like this: America's treatment of Her sociopaths is inhumane. Nick says several times that all he really wants to do is to "die young, and leave a pretty corpse." Anyone familiar with the Ethel Rosenberg case knows that electrocution frequently turns the victim into smoldering meat, which is not only NOT pretty, but not very appetizing, either. KNOCK ON ANY DOOR makes it clear that Nick has very little fun terrorizing all the local business and automobile owners with his constant armed thefts. Driving his wife to suicide is very hard on him. Killing his first cop gives Nick the jitters. Therefore, counselor Morton demands that all high school dropouts and first-time felons be tested while they're youths (still "pretty," and Un-fried) to see if they're sociopaths. If they are, Society owes it to them to provide a fatal overdose of something that will allow them to rest easy, "die young, and leave a pretty corpse" WITHOUT going through the trauma of leading a life of crime, followed by 20 years on Death Row, and public burning in the electric chair (or whatever the flavor of the month is on Death Row). After all, as Nick says here, they "didn't ask to get born."
Martin Teller As in THEY LIVE BY NIGHT and later REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE, Nicholas Ray explores the life of a troubled youth, driven by fate and circumstance to exist outside societal rules. In this case, John Derek is a fella from the slums, being defended by attorney Humphrey Bogart for the murder of a policeman. The film uses a series of flashbacks to reveal the developing relationship between the two as Bogart tries to reform the boy but his efforts are thwarted by the cold, unfeeling world around them. Even as a bleeding heart liberal, I found the moralizing a bit much, especially in Bogart's pleas to the jury. However, the performances are excellent and the film has a sensitive, poetic rhythm to it. The stylish camera-work by Burnett Guffey (one of the greats) maintains the noir vibe, with some gorgeous sequences. Also, the third act is a courtroom drama that manages to avoid a lot of the predictable tropes. Perhaps too earnest and a tad too slow, but a sorrowful and often beautiful movie.
vincentlynch-moonoi I think this is a fine movie, with a tremendous performance by Humphrey Bogart.A lawyer -- Bogart -- defends Nick Romano (John Derek), a good boy that turned into a juvenile delinquent when his childhood went bad when his father died...in part due to his lawyer's negligence (Bogart). The older Nick got, the more of a thug he became, although for a while, after he married a sweet girl, it seemed as if things were turning around for him. Eventually, Nick goes on trial for viciously killing a policeman. Bogart's legal strategy is to argue that the slums bred Nick into a criminal. Bogart has a field day in the courtroom scenes...one his strongest performances...in a film produced by his own production company.Reviewer Bosley Crowther called the film "a pretentious social melodrama". Well, it is a social melodrama...a rather liberal one, though I'm not sure why Crowther called it "pretentious".While Bogart's performance is dominant, John Derek's debut is very strong. Unfortunately, I'm not sure Derek ever lived up to this early promise. As he was nicknamed in this film, he was a pretty boy, and as Bogart reportedly told him, that would not be enough.A fine film that might belong on your DVD shelf.