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The Front
Directed by
Martin Ritt
1976
1h 35m
PG
Comedy
,
Drama
7.3
69%
74%
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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.
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+4 more
Cast of The Front
Woody Allen
Howard Price
Zero Mostel
Hecky Brown
Herschel Bernardi
Philip Sussman
Michael Murphy
Alfred Miller
Andrea Marcovicci
Florence Barrett
Remak Ramsay
Hennessey
Marvin Lichterman
Myer Prince
Lloyd Gough
Delaney
David Margulies
Phelps
Joshua Shelley
Sam
Norman Rose
Howard's Attorney
Charles Kimbrough
Committee Counselor
Josef Sommer
Committee Chairman
Danny Aiello
Danny LaGattuta
Georgann Johnson
T.V. Interviewer
Scott McKay
Hampton
David Clarke
Hubert Jackson
I.W. Klein
Bank Teller
John Bentley
Bartender
Julie Garfield
Margo
Murray Moston
Boss
MacIntyre Dixon
Harry Stone
Rudolph Willrich
Tailman
Burt Britton
Bookseller
Albert M. Ottenheimer
School Principal
William Bogert
Parks
Joey Faye
Waiter
Marilyn Sokol
Sandy
John J. Slater
T.V. Director
Renee Paris
Girl in Hotel Lobby
Gino Gennaro
Stage Hand
Joan Porter
Myer's Wife
Andrew Bernstein
Alfred's Child
Jacob Bernstein
Alfred's Child
Matthew Tobin
Man at Party
Marilyn Persky
Man at Party's Date
Sam McMurray
Young Man at Party
Joe Jamrog
FBI Man
Michael Miller
FBI Man
Lucy Lee Flippin
Nurse
Jack Davidson
Congressman
Donald Symington
Congressman
Pat McNamara
Federal Marshal
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Self (archive footage)
Mamie Eisenhower
Self (archive footage)
Douglas MacArthur
Self (archive footage)
Harry S. Truman
Self (archive footage)
Billie Perkins
Waitress (uncredited)
Frankie Verroca
Hotel Bellman (uncredited)
Carson Grant
Eddy Waiter (uncredited)
The Front Reviews
EmanuelLevy.Com
Emanuel Levy
As directed by Martin Ritt and played by Woody Allen, this is a well intentioned but oversimplified tale, which is mostly useful as an historical reminder of a shameful chapter in Hollywood's blacklisting era
Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews
Dennis Schwartz
Although made by those who were punished by being blacklisted during that period, the film disappoints by being so politically mild.
New York Times
Vincent Canby
It recreates the awful noise of ignorance that can still be heard.
eFilmCritic.com
Scott Weinberg
The Front may not be all you need to know about the 1950's blacklist tragedy, but it's certainly one of the finest films ever made on the subject.
DVDJournal.com
Mark Bourne
Any reminder of the tribulations undergone by the blacklistees serves a useful and eye-opening purpose, but good intentions and a sense of martyrdom don't by themselves fill the glass.
Slant Magazine
Eric Henderson
Bernstein smartly suggests how capitalism actually benefited from the oppression of suspected communists.
Chicago Sun-Times
Roger Ebert
The tragedy implied by this character tells us what we need to know about the blacklist's effect on people's lives; the rest of the movie adds almost nothing else.
Reel Film Reviews
David Nusair
...an effective (and affecting) endeavor.
San Francisco Examiner
Jeffrey M. Anderson
A well-balanced story of McCarthyism.
Chicago Reader
Dave Kehr
Ritt's direction is all sweaty close-ups and mismatched shots.
Philadelphia Gay News
Michael Mascioli
The Front lacks a good script and seems to have trouble convincing us whether or not all this really happened.
Bay Area Reporter
Donald McLean
Funny as only Allen can be, the script by Walter Bernstein and the direction by Martin Ritt delve far deeper and give us a penetrating look via black comedy at a time of mass hysteria.
Los Angeles Free Press
Ruth Batchelor
It's human and more terrifying than any horror film because it could happen again.
Spirituality & Practice
Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat
Proves that no one can escape the long and intrusive arm of politics and evade involvement
New Yorker
Pauline Kael
Damned if the subject didn't get the better of Berstein. He didn't develop the comic potential of his idea; instead, almost as if by reflex, he has written one of those scripts about how the common man must become involved, must learn what he stands for.
TV Guide
A pretty sluggish movie.
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