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Rebel
Without a Cause (1955)
In director Nicholas Ray's seminal,
classic, melodramatic "Romeo and Juliet' tale - it was mostly a story of rebellion and angst in
the life of an unsettled, often-uprooted, teenaged, new-kid-in-town
- over a 24-30 hour period.
It was the second of iconic anti-hero James
Dean's three career films and the best archetypal 50s film of its kind
regarding the generation gap, troubled and confused 50s youth and
juvenile delinquency. Other contemporary films included The
Wild One (1954) and The
Blackboard Jungle (1955).
- in the opening sequence set in the lobby
of a Los Angeles police station late at night, the three main teenaged
characters (all alienated, outcast and misfit youth who lacked
a solid male or 'father' role model) crossed paths and were introduced:
troublemaker Jim Stark (James Dean) had been arrested for public
drunkenness after being found lying on a sidewalk curb with a wind-up
toy monkey next to him; pretty but unloved 16 year-old Judy (Natalie
Wood) in a bright-red outfit with matching red lipstick had been
cited for curfew violation after running away from home to make
her father notice her; and emotionally-disturbed, anguished 'orphan'
John "Plato"
Crawford (Sal Mineo) who had been abandoned by his neglectful and
irresponsible parents and was being cared for by the family's black
housekeeper-maid (Marietta Canty), and had recently killed a litter
of puppies [Note: Plato's character was considered to be
one of the earliest and more blatant portrayals of a troubled gay
teen on film, although semi-disguised due to the Hays film code at
the time. The fate of the puppies tied Plato's situation to
how puppies are ultimately abandoned by their mother and
never know their father.]
- Judy delivered a "dirty tramp" speech
to patient, sympathetic juvenile-offenders officer Ray Fremick
(Edward C. Platt) about her father's cruelty when she dressed up
and wore lipstick, and he resisted and reproached her
grown-up maturity: "He
must hate me. He hates me....I don't think, I know. He looks at
me like I was the ugliest thing in the world. He doesn't like my
friends. He doesn't like one thing about me. He called me - he
called me a dirty tramp, my own father... I don't know, I mean,
maybe he doesn't mean it, but he acts like he does. We were all
together. We were gonna celebrate Easter and we were gonna catch
a double bill. Big deal! So I put on my new dress and I came out,
and he grabbed my face and he started rubbing off all the lipstick.
I thought he'd rub off my lips. And I ran out of that house"
- Jim's often-bickering and
love-smothering parents arrived to pick him up: his ineffectual,
hen-pecked, milquetoast father Mr. Frank Stark (James Backus, the
voice of the cartoon character Mr.
Magoo) and his mother
Carol Stark (Ann Doran); the alienated Jim expressed
his frustrated rage and agony when he screamed at them: "You're
tearing me apart!...You say one thing, he says another, and everybody
changes back again"
- in officer Ray's office,
Jim's bottled up energy caused him to box bare-knuckled with Ray's
large wooden desk, venting his pent-up crazed energy; he then continued
his description of his dysfunctional family that kept moving from
town to town to protect him, especially his passive, weak, henpecked
and 'chicken' father: "It's a zoo.
He always wants to be my pal, you know? But how can I give him anything?
If he's, well, I mean I love him and all that type of stuff, and
I-I mean, I don't want to hurt him. But then, I don't, I don't, well
I don't know what to do anymore, except maybe die...."
Jim Pummeling Officer Ray's Desk with Fists -
in Frustration
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Jim Counseled by Officer Ray About His Dysfunctional
Family
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Jim About His 'Chicken' Father: "I don't
ever want to be like him"
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- Jim also expressed a wish that his "chicken" father
(a weak and timid role model) would one day stand up to his domineering
and overbearing mother who was only concerned about keeping up
an image of respectability:
"If he had guts to knock Mom cold once, then maybe she'd be
happy and then she'd stop pickin' on him, because they make mush
outta him... I'll tell you one thing, I don't ever want to be like
him...How can a guy grow up in a circus like that?...Boy, if, if
I had one day when, when I didn't have to be all confused, and didn't
have to feel that I was ashamed of everything...If I felt that I
belonged someplace, you know, then..."
- just before Jim's first day of school at a new HS,
Dawson High, he questioned Judy who lived in his neighborhood: ("You
live here, don't you?") - followed by her response: "Who
lives?"; she asked: "You wanna carry my books," then
refused his offer of a ride and went off with a carload of other
teens: ("I
go with the kids"); the delinquent gang was led by Judy's leather-jacketed
boyfriend Buzz Gunderson (Corey Allen); her last words to Jim were
an insult: "I bet you're a real yo-yo"; Jim was treated
with contempt by Buzz and his rowdy gang
of cohorts, including Goon (Dennis Hopper) and Moose (Nick Adams)
- later in the day during a science
field trip to the Griffith Observatory, after a planetarium show,
HS newcomer Jim engaged in a choreographed, tense switchblade knife-fight
with Buzz outside, and then the two challenged each other to participate
in a deadly drag race ("chickie
run") that evening
- in their homes that same day
after school, both Judy and Jim experienced
family tensions - Jim was embarrassed by his father's indecisiveness,
lack of understanding and weak-willed cowardice, while Judy was scolded
by her insensitive and sexist father when she tried to kiss him
- when Jim returned home, he found
his frilly, apron-clad father ludicrously positioned on his knees
on the upstairs landing cleaning up a spilled tray of food - his
cowardly, emasculated father was not willing to admit the accident
to his mother: "Shhh. Listen, I'd better, better clean it up before she sees it" -
Jim pleaded with his weak and foolish dad to stand and be a man,
and was unable to receive advice about how to stand up and defend
one's honor when challenged
- feeling unloved in her home, Judy
forced her father (William Hopper) to give her a kiss at the family's
meal table after he had returned from work: ("Daddy?... Haven't
you forgotten something?"), but he pushed her away: "What's the matter with you? You're
getting too old for that kind of stuff, kiddo. I thought you stopped
doing that long ago..."; Judy begged to be loved and appreciated: "Girls
don't love their father? Since when? Since I got to be 16?" -
then, when she tried to steal another kiss, her father slapped and
chastised her with a reprimanding tone ("Stop that! Sit down!");
Judy fled from her unwelcoming father; after he called her a "glamour
puss," she left the house and slammed the door: "This isn't
my home"; her father admitted: "I don't know what to do.
All of a sudden, she's, she's a problem; her mother (Rochelle Hudson)
attempted to be reassuring, but admitted that she too didn't know
how to help their problematic adolescent daughter: "She'll outgrow
it dear, it's just the age...It's just the age when nothing fits."
16 Year-Old Judy Lacking Affection From Her Father
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- during the sea-side cliff
challenge competition (known as a "chickie run") in cars
between Jim and Buzz, Judy signaled the start of the race, that
suddenly and tragically turned lethal when Buzz became trapped
inside his stolen hot-rod car by his jacket sleeve, and his
vehicle plunged over the edge of the cliff and he was killed; Jim
extended his hand to Judy and touched her fingertips and then
took her hand, while Plato stood in the background
between them; drawn together, Jim drove both of them home
The Deadly "Chickie Run"
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Buzz Just Before Hot-Rod Car Accident
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Jim and Judy Touching Hands After Buzz's Death
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- Jim returned to his home
after the lethal chickie run, and drank milk directly from the bottle,
and then put the cold glass on his forehead and cheek to cool himself;
he wished to appeal to his parents following the tragedy of Buzz's
death; as his mother approached from upstairs, the camera revolved
an entire 180 degrees counter-clockwise to reflect his point of
view - he told his parents that he needed a "direct answer" this
time, because he was "in trouble": ("They called
me chicken. You know, chicken? I had to go because if I didn't
I'd never be able to face those kids again. I got in one of those
cars, and Buzz, that - Buzz, one of those kids - he got in the
other car, and we had to drive fast and then jump, see, before
the car came to the end of the bluff, and I got out OK, and Buzz
didn't and, uh, killed him...I can't - I can't keep it to myself
anymore")
Jim With His Parents After the "Chickie" Run
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Father: "Did anyone see you there?"
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Mother: "No I don't want you to go to the police"
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Jim to His Mother: "You're not tearing me
loose again"
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Jim Choking His Father
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- his weak-willed, indecisive father first wanted
Jim to not get involved ("Did anyone see you there? Did anyone
see your license plate?"), and then his mother refused to
have him go to the police; his father could not offer support: "But
you know that you did the wrong thing. That's the main thing, isn't
it?"; Jim wanted to tell the truth to the authorities as his
father had instructed him, but his mother suggested that he just
not "volunteer" the information, or that they move away
again to get away from the problem; Jim objected ("You're
not tearing me loose again") and became enraged at both his
cowardly father and mother for not standing up for him: ("You
better give me something. You better give me something fast...Dad,
let me hear you answer her. Dad, Dad, stand up for me"); his
father was powerless and impotent, and buried his head in his hands;
Jim physically attacked his father and choked him before contemptuously
leaving
- under a moonlit sky, Jim found
Judy sitting next to his driveway when he drove up; she was wrapped
tightly in a pink coat to keep warm. She greeted him with an affectionate
name: "Hello, Jamie," and he was surprised. She warned: "They'll be looking
for you...It doesn't matter to them," referring to the earlier,
deadly chicken-run car race. She admitted: "I'm just numb." He
leaned forward and confided in her: "You
know something? I woke up this morning, you know. And the sun was
shining and it was nice and all that type of stuff. And the first
thing - I saw you. And, uh, I said, 'Boy, this is gonna be one terrific
day, so you better live it up, 'cause tomorrow you'll be nothin'.'
See? And I almost was"; she apologized for treating him poorly on the first day of school: "I'm
sorry. I'm sorry that I treated you mean today. You shouldn't believe
what I say when I'm with the rest of the kids. Nobody, nobody acts
sincere"; under a moonlit sky, he kissed her for the first time
- sweetly on the side of her forehead - she told him: "Your
lips are soft"
- the outcast and misfit trio of juveniles formed a
strong bond against both their insensitive parents (completely unjust,
dysfunctional, ineffectual, or callous) and their peers, as they
searched for their identities. In particular, Plato came to look
upon Jim and Judy as his married 'surrogate' parents
- the threesome (acting as a "family" with
Jim and Judy pretending to be a married couple)
met up to find refuge and solace together for the night while exploring
and touring an abandoned and deserted mansion (with an empty swimming
pool) near the observatory
- Plato assumed the part of a real estate agent leading
the pretend 'newlyweds' through the run-down Gothic property with
a lighted candelabra: ("Well,
what do you think of my castle?"); like a surrogate family,
Jim had his head in Judy's lap, with Plato the 'child' at their feet;
before leaving to explore further, Judy and Jim noticed the sleeping
Plato's red and blue mismatched socks and laughed - Jim commented: "Must
have been a nervous day..."
- settling down for the night, Judy opened her heart
to Jim in a very intimate sequence, as she laid next to him and confessed
why she was falling in love with him. She asked: "Is this what
it's like to love somebody?...What kind of a person do you think
a girl wants?" She agreed that she wanted "a man" - "but
a man who can be gentle and sweet - like you are." To her,
Jim was a man who was very different from her irresponsible and
unloving father. She added: "Someone who doesn't run away
when you want them. Like being Plato's friend when nobody else
liked him. That's being strong." She transferred her love
for her father to a new heroic man and ideal partner - Jim. He
had the traits of a man who was brave and strong (and wouldn't
run away or abandon her), caring, responsible, gentle and sweet
with peaceful instincts.
Jim: (responding favorably): "Oh, wow...We're
not gonna be lonely anymore. Ever, ever. Not you or me."
Judy: (confiding, as she nuzzled closer) "I love somebody.
All the time I've been, I've been looking for someone to love me.
And now I love somebody. And it's so easy. Why is it easy now?"
Jim:
"I don't know. It is for me, too."
Judy: (confessing her love)
"I love you, Jim. I really mean it."
Jim:
"Well, I'm glad." (He turned toward her and their lips
found each other.)
- in the final tragic, senseless and violent scene -
after being pursued and assaulted by Buzz's gang at the mansion (and
believing that Jim and Judy had deserted him), Plato (with his mother's
hand-gun) shot one of the gang members, and then fled toward the
observatory, where he was also pursued by police after he had fired
at them; he barricaded himself inside; alerts brought Plato’s
housekeeper, juvenile officer Ray and the Stark parents to the scene,
as well as Jim and Judy
- to calm him and in an attempt
to disarm Plato, Jim traded his red jacket for Plato's gun (and was
able to secretly remove the bullets before returning the gun). At
dawn, Plato panicked when caught in a spotlight and rushed out of
the observatory - appearing to be armed when he rushed at the police
foolishly brandishing his gun (unloaded), and was shot down and killed.
Jim tried to protect his friend, but failed. He called out with his
arm outstretched: "I got the bullets, look!"
- feeling powerless
after Plato was struck down, the distraught Jim knelt down and crawled
next to his friend's dead body, mourning over the loss of his surrogate
'son' who was unable to reach the adult world - he asked Plato: "Hey
jerk-pot. What did ya do that for?" At the same time, Jim's
father promised to be a stronger and more dependable father for Jim,
and the two embraced
- the disconsolate words of Plato's family's distraught
black housekeeper provided an epitaph for the film's sacrificial
lamb: "This
poor baby got nobody. Just nobody."
- now reconciled with his parents and accepted as a
newly-initiated adult, Jim introduced Judy
to them and they drove off together as a new day dawned
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Jim Lying Drunk on Sidewalk Before Arrest
Judy's 'Dirty Tramp' Speech
Orphaned, Puppy-Killing 'Plato'
Jim to His Father in Police Station: "You're tearing
me apart!"
Judy: "You wanna carry my books?"
Judy's Statements to Jim: "Who lives?", "I
go with the kids", and "You're a real yo-yo"
Jim Called a "Chicken" by Buzz: "You
shouldn't have called me that"
Jim's Switchblade Knife Fight at Planetarium Against
Buzz
Jim's Emasculated Father
Jim With Cold Bottle of Milk after the 'Chickie'
Run
Jim: "This is gonna be one terrific day"
Jim and Judy's First 'Kiss' After Her Apology:
"Your lips are soft"
The "Family" Trio of Characters in a Deserted Mansion
Laughing at Plato's Mis-Matched Socks
Judy's Profession of Love for Jim in the Mansion
Jim Removing Bullets from Plato's Gun
Plato Shot Dead
Jim's Failed Effort to Protect Plato: ("I
got the bullets, look!")
"Hey, jerk-pot. What did ya do that for?"
Jim's Anguish at Plato's Death
The Words of Plato's Black Housekeeper ("This poor
baby got nobody")
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