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"Nicholas Ray Blogathon: Rebel Without a Cause (1955)"

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Blogger Joel Bocko said...

Even after seeing and admiring so many of his other films, and seeing them & admiring them as expressions of his highly unique and idiosyncratic vision, I still have trouble seeing this as a Ray film above all. It seems to me a piece of 50s iconography which transcends its auteur, even though he's the one responsible for making it that way.

Watching it again last night, after about a dozen years (the first time I saw it I didn't know Ray from Adam), I could see how it fit into his pantheon - how its weirdness (and it is a weird movie) stemmed from his sensibility, how its themes and characters echoed those in his other films, yet it nonetheless seemed to belong to history more than its director.

I'm hard-pressed to think of any other film that so summarily captures a zeitgeist - sure, there are a lot of 60s films that catch a part of their time, but perhaps it's most noticeable here because the teen culture was just new and uncertain enough to be fully evoked in a single film.

It's not my favorite Ray film, not by a long shot, and I find parts of the final third somewhat lumpy (I think I like the middle section the best, from about the planetarium scene to those sequences with the teenagers wandering the town like dispossessed spirits). But I think it might be the most interesting Ray film, in part because it's at once his and history's - it's a fascinating cross-section of auteurist and sociological perspectives on film. Hope that makes sense.

September 27, 2011 at 10:51 PM

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