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4.0 out of 5 stars Blackboard Jungle!
This is a classic. If you like performance with a message from an era of cliche this is the movie for you! It's a time when men were men, women loved them or were tarts, bad boys had the world against them yet good choices could take them in the right direction. This was a time when the bad boys who stayed bad got caught and punished. This movie is based on a real...
Published 3 months ago by Mira Malatestinic

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3.0 out of 5 stars Always Good to See Poitier in Fine Form
Early Poitier flick. He's actually not in very much of it. Elements of what made him the greatest black actor ever are already evident. The movie itself is merely ok. On those crazy kids. Rebel Without a Cause, released the same year, is a far superior movie on the same exact subject. So, James Dean fans watch that one and Poitier fans watch this one.
Published on Jun 14 2004 by J


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4.0 out of 5 stars Blackboard Jungle!, Feb 4 2012
This review is from: Blackboard Jungle, the (DVD)
This is a classic. If you like performance with a message from an era of cliche this is the movie for you! It's a time when men were men, women loved them or were tarts, bad boys had the world against them yet good choices could take them in the right direction. This was a time when the bad boys who stayed bad got caught and punished. This movie is based on a real school in New York City that my uncle went to -- He turned out just fine!!

Enjoy
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Rock and Roll Era Begins, April 23 2004
This review is from: Blackboard Jungle, the (VHS Tape)
I saw this movie in 1955. It was one of the best in that age in the genre about alienated youth, dealing as it did with ghetto kids and minorities rather than the spoiled brats of "Rebel Without a Cause."

Most of all, the movie introduced me and a million other kids to Rock and Roll. I remember listening spellbound to "Rock Around the Clock" by Bill Haley and the Comets at the end of the movie. Something, I perceived in my little noodle brain, had changed -- and nothing would ever be the same again.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Always Good to See Poitier in Fine Form, Jun 14 2004
This review is from: Blackboard Jungle, the (VHS Tape)
Early Poitier flick. He's actually not in very much of it. Elements of what made him the greatest black actor ever are already evident. The movie itself is merely ok. On those crazy kids. Rebel Without a Cause, released the same year, is a far superior movie on the same exact subject. So, James Dean fans watch that one and Poitier fans watch this one.
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4.0 out of 5 stars An honor roll American drama, Mar 8 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Blackboard Jungle, the (VHS Tape)
This tough, gritty film created quite a stir in 1955 with its approach to incorrigible students unwilling to learn or listen and their self-destructive tendencies. A brave, tireless teacher is determined to remain at a trade school and try to shape and mold young minds against heavy odds. Richard Dadier [Glenn Ford] is beset by many problems, personal and professional, but he eventually wins over his unruly students by teaching them about life, racial intolerance, and responsibility as well as the three Rs that his charges so desperately need to learn. Dadier remains true to his personal values as he dotes on his pregnant wife who fears another miscarriage, resists the advances of a lonely, sexually frustrated fellow teacher and returns to the classroom to confront and teach the same thugs who beat him and another teacher senseless in an alley. The student body has a diverse ethnic make-up and the volatile racial angle flares up in several scenes. Margaret Hayes has a nice turn as a teacher with plenty of sex appeal and because she doesn't dress like a teacher should, she gets catcalls and whistles from her male students who ogle her figure appreciatively. Sidney Poitier is also good as Miller, the thoughtful student who Dadier targets to pull the other boys into line and turn the tables on Vic Morrow's sneering, lawless thug Artie West.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Blackboard Review, Dec 3 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Blackboard Jungle, the (VHS Tape)
The Blackboard Jungle was produced in 1955-a popular time period for movies dealing with teenage delinquency. Richard Dadier is a teacher who gets his first assignment in a rough inner-city school. Dadier has trouble exerting his authority over the students while other teachers have given up.
Gregory Miller, played by Sidney Poitier, is pinpointed by Dadier as the leader of the students. Dadier wants to reach Miller in hopes at reaching other students. But it is soon discovered that Artie West and his student gang rule the school.
Dadier foiled an attempted sexual assault (against another teacher, Ms. Hammond) by one of the students in the gang. The other members vow revenge on Dadier. In the end of the film, West attacks Dadier with a knife and Miller comes to the aid of Dadier.
For me, I feel that the main message about teenagers/youth culture was that kids were often labeled as delinquents without fully understanding them. Dadier assumed that all of the students were problem students, yet really it was a select few. Also, such students', growing up in poorer families, seemed to be labeled as delinquents and thus not much is expected of them or their future. Dadier tries to change this by showing his students that he does care about all of them.
Even though this film was created almost 55 years ago, I think it does a decent job capturing the realities of some youth cultures. I, myself, can not relate to such deviance in school, but I can imagine for those who grew up in urban areas, that students are much more disrespectful, abusive and delinquent, just like they are depicted in the film.
I liked that the film focused on a teacher who was willing to fight for the students. While watching this movie, I am reminded of the film Dangerous Minds. Both movies contain teachers who don't back down from a challenge. They help the students because they want to, not because they have too.
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4.0 out of 5 stars IT REALLY IS A JUNGLE OUT THERE, Sep 14 2002
By 
K. Jump (Corbin, KY United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Blackboard Jungle, the (VHS Tape)
1955's "The Blackboard Jungle" remains a poignant, relevant portrayal of life in America's public schools. The story of WWII vet turned English teacher (Glenn Ford)as he struggles to reach a class of apathetic teens who do not want to be reached, the movie takes us from Ford's unsuspecting classroom debut through his efforts to lead a normal home life despite the pressures of his new job and finally to a climactic showdown with his most evil of students.

The movie's cast is thoroughly excellent. Ford is at once tough and terribly vulnerable as the embattled new teacher, Margaret Hayes is all patrician slinkiness as For'd wanne-be paramour, Sidney Poitier is convincing as the slowly mellowing student, and Anne Francis is even sexier than she was in "Forbidden Planet" as Ford's supportive but insecure wife.

There's much to appreciate in this film. Partly intended to help comat the growing problem of juvenile delinquency in 50s America, the film tries hard to achieve realism and generally succeeds. The students in Ford's class are disillusioned, lazy, suspicious, arrogant, obnoxious, and sometimes dangerous--which is exactly how teens are in real life. The only typical teenage bad habit that's not portrayed (or at least suggested) is cursing, which of course 50s moral standards would not allow on the big screen. But if they don't swear, Ford's students have no trouble finding other ways to be both annoying and anarchic, just like real kids. Interestingly, Ford discovers (much like this reviewer did) that sometimes the best way to reach apathetic kids is with a cartoon. Sad.

Another great thing about this movie is its approach to the politics of the school world. The movie's teachers argue and struggle not only with their students, but amongst themselves. Moreover, the encroaching dangers of multiculturalism are, perhaps inadverdantly, accurately addressed as Ford must deal with ethnic divisions amongst his students which some are eager to exploit for their own gain, as when Ford is unfairly accused of racism simply because of some careless word choices. In today's schools Political Correctness is indeed the rule, often to the detriment of real learning and growth, so at least one of the film's pertinent warnings has gone ignored.

Though some might find "The Blackboard Jungle" dated, it is in fact as timely in all the important ways as it was in the 50s. The American educational problem continues to undercut many of society's more noble aims, and it will do so as long as the powers that be refuse to take the necessary steps to reach a solution. Teens must be taught there are absolutes in life and be expected to live up to them, not encouraged to simply indulge their every whim. Perhaps if enough of us adults in liberated America come to realize this for ourselves, we can at least begin to convince our children of it.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Never Give Up, Mar 19 2002
This review is from: Blackboard Jungle, the (VHS Tape)
Filmmakers through their motion pictures often reflect or mirror traits or problems with society. Some filmmakers even affect society by their works. The effects of some movies may be positive or they may have an opposite effect that is detrimental to society. Problem: Filmmakers may glamorize a problem in society by the very motion pictures they make. BLACKBOARD JUNGLE made in 1955 was a realistic look at adolescence contempt for society at an inner city trade school for delinquent boys under the direction of Richard Brooks. It was said to be shocking for its time and was even blamed for provoking violence. Glenn Ford played a new teacher who decides that his only chance of teaching the boys anything is to reach the roughest boy of the bunch played by Sidney Portier. Poitier gave a brilliant performance as the one youth that new true right from wrong and only used his tough facade to survive in a world of his peers where he would otherwise have been the low man on the rung. Vic Morrow gives another impressive performance as Artie West, the one student who is beyond reach. Morrow remains one of our most underrated actors of the last decade. Richard Kiley gives a heart rendering performance as a teacher who brings his record collection to class trying to reach out and share his enjoyment of music, which results in the ultimate destruction of his vinyl. When the delinquents threaten Glenn Ford's wife played by Anne Francis the line is crossed. In the end Glenn Ford never gave up on his kids, as did his contemporaries.
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5.0 out of 5 stars This Movie is Timeless, Jan 14 2002
By 
C. W. Emblom "Bill Emblom" (Ishpeming, Michigan USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Blackboard Jungle, the (VHS Tape)
I remember seeing this movie in 1955 when I was eleven or twelve years old, and it's surprising how much I remembered about the movie before viewing it again. Since ordering the movie I have looked at it again three additional times. Being a former teacher, I enjoy teacher movies, and if a movie rates five stars it must be able to withstand repeated viewings. This movie easily passes that test. I enjoyed noticing the difference in audio/visual materials used in the school in the movie, namely the use of a reel-to-reel tape recorder and a movie projector to show movies. This movie ushered in the rock-and-roll era with the song "Rock Around the Clock", and introduced the term "Daddy-o". I plan on showing this movie to my after school class of students on social history of the 1950's. I know they will enjoy it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A gritty portrayal of an unyielding teacher's crusade!, Oct 11 2000
By 
drew behr (Cliffside Park, New Jersey United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blackboard Jungle, the (VHS Tape)
I first saw this movie in the early 70s on TV and have rented it numerous times since the advent of VHS. It is an eye-opening portrayal of Richard Daddiere, an eager navy veteran who giddily wins his first teachng assignment at a hopelessly urban hellhole of a school. Right from the start though, one can immediately sense that his altruistic belief in the nobility of teaching will be reduced that of a desperate corrections officer doing his best to quell a daily uprising. And this does become the case very early into the film and serves as the film's central conflict. His first day of class begins with one of the punks hurling a baseball within inches of his head the first moment he turns his back on them, blasting a cracked hole into the blacboard. Daddiere wryly retorts with, "Well...whoever threw that will never play centerfield for the Yankees." This is our introduction to the likes of Artie West, more than convincingly played by the late Vic Morrow, a vicious punk whose demeanor instantaneously reveals that it is lkely that he'll not live a day beyond his twenty-first birthday. Then there is Gregory Miller, smoothly played by Sidney Poitier-a cool black cat who knows the score and is inherently decent. Daddiere smells this in him and encourages him to put his keenness to good use rather than waste his potential by being a lowlife like West and the rest of hs ilk. But Miller's race justifies his roguery, and he remains a sympathetic character for the duration. Then there is Bilozzi, a frightened punk and who takes sides with West because he's too afraid to be his own man and think for himself. I really admired this film, as it credibly depicted one man's quest to teach the unteachable, even though he well realizes that it is an unwinnable battle. Glenn Ford's performance is astonishingly good. His character seethes with a relentless desire to achieve his goal despite whatever these delinquents do to deter him. Louis Calhern also turns in a wonderful performance as a jaded, veteran history teacher who serves as a type of Greek chorus for Daddiere, constantly reminding him from the start that all that is does not glitter. When Daddiere insists to him at one point that "If only I could just reach them...get inside their minds!", Calhern wittily replies, "Mind? A mind would indicate the presence of a brain!". For anyone considering teachingin the New York City public school system, please watch this film SEVERAL times, for despite the fact that it is almost fifty years-old, it is by no means a dated film.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Saw this film when it released in '55-still great now!, May 30 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Blackboard Jungle, the (VHS Tape)
It has a certain sentimental value to be but it sure earns that five stars. This is a film with a socially commenting relative plot which along the way had many small moments. When Dadier told Miller to stop calling him chief-he did it anyway, Dadier exposing his own racism when he called Miller,"you black...." and then did not finish the sentence. Miller did not seem to hold that against him because he saw Dadier as flawed like everyone else. It was a realy good commentary on our process of socialization in the US and I think is still relative today. Today instead of knives and baseballs thrown against the blackboard-kids use guns and bombs. In many ways it seems like nothing has changed since 1955. Anyway I liked the ending-it was hopeful-maybe not what audiences would like today-but suggested that kids can change with trust and commitment from those who matter in their lives-parents, teachers etc. Joe.
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