No Way Out (1950)

Director: Joseph L. Mankiewicz  Starring: Sidney Poitier  Richard Widmark  
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Product Summary
Publisher: Foxvideo
Format: DVD
UPC: 00024543214571
Buy.com Sku: 202126089
Item#: V27N29
Buy.com Sales Rank: 27730
Category Keywords: Action  Crime  Doctors  Organized Crime  Race Relations  Social Issues  Theatrical Release  Vengeance 
Rating: NR
 
Is it a question...or an answer?
 
 
Features: DVD, Aspect Ratio 1.33:1, English, Spanish, Subtitled
 
Nominated for the 1950 Oscar for Best Writing, Story and Screenplay, this intense drama about racial hatred pulls no punches. When a white patient in a hospital dies under the care of a black intern (Sidney Poitier), the victim s racist brother (Richard Widmark) seeks to destroy the doctor s career. Although the hospital s idealistic Chief Resident (Stephen McNally) tries to diffuse the escalating tension, the victim s ex-wife (Linda Darnell) seems to go along with the vengeance-seeker until she realizes she s on the wrong side.Episodes-Bonus Features:FeatureAudio Commentary with Film Noir Historian Eddie MullerPublicity GalleryPhoto GalleryFox Movietone News: Richard Widmark Puts Imprints in CementTheatrical TrailerFox Noir: Dark Corner, Where the Sidewalk Ends, & LauraFormat: DVD MOVIE
 


Editor's Note

In Sidney Poitier's feature film debut, racial tensions simmer, then flare into violence when two white criminals wounded in a shootout are brought into the care of Dr. Brooks (Poitier), the only black doctor at a city hospital. When one brother suddenly dies, the surviving brother accuses Dr. Brooks of killing him and instigates slayings and racial rioting to get revenge. Provocative and nuanced, NO WAY OUT dramatizes the different threads of race relationships, from indifference to blind hatred, that are woven through American society. Starring black actors (it was also Ossie Davis's first film) and filmed at the very cusp of the civil rights movement, only 10 years after Hattie McDaniel became the first African-American actor to win an Oscar, NO WAY OUT was a leap ahead of the mainstream film industry in its head-on tackling of racial prejudice. The script, written by director Joseph L. Mankiewicz and Lesser Samuels, was nominated for an Oscar.


Plot Summary

When a young black doctor fails to save a gangster's brother who is suffering from gunshot wounds, the bigoted honcho orchestrates a string of race riots and slayings as his means of revenge. A provocative melodrama featuring the debut film performances of Sydney Poitier and Ossie Davis, the film also stars Ruby Dee and Richard Widmark, and was directed and written by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, who along with Lesser Samuels, received an Academy Award nomination for the screenplay.

 
Features
Audio Commentary With Film Noir Historian Eddie Muller
Audio: English Dolby Digital Mono
Audio: English Dolby Digital Stereo
Fox Movietone News: Richard Widmark Puts Imprints In Cement
Interactive Menus
Original Theatrical Trailer
Photo Gallery
Publicity Gallery
Scene Selection
Subtitles: English, Spanish
 
Technical Info

Release Information
Studio: Foxvideo
Release Date: 3/7/2006
Running Time: 106 minutes
Original Release Date: 1950
Catalog ID: 2231457
UPC: 00024543214571
Number of Discs: 1

Audio & Video
Original Language: English
Available Audio Tracks: English
Available Subtitles: English, Spanish
Video: B&W

Aspect Ratio
Standard  1.33:1 [4:3]

 
Cast & Crew
Linda Darnell
Richard Widmark
Sidney Poitier
Stephen McNally
Alfred Newman - Original Music By
Barbara McLean - Editor
Darryl F. Zanuck - Producer
Joseph L. Mankiewicz - Director
Joseph L. Mankiewicz - Writer
Lesser Samuels - Writer
Milton R. Krasner - Cinematographer

 
Awards

Oscar (1951)
   Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Lesser Samuels, Nominee, Best Writing, Story and Screenplay

 
Professional Reviews
USA Today
"...Uncommonly provocative for its day..." 02/06/1998 p.3D

New York Times
"[A] gutsy social melodrama....[Mankiewicz] unleashes a burst of expressionist brilliance like the complex tracking shot that begins just after the one-hour mark and draws a hellish portrait of a race riot in the making." 03/07/2006 p.E5

Epinions.com 8 of 10
Although it is film written and directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz between his triumphs "A Letter to Three Women" and "All About Eve," (for which Mankiewicz won Oscars for his direction and for his screenplays in both 1950 and 1951), "No Way Out" is best known as the site of Sidney Poitier's screen debut. Poitier plays the part of a young doctor in a public hospital accused by Ray Biddle, a psychotic "white trash" racist (played with all the stops out by Richard Widmark) of killing his brother after the two of them had been shot during a failed robbery. Playing Dr. Brooks's brother John, a mail carrier who jokes that his brother may be able to deliver babies but is not qualified to deliver mail (because he does not know what the capital of South Dakota is), Ossie Davis also made his screen debut in "No Way Out," as did his real-life and often-time screen wife, Ruby Dee. Poitier was billed fourth, Davis and Dee not at all, but the film was obviously important in showing an African American professional and a range of sympathetic African Americans onscreen. "No Way Out" is also a gripping melodrama with a race riot (actually a pre-emptive strike from "N--rtown" against the white slum from which the Biddles came). Mankiewicz has a reputation for being a great writer of dialogue with little interest in the visual aspects of cinema: "all talk, and no action." To me, "The Quiet American" is decisive disproof of this indictment, though I wonder how anyone who has watched Bette Davis descend the stairs at the party in "All About Eve" could have thought such a thing (even with all the great lines Davis and George Sanders have in that delirious backstage epic). Although he had just played a heroic doctor (with Jack Palance playing the villain) in Elia Kazan's "Panic in the Streets," Richard Widmark turned in a frightening performance as the fomentor of a race riot and rabid racist. His own 1947 debut in "Kiss of Death" established him as the primo psycho of the post-World War II decade. Widmark had a frightening smirk and a truly blood-curdling giggle. Instead of getting to chew up the scenery and act out every impulse, Poitier's character is trying to prove himself and to be "a credit to his race." He tries to dissuade a black orderly (played by Dots Johnson, who played the drunken M.P. in Rossellini's "Paisˆ") from taking off to join the rumble, telling him that, if he does, he's "no better than they are." The orderly replies that it is too much to expect black folks to be better than white folks, since trying to prove they are as good as white folks gets them attacked, maimed, and killed. Dr. Brooks's boss, Dr. Dan Wharton (Stephen McNally) also counsels pragmatism, but Dr. Brooks is determined to prove himself. He undertakes a dangerous course to get the autopsy that Ray Biddle refuses even after his former sister-in-law Edie (played by Linda Darnell, who had been Lora Mae, another woman who grew up on the wrong side of the tracks and bettered herself in - Stephen Murray
 

  
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