Film Review
Whilst it has lost much of its impact, and certainly doesn't shock as
it once did,
The Wild One has
retained its cult status and is still considered one of the most
influential American films of the 1950s. Producer Stanley Kramer
made the film because he wanted to alert the public to the growing
problem of youth disaffection in his country. The film was
inspired by a real life incident that took place a few years
before. In 1947, 4000 bikers converged on the small Californian
town of Hollister and wrecked the fourth of July celebrations. In
the years that followed similar incidents, albeit on a much smaller
scale, were frequently reported in the newspapers, fuelling fears of a
growing youth problem.
As events would show over the decade that followed this film's release,
Kramer was right to be concerned, and the alienation and resentment
felt by adolescents would become almost a national crisis.
The Wild One was followed by a
spate of films that tackled the same subject, the most notable being
Nicholas Ray's
Rebel Without a Cause (1955),
the film that offered disaffected youth its most potent symbol and
standard bearer, in the form of James Dean. It also inspired a
notable sub-genre of cinema, the biker movie, laying the groundwork for
such films as
Scorpio Rising
(1964) and
Easy Rider
(1969).
The Wild One,
although originating from noble motives, was not without
controversy. In the UK, the film censors misunderstood the point
of the film and banned it for over a decade, judging it to be an
incitement to adolescent rebellion.
As the biker rebel Johnny, Marlon Brando vividly personifies a
generation that has lost its identity, its self-respect and its sense
of purpose. "What are you rebelling against?" Johnny is asked by
Kathie, the one person who is not intimidated by him. "What have
you got?" he replies. Our hero doesn't even know why he is a
rebel; the predicament appears dismally hopeless. There are,
however, signs that Johnny is not lost forever. Kathie - who is a
different kind of rebel - awakens a gentler, more adult side in his
nature, and so things are not so grim as they first seemed. The
qualities that are missing in Johnny's life - compassion and
understanding - are there, if he can only see them and realise their
value.
It is interesting that the film portrays the bikers far more
sympathetically than the townsfolk they end up provoking. The
growing rift between the generations is demonstrated time and again in
the film, most obviously in the scene where two bikers talk in a
language which a barman fails to understand. You sense that the
two generations do not want to communicate. The oldsters are
happy to regard the youngsters as a troublesome vermin and the
youngsters are happy to play out the role that is expected of
them. The film offers no easy solutions but it offers a potent
warning of what can happen if the problem of youth disaffection is
allowed to grow unchecked.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
One eventful day, a group of leather-jacked young motorcyclists invade
the peace of a small Californian town. Their attempt to gatecrash
a motorcycle race is thwarted by its organisers, but their leader,
Johnny, does not go away empty handed: he makes off with one of the
prize trophies. After creating a ruckus in the town, Johnny stops
for a beer at a bar-café and immediately attracts the attention
of bargirl Kathie. A rival biker gang suddenly puts in
appearance and all Hell starts to break loose...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.