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The Glass Wall

  • 1953
  • Approved
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Gloria Grahame in The Glass Wall (1953)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:05
1 Video
48 Photos
Film NoirDrama

Peter is a refugee who wants to make a better life for himself in America, but he doesn't have the proper papers. Desperate for entry, he jumps ship and flees to New York to search for a Wor... Read allPeter is a refugee who wants to make a better life for himself in America, but he doesn't have the proper papers. Desperate for entry, he jumps ship and flees to New York to search for a World War II veteran whom he helped during the war.Peter is a refugee who wants to make a better life for himself in America, but he doesn't have the proper papers. Desperate for entry, he jumps ship and flees to New York to search for a World War II veteran whom he helped during the war.

  • Director
    • Maxwell Shane
  • Writers
    • Ivan Tors
    • Maxwell Shane
  • Stars
    • Vittorio Gassman
    • Gloria Grahame
    • Ann Robinson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Maxwell Shane
    • Writers
      • Ivan Tors
      • Maxwell Shane
    • Stars
      • Vittorio Gassman
      • Gloria Grahame
      • Ann Robinson
    • 39User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    The Glass Wall
    Trailer 2:05
    The Glass Wall

    Photos48

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    Top cast42

    Edit
    Vittorio Gassman
    Vittorio Gassman
    • Peter
    Gloria Grahame
    Gloria Grahame
    • Maggie
    Ann Robinson
    Ann Robinson
    • Nancy
    Douglas Spencer
    Douglas Spencer
    • Inspector Bailey
    Robin Raymond
    Robin Raymond
    • Tanya
    Jerry Paris
    Jerry Paris
    • Tom
    Elizabeth Slifer
    Elizabeth Slifer
    • Mrs. Hinckley
    Richard Reeves
    Richard Reeves
    • Eddie Hinckley
    Joe Turkel
    Joe Turkel
    • Freddie
    • (as Joseph Turkel)
    Else Neft
    • Mrs. Zakoyla
    Michael Fox
    Michael Fox
    • Toomey
    Nesdon Booth
    • Monroe
    • (as Ned Booth)
    Kathleen Freeman
    Kathleen Freeman
    • Zelda
    Juney Ellis
    • Girl Friend
    Jack Teagarden
    Jack Teagarden
    • Jack Teagarden
    Shorty Rogers and His Giants
    • Shorty Rogers and His Band
    • (as Shorty Rogers and His Band)
    Leon Alton
    Leon Alton
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Phil Bloom
    Phil Bloom
    • Pedestrian
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Maxwell Shane
    • Writers
      • Ivan Tors
      • Maxwell Shane
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews39

    6.81.4K
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    Featured reviews

    6secondtake

    Terrific most of the time, and terrible in little spurts. It has the UN, jazz, and Grahame!

    The Glass Wall (1953)

    A great idea, and two great leads--Gloria Grahame as a down and out single girl and Vittoria Gassman as a Eastern European illegal immigrant. And one mediocre directing job--by Maxwell Shane. I had just seen another Shane film that was pretty good, with some great performances ("The Naked Street" with a terrific Anthony Quinn) so I was looking forward to this. It has a great theme (facing the immigration system) and it turns our attention to the new world presence for justice, the United Nations. It also features some real musicians--Jack Teagarden and Shorty Rogers--and one straight small combo big band jazz number. (I put it that way because by 1953 the real scene in New York was bebop, this this style predates it.)

    So, the best parts of this movie are terrific, mainly the middle section where the two leads help each other and start to fall in love, with hints of an urban "They Live by Night" in mood. But there are parts where you can't help but laugh, because they are either so improbable or the editing and acting is ridiculously off key. Director Shane also co-wrote this adventure, and here there are hiccups, too, even down to the central premise of a man facing deportation even though he has nowhere to go and has been on the run for a decade. For one, it's hard to believe the immigration laws were so blindly inflexible, but let's say they were. They have the reputation. But certainly New York City wouldn't get turned upside down for one man, not considered dangerous, who has slipped from custody. There are APBs and front page photos and a general panic on the order of Son of Sam.

    But we understand the dilemma anyway. It's one man against the system, and that's always an easy one for choosing sides. Grahame plays a woman on the outs with great sympathy and conviction, and she's just the kind of hardened, soft-hearted girl you'd want to fall in with if you were on the lam. And the ending, as badly directed and edited as it is (you'll see), is pure Hitchcock for its setting and high drama. We are taken inside the new United Nations building called the Secretariat in Manhattan (the International Style Le Corbusier skyscraper was finished in 1952), in what must be the first Hollywood movie to do so (and perhaps the last in this manner until "The Interpreter" in 2005, the site being secret and guarded enough that Hitchcock himself in 1958 had to use a model instead of the real location).

    This is one case where someone could re-edit it and have something of a minor gem, with high points making it worth the effort. As it is, the speed bumps are nearly fatal.
    dougdoepke

    Better Than Expected

    The movie came as a rather pleasant surprise. I wasn't expecting much, not having heard of it among Grahame's usual list of noirs. Nonetheless, it's imaginatively directed and generally suspenseful, despite a one-note plot. Refugee Kaban (Gassman) arrives in New York as a stowaway, but will be deported if he doesn't track down a musician friend. So he searches the dives along Times Square looking for the guy he last saw in Europe. While he's tracking his friend, however, the cops are tracking him. There's also a number of sub-plots concerning people he meets on the way, who sort of drift in and out.

    There's atmosphere a-plenty as director Shane takes the camera crew along Times Square's night beat, which amounts to a dazzling b&w light show. At the same time, Gassman's gaunt frame and few words add to the carnival of characters. Grahame has a sympathetic role, for a change, which may be why the film remains obscure. Here, she's mostly a tag- along with Gassman and then with the cops. But I really like the unknown Robin Raymond as the personality-plus stripper who lights up the screen in a brief role.

    At first, I thought "the glass wall" referred to Kaban's inability to enter the country as a stowaway. But then, the many imposing shots of the glass slab of the UN building changed my reference. Nonetheless, it looks like a number of scenes were actually filmed in the UN, lending the story even more visual appeal. All in all, the movie's a pretty good dramatic travelogue of downtown NYC, slim on plot and dialog but fat on inventive visuals. It's also reminiscent of a time when Europe's post-war DP's (displaced persons) were much in the news.
    7bmacv

    A vividly raffish New York City comes to life in Maxwell Shane's overlooked message movie

    A pungent period flavor of post-war New York elevates Maxwell Shane's The Glass Wall. If it's not quite noir (its idealism disqualifies it), it sure looks and feels like noir. As well it should, coming from the writer/director of those unambiguous noirs Fear in the Night (1947) and its remake Nightmare (1956).

    In his first American film, Vittorio Gassman plays a stateless stowaway who's caught before his ship sails into New York harbor. Detained by immigration authorities, who won't believe his story that he qualifies for special consideration for aiding the Allies during the war, he's due to be returned to Trieste and certain death. But he jumps from the deck onto the docks, smashing his ribs, and starts stumbling around the city looking for the G.I. who can vouch for him (Jerry Paris). All Gassman knows is Paris' first name, and that he plays clarinet somewhere near Times Square (when we catch up with Paris, he's auditioning for Jack Teagarden's band).

    During his nocturnal search, he runs into Gloria Grahame, who's very down on her luck. A sharp little minx who used to affix the tips to shoelaces for a living, now she steals coats from Automats (it's one of her more captivating performances). Grahame's at first wary of Gassman but quickly won over – his tale of woe makes her troubles look paltry, and he's the first guy to treat her decently. So she lets him hide out in her garret room (his escape makes the front pages) and helps him search for his old pal.

    There's a beat-the-clock element that keeps the story moving: Gassman doesn't know that Paris has seen the tabloids and will vouch for him – or that his options will expire at dawn. And Shane stews the path with obstacles as well as with good Samaritans (Robin Raymond as a stripper with a heart of gold – another `Hunkie' – touchingly among them).

    As the sky lightens, the desperate Gassman reaches the place he thinks will be his salvation: The forbidding `glass wall' of Wallace K. Harrison's just-completed United Nations Headquarters. But the building's empty of all but janitors, and Gassman still doesn't know that he's still safe....

    The Glass Wall's a modest movie that overcomes the handicaps of its dated and idealistic `message' to succeed as a well told and acted human interest story. But it triumphs in its presentation of mid-20th-century Manhattan, as vividly raffish as in any movie of its period.
    7bobbie-16

    As fresh as today's headlines

    The plot of this movie is as fresh as today's news about refugees, asylum seekers, detentions and deportations, sensationalized images of immigrants, and the question of who gets to come to the US. Peter Kaban, a displaced person seeking to enter the US (Vittorio Gassman in a touching performance), escapes from detention and begins a desperate search through nighttime New York for the jazz musician who can corroborate his claims to having saved the life of an American soldier. The story has potential as a remake (sub Syria or Honduras for Hungary, etc)!

    The America the writer-director (Maxwell Shane) portrays is not the wholesome suburbia many folks associate with the 1950s, but a tough tawdry urban jungle of sexual harassment, single moms surviving as strippers (Robin Raymond in a sympathetic turn), shabby single-room occupancy buildings,exploited factory workers, kids who have to dance in the street for coins, homeless people sleeping in subways, and desperate people eating food left behind in restaurants...brilliant imagery with a Noir atmosphere.

    I did not fully understand Peter's story as a displaced person. He says clearly enough that the Nazis murdered his family and that he had been in Auschwitz, but he does not fill in much between WW II and 1953 --and so in 2018, it is difficult for us to understand exactly who he is and what happened to him in that period. 7-11 million people were wandering through Europe at the end of the war as "displaced persons": Jewish survivors of the Holocaust; Poles, Germans who had lived in Eastern Europe, and Ukrainians; refugees from the Baltic countries that were incorporated into the Soviet Union; and some Nazi collaborators fleeing the Soviets. The US passed strict and rather controversial legislation as to who could come to the US (e.g., only people who were already in displaced person camps by 1945 as well as many other rules), and Peter evidently did not match the approved profile. Maybe viewers in 1953 understood the context more clearly than the average viewer does now.
    7ksf-2

    Immigration adventure gone bad...

    Peter ( Vittorio Gassman) and Maggie (Gloria Grahame) show what can happen to immigrants that arrive here without proper papers. He has a loophole that he thinks he can use to be admitted to the country, but without enough information, this plan isn't going to work... Grahame had JUST made "the Bad and the Beautiful, which won her an Oscar; she often played the rough, gritty, sexy type that seemed to find trouble of some sort. Keep an eye out for Jerry Paris (we all know him as Dick Van Dyke's next door neighbor/dentist), directed a whole lot of TV shows in the 1960s and 1970s. Here he plays "Tom", someone from Peter's past who can help him if he can be located. Also some great photography (real or stock footage...?) of the crowded, rough and tumble, glizty well-lit Times Square from the 1950s, before Disney bought the whole block. A good, well told story, even if there are a couple of unbelievable moments here and there, like in the taxi cab.... Written and directed by Maxwell Shane, who mostly stuck to writing, but also produced and directed a few things from 1930 - 1960.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Along with Jack Teagarden (trombone) in the nightclub sequence, the band's Jimmy Giuffre (saxophone) on the far left and Shelly Manne (drums) can be seen. Shorty Rogers (trumpet) is leading the band. He and Bob Keene (clarinet) supply off camera solos for the actors.
    • Goofs
      The lights above the elevator on the ground floor of the United Nations building indicate that the elevator travels 36 floors in a few (i.e., 3-5) seconds. That kind of acceleration, speed, and braking would injure occupants of the elevator, especially the elderly operator. That distance in that period of time would exceed 60 mph.
    • Quotes

      Peter: Tell me. Is there not work for everyone here in America?

      Maggie: Almost everyone.

      Peter: So, how it happens that a girl like you steals a coat?

      Maggie: I don't know. I was cold. I needed a coat.

      Maggie: [thinking about what she just said] More than that, I was fed up, I guess.

      Maggie: [standing up] Did you ever put tips on shoe laces?

      Peter: Tip on shoelaces?

      Maggie: Yeah. That's what I did for two years.

      Maggie: [gesturing about her work] There's a big steal machine here, see, and over here, a giant spool of shoelace. You pull it out like this, twenty-seven inches at a time, all day. And then you stamp a pedal and a ton of steel bangs down, cuts the lace and rolls the tip on. Bang like that, and again. Bang, all day. You're scared you'll smash your finger. At the same time, you gotta keep your eye on the assistant foreman. Because every time he comes by he pinches you. You do this until your brain goes numb, and you get thirty-five bucks a week. And then, all of a sudden, you have an appendix attack, an operation, and you're out flat on your back. And you just can't get back on you're feet. And you get fed up. And you want to strike back at somebody, anybody!

      Maggie: [after she heaves a sigh] And you steal a coat.

    • Connections
      References Arch of Triumph (1948)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 1953 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Hungarian
    • Also known as
      • Die gläserne Mauer
    • Filming locations
      • 760 United Nations Plaza, 47th Street and 1st Avenue, New York City, New York, USA(Exterior/Interior - United Nations Building, still partially under construction.)
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 22 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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