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IMDbPro

The Big Night

  • 1951
  • Approved
  • 1h 15m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
John Drew Barrymore and Joan Lorring in The Big Night (1951)
The Big Night: Jazz Club
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Film NoirDramaThriller

A teenager comes of age while seeking revenge on the man who beat up his father.A teenager comes of age while seeking revenge on the man who beat up his father.A teenager comes of age while seeking revenge on the man who beat up his father.

  • Director
    • Joseph Losey
  • Writers
    • Stanley Ellin
    • Joseph Losey
    • Hugo Butler
  • Stars
    • John Drew Barrymore
    • Preston Foster
    • Joan Lorring
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    1.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joseph Losey
    • Writers
      • Stanley Ellin
      • Joseph Losey
      • Hugo Butler
    • Stars
      • John Drew Barrymore
      • Preston Foster
      • Joan Lorring
    • 20User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Big Night: Jazz Club
    Clip 3:11
    The Big Night: Jazz Club

    Photos35

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    Top cast45

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    John Drew Barrymore
    John Drew Barrymore
    • George La Main
    • (as John Barrymore Jr.)
    Preston Foster
    Preston Foster
    • Andy La Main
    Joan Lorring
    Joan Lorring
    • Marion Rostina
    Howard St. John
    Howard St. John
    • Al Judge
    Dorothy Comingore
    Dorothy Comingore
    • Julie Rostina
    Philip Bourneuf
    Philip Bourneuf
    • Dr. Lloyd Cooper
    Howland Chamberlain
    Howland Chamberlain
    • Flanagan
    • (as Howland Chamberlin)
    Myron Healey
    Myron Healey
    • Kennealy
    Emile Meyer
    Emile Meyer
    • Peckinpaugh
    • (as Emil Meyer)
    Mauri Leighton
    Mauri Leighton
    • Terry Angelus
    • (as Mauri Lynn)
    Robert Aldrich
    Robert Aldrich
    • Ringsider at Fight
    • (uncredited)
    Walter Bacon
    • Boxing Match Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    Benjie Bancroft
    • Bar Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Bice
    Robert Bice
    • Taxi Driver
    • (uncredited)
    Willie Bloom
    • Boxing Match Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    Chet Brandenburg
    Chet Brandenburg
    • Boxing Match Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    Lane Chandler
    Lane Chandler
    • Printer
    • (uncredited)
    Edmund Cobb
    Edmund Cobb
    • Cop
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Joseph Losey
    • Writers
      • Stanley Ellin
      • Joseph Losey
      • Hugo Butler
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.31.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8bmacv

    John Barrymore, Jr., memorable in coming-of-age noir

    Joseph Losey's The Big Night is a film noir that's also, like Moonrise and Talk About A Stranger, a coming-of-age story. The young male undergoing his transformational journey is John Barrymore, Jr., son of the Great Profile and father of Drew. His film career was not high-profile, as he inherited the family disposition toward chemical dependency (blood will tell). But here, boasting a luxuriantly healthy crown of hair, he gives a surprisingly intense yet controlled performance. His big night happens to be his 16th or 17th birthday, when his barkeep father is brutally beaten and publicly humiliated by a local sportswriter (Losey's staging is unflinching). Frustrations about his own Hamlet-like ditherings and confusions impel him to seek revenge on his father's behalf, and, gun in pocket, he sets out into a nightscape of prize fights, gin mills and the walk-up flats of casually met strangers. While Losey's sympathies lie with Barrymore, it's always clear that the emergent man is still a callow stripling, incapable of apprehending the complex reality he crashes into, like a fatted calf in a china shop. Though the director refrains from pushing the conclusion to where it might logically go -- he retreats into sentimentality and sententiousness -- The Big Night still scores as a provocative, moodily shot film.
    6amadman

    Decent B Noir, horrible audio quality

    As previous reviewer wrote, saw this on TCM and the sound was terrible. Good story in need of a cleanup. I like hearing dialogue.
    jimddddd

    Too stage bound!

    As someone who knew John Barrymore Jr. 25 years ago, I was heartbroken to see him early in his aborted film career. Though not as charismatic as James Dean would be just a couple of years later, he was certainly Dean's prototype in The Big Night. Perhaps with a better film and a less disturbed personality, Barrymore might have been a working Hollywood actor for many years to come. Anyway, what director Joseph Losey lacked here was the Los Angeles cityscape he used to full effect that same year in his retelling of Fritz Lang's M. The Big Night was screaming for a location project on downtown L.A.'s seedy, beaten down Bunker Hill, a neighborhood of crumbling Victorian mansions and apartment buildings with vertiginous stairways that provided so much atmosphere to other films, such as Kiss Me Deadly, Criss-Cross, The Exiles and, yes, M. Instead, the movie is stage bound and hemmed in by sets that never look convincing. With its rambling "a night in the life" plot line, The Big Night needed another character: a dark city of real streets, background lights, rambling old house, and dingy clubs and bars. In other words, the kind of verisimilitude that transports the viewer into the protagonist's world. The back lot, unfortunately, was a poor stand-in.
    5bkoganbing

    Cop out ending

    A truly cop out ending really ruins what was potentially a great coming of age film. John Drew Barrymore gave an outstanding performance as our youth protagonist who does a lot of growing up in The Big Night.

    Young Barrymore celebrating his 17th birthday is horrified that at his birthday party sportswriter Howard St.John gives Barrymore's father Preston Foster one severe and public thrashing. And Foster who back in his prime Hollywood days in the 30s was one rugged tough guy just submits to it. A case of directolr Joseph Losey casting successfully against type. i do wish we saw a bit more of Foster in the film though.

    Looking to avenge the family honor Barrymore has quite an odyssey on his Big Night.

    I can't say more lest I spoil things, but the ending was a cop out. My guess was that the soon to be blacklisted Joe Losey made some concession to Hollywood convention. It was not over politics though.

    Not the best note Losey could have left America on.
    robotman-1

    The Wrong Woman

    The story here is revenge, more real-life based, a 1950's version of the crime of passion. A teenager's good-hearted father is beaten to a pulp by a gangster, so the kid invades the streets to get some payback. The father's not worried about the floor-wiping, which leads to a mystery behind the teen's mother, who skipped out on the family long ago, and a woman the father knows who has committed suicide.

    Seeing this film, there's not much in terms of plot, but there are some notable scenes, particularly when the kid hears a beautiful night-club singer, becomes entranced, gets a chance to meet her on the street, and tells her how beautiful she is. Even though she's, you know,

    black. The pain in the singer's face rends the poor kid, who was transported by her voice, but can't get beyond her skin color.

    This film also has one of THE great lines ever in any film noir or any movie period, at least concerning the tragedy between a man and a woman, when there is love involved. There are no words more powerful or poignant, especially for a man who loves a woman beyond reason, who knows he has lost the love of his life. Unable to move on, to love or marry another woman after that one woman has destroyed him, and in fact still very much in love with his destroyer,

    Preston Foster tells his son, "Sometimes a man loves one woman in the whole world. If she turns out to be the wrong one, well...that's just tough." Truly, the heart of noir is not blackness, but the white-hot scars of passion.

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    Related interests

    Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in The Big Sleep (1946)
    Film Noir
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to interviews that director Joseph Losey gave in the mid-1970s to Michel Ciment, the FBI wanted to spy on him in Europe, where he relocated to work after being blacklisted by Hollywood because of his political activities. So they paid John Drew Barrymore (who became a good friend after this movie) to furnish information about Losey's political activities, if any, in London. Barrymore later met Losey in London and confessed to him about the money and expense account the FBI had given him to spy on Losey. Losey, recalling that the young actor had been under tremendous pressure at the time, forgave him and, in fact, suggested that they have several lavish meals together and put the cost on Barrymore's FBI expense account, which they promptly did.
    • Goofs
      The magazine racks outside the corner store are mostly issues contemporary to 1951, with one glaring exception. A copy of the famous first issue of The New Yorker (published in 1925).
    • Quotes

      Peckinpaugh: Next time you see somebody drop money, don't think about it so long before you decide to give it back.

    • Connections
      Featured in Vampira Returns: The Big Night 1951 (1956)
    • Soundtracks
      Am I Too Young
      Music by Lyn Murray

      Lyrics by Sid Kuller

      Sung by Mauri Leighton (uncredited)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 7, 1951 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Die Nacht der Wahrheit
    • Filming locations
      • 218 East 12th Street, Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA(George goes to the old St. Joseph's Church - destroyed by fire and demolished in 1983)
    • Production company
      • Philip A. Waxman Productions Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 15m(75 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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