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The Joker Is Wild

  • 1957
  • Approved
  • 2h 6m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Frank Sinatra, Jeanne Crain, and Mitzi Gaynor in The Joker Is Wild (1957)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:09
1 Video
12 Photos
BiographyDramaMusical

Frank Sinatra plays Joe E. Lewis, a famous comedian of the 1930s-50s. When the movie opens, Lewis is a young, talented singer who performs in speakeasies. After he bolts one job for another,... Read allFrank Sinatra plays Joe E. Lewis, a famous comedian of the 1930s-50s. When the movie opens, Lewis is a young, talented singer who performs in speakeasies. After he bolts one job for another, the mob boss who owns the first speakeasy has his thugs try to kill Lewis. He survives, b... Read allFrank Sinatra plays Joe E. Lewis, a famous comedian of the 1930s-50s. When the movie opens, Lewis is a young, talented singer who performs in speakeasies. After he bolts one job for another, the mob boss who owns the first speakeasy has his thugs try to kill Lewis. He survives, but his vocal cords are cut and he cannot sing. Several years later, his buddy tracks him d... Read all

  • Director
    • Charles Vidor
  • Writers
    • Oscar Saul
    • Art Cohn
  • Stars
    • Frank Sinatra
    • Mitzi Gaynor
    • Jeanne Crain
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Charles Vidor
    • Writers
      • Oscar Saul
      • Art Cohn
    • Stars
      • Frank Sinatra
      • Mitzi Gaynor
      • Jeanne Crain
    • 35User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    The Joker Is Wild
    Trailer 2:09
    The Joker Is Wild

    Photos12

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Frank Sinatra
    Frank Sinatra
    • Joe E. Lewis
    Mitzi Gaynor
    Mitzi Gaynor
    • Martha Stewart
    Jeanne Crain
    Jeanne Crain
    • Letty Page
    Eddie Albert
    Eddie Albert
    • Austin Mack
    Beverly Garland
    Beverly Garland
    • Cassie Mack
    Jackie Coogan
    Jackie Coogan
    • Swifty Morgan
    Barry Kelley
    Barry Kelley
    • Captain Hugh McCarthy
    Ted de Corsia
    Ted de Corsia
    • Georgie Parker
    Leonard Graves
    • Tim Coogan
    Valerie Allen
    Valerie Allen
    • Flora - Chorine
    Hank Henry
    Hank Henry
    • Burlesque Comedian
    Sophie Tucker
    Sophie Tucker
    • Sophie Tucker
    Ned Glass
    Ned Glass
    • Johnson
    • (unconfirmed)
    Eric Alden
    Eric Alden
    • Doorman at the Copacabana
    • (uncredited)
    Jerry Antes
    Jerry Antes
    • Vegas Speciality Dancer
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Asquith
    • Nightclub Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Bill Baldwin
    Bill Baldwin
    • Radio Announcer on Loudspeaker
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    Bobby Barber
    Bobby Barber
    • Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Charles Vidor
    • Writers
      • Oscar Saul
      • Art Cohn
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    7.01.5K
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    Featured reviews

    9gajomat

    The Joker is Wild - Sinatras best

    Amazing biography of an amazing man. Joe E. Lewis was the quintessential star of the roaring 20's, with apologies to Al Jolson. A great singer who crossed the wrong people and paid for it with a slashed throat. Sinatra's performance is beyond belief. Already noted as a great actor he outdoes himself. It's been heard that FS "walked" through his roles but not here. Shows how much respect he had for Lewis. A great supporting cast ( Eddie Albert, Jeanne Crain, Mitzi Gaynor and Jackie Coogan) help the film but without the "Chairman of the Board" it would have been just another biography. Sinatra's rendition of "All the Way" is not to be missed. Do yourself a favor and see this movie.
    10godsnewworldiscoming-1

    Frank Sinatra is an underrated actor!

    If only this movie was available on DVD! This movie is good for those people who have had major setbacks in life, and need to start over. It reinforced in me the need to make the best of your situation in life.

    Frank played the title role impeccably. I think its a travesty that his performance didn't garner him a best actor nomination. That just shows you how superior the actors of that era were in comparison to the actors of today.

    Again, I'm befuddled as to why this movie is not available on DVD. Hopefully, it will be more accessible for viewers who know very little of the acting talents of old blue eyes!
    8jjnxn-1

    One of Sinatra's best

    Sinatra offers a good account of Joe E. Lewis in a film made during his most fruitful as an actor before the laziness of the Rat Pack years crept into his work. Plus it contains one of his most beautifully sung songs "All the Way". The moody black and white camera work also helps set the tone for this rather downbeat bio pic. As the two women in his life Jeanne Crain and Mitzi Gaynor both perform well but the really strong woman's role goes to Beverly Garland, always an underused and undervalued actress, as Eddie Albert's loyal wife. She is strong, gritty, sensible and sympathetic as needs be doing a great deal with what could have been a nothing part.
    7B24

    A Competent Curiosity

    Comedian Joe E. Lewis is best remembered as a precursor of comedians like Rodney Dangerfield and Foster Brooks as well as a pal of Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra. The common thread was creating one-liners that had something to do with drunks. He is sometimes confused with Joe E. Brown because of his name, though the two had little in common except being in the show business at about the same time. This film starring Frank Sinatra is therefore a kind of personal homage to a friend, one that would hold little interest as a story unless the viewer knew of the connection in advance. In starts sort of nowhere and goes sort of nowhere, relying for its interest on an unusually literate script and some really good direction and camera work. The best scene is one toward the beginning where Sinatra and a radiant Jeanne Crain meet behind a cyclorama in a theater and flirt with each other as the shadowy figures on the other side of the screen are partying. Twenty-first century viewers will find the dialogue, the sets, and the constant smoking and drinking very curious -- sometimes offensive to modern sensibilities. But that is a characteristic common to many films made between the beginning of "talkies" in about 1930 and the introduction of blockbuster mega-films in the late 1950's and early 1960's. The social diameters and definitions of acceptable behavior for women, black people, drunks, so-called burlesque shows, and "cafe society" and the like were either narrower or broader during that time than they are today. This is definitely not a film made from a play or novel requiring attention to literary unities. Still, it hangs together pretty well for anyone patient enough to concentrate on its more dramatic moments. Look for it on Turner Classic Movies.
    7sol-kay

    Don't call me a doctor call me a drunk!

    Movie about singer stand-up comedian Joe E. Lewis with Frank Sinatra in the leading role as the beloved and at the same time tragic entertainer who survived a vicious knife attack in Al Capone's Chicago that ended his singing career.

    Alone and forgotten years later Joe E. is spotted at the Belmont Race Track by his old friend Swifty Morgan, Jackie Coogan, who thinks that his velvet voice is back,or never really left him. Swifty offers Joe. E a job in a Broadway song and dance number with Sophie Tucker. It turns out that Joe E. is nowhere the singer that he used to be but he had developed a very sharp sense of humor and rapid-fire delivery. That together with a couple of stiff drinks on the stage, to loosen him up, had the night club costumers rolling in the aisles.

    We get to see Joe E. Lewis go from being almost forgotten to reaching the top of the entertainment world and then slowly destroying himself and those who loved and cared for him. Like he did to the blood-blooded socialite Letty Page, Jeanne Crain, who wanted to marry Joe E. but finally gave up when Joe E. left her for two years during WWII doing shows and getting drunk, overseas. Marrying showgirl Martha Stewart, not the one that you think but someone else,(Mitzi Gaynor) lasted just two years. As Martha was getting parts in motions pictures Joe E. got drunk doing his night-club act and in the end turned their home into a card playing casino and horse room. With dozens of Joe E.'s friends in attendance where Martha felt that she was a stranger in her own home.

    Martha just about had it when she came to visit Joe E. in Vegas, in the middle of making a movie, and got the cold shoulder from him. Joe E. was more interested with the goings on the crap table then with the emotional state of his own wife. Hurt and humiliated by Joe E.'s actions Martha got herself gloriously drunk on a half dozen cocktails told him good-by for the last time and ended up walking, or better yet staggering, out on him for ever.

    Joe E. on the stage doing his act really gets hot under the collar when one of the drunk, like himself, and abusive patrons in the audience makes a nasty and snide remark about him and is drunken wife, Martha. That leads Joe E. to get off the stage walk up to him and lay him out together with his friend and on stage piano player Auston Mack, Eddie Albert, who tried to intervene.

    "The Joker is Wild" is a movie about the self-destruction of a talented entertainer who was trapped in a bottle because he needed it to preform on stage. At the same time turned him into a drunken an abusive personality that eventually proved to be his biggest enemy by far. More then any of the abusive and obnoxious customers that he had to deal with while he was preforming on stage.

    Frank Sinatra as Joe E. Lewis has a chance to sing a number of his biggest hits notably the movie's theme song "All The Way". Sinatra's acting as the troubled and alcoholic comedian is among his best. There's a somewhat up-beat ending with Joe E. seeming to see the light and turn his life around which Joe E. did and outlived the predictions of his doctors who told him that if he didn't stop drinking he'd never live past middle-age. It had been reported from those close to him at the time that in the last years of his life Joe E.Lewis did his night-club act while downing glasses of tea not booze. Still it was obvious that the many years of heavy drinking took a toll on Joe E. Lewis and was a major reason in his not so sudden but very shocking physical deterioration and death.

    P.S Joe E Lewish 1971 death certificate it stated that he died of among other things acute alcohol related complication's.

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    Related interests

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    Biography
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    Musical

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In real life, Danny Cohen owned the club in which Joe E. Lewis first worked. After Lewis defected for more money, Cohen gave mobster Jack "Machine Gun" McGurn (real name: Vincenzo Antonio Gebhardi), a lieutenant in Al Capone's mob, a 25% share in the club in return for his persuading Lewis to stay. McGurn's method of persuasion was the beating which Lewis received.
    • Goofs
      When Joe is looking at the building directory, the close-up shows "MORRIS WILLIAM". Yet in the next shot as Joe turns to go to the elevator, it says "MORRIS Wm"
    • Quotes

      Joe E. Lewis: You know I wish I had a camera right now, because I could get the perfect picture of a guy with his two feet in his mouth.

    • Connections
      Featured in Sinatra (1969)
    • Soundtracks
      All the Way
      Music by Jimmy Van Heusen

      Lyrics by Sammy Cahn

      Sung by Frank Sinatra

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 1957 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • All the Way
    • Filming locations
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • AMBL Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 6m(126 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White

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