By Jeremy Lott on 8.3.09 @ 6:06AM
Tonight, a special Washington screening of a great labor movie.
Tonight at dusk, D.C.'s National Mall will host a special Screen
on the Green showing of the 1954 classic On the
Waterfront. Barring awful weather, you might want to come
early. It's likely to be crowded.
People will flock to see the film for a number of reasons -- most
of them good. It has an all-star cast, including a young Marlon
Brando, Karl Malden, Rod Steiger, and Eva Marie Saint in her
debut role. It won eight Oscars and made the Vatican's list of 45
greatest films of all time. And it deserved the accolades. It's a
great story.
Within Hollywood, politics made On the Waterfront an
extremely controversial film. Director Elia Kazan had testified
before the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1952 about
Communist attempts to infiltrate the studio system. This story,
which painted "naming names" as an heroic act, was Kazan's
response to his critics.
They were none-too-happy about his unapology. When Kazan was
finally presented with a honorary Lifetime Achievement Award
during the 1999 Oscars, there was an organized campaign to
discourage applause. Several Hollywood notables sat on their
hands. The once-blacklisted writer Abraham Polonsky said publicly
that if someone were to shoot Kazan, "It would no doubt be a
thrill in an otherwise dull evening."
It's both easy and hard to see why people got so worked up.
On the Waterfront was based on an actual Pulitzer
Prize-winning series of articles documenting corruption on the
docks of Brooklyn and Manhattan. The reluctant hero, Terry Malloy
(Brando), is a former prizefighter turned New York dockworker who
starts out in the pocket of union boss and mafioso Johnny
Friendly (Lee J. Cobb), but eventually breaks the Longshoremen's
code of "d and d" ("deaf and dumb") to restore justice and
dignity to his fellow workers.
His conscience is helped along in this by the love of a good
woman Edie (Saint) and the tough-but-caring voice of Father Barry
(Malden). Many of the lines have lost some of their impact
because of endless repetition ("I coulda been a condendah"), but
Father Barry's sermon over the fallen body of a dockworker is
still bracing.
Braving jeers and projectiles, the priest booms, "Some people
think the Crucifixion only took place on Calvary. They better
wise up. Taking Joey Doyle's life to stop him from testifying is
a crucifixion. Dropping a sling on Kayo Dugan because he was
ready to spill his guts tomorrow, that's a crucifixion. Every
time the mob puts the crusher on a good man, tries to stop him
from doing his duty as a citizen, it's a crucifixion. And anybody
who sits around and lets it happen, keeps silent about something
he knows has happened, shares the guilt of it just as much as the
Roman soldier who pierced the flesh of Our Lord to see if He was
dead."
Then comes the instructive exchange:
Thug: "Go back to your church, Father."
Barry: "Boys, this is my church. If you don't think Christ is
down here on the waterfront, you've got another guess coming!"
Some have called On the Waterfront an anti-union flick,
but that couldn't be further from the truth. Its moral outlook is
in favor of the hard working union worker and dead set against
union bosses who misuse union dues, demand kickbacks, and
intimidate people who won't shut up and go along.
And it's still relevant today. In the film, Malloy is able to set
things to right by cooperating with the anti-corruption
Waterfront Crime Commission. Our modern version of the Commission
is the Department of Labor's Office of Labor Management
Standards, which in the past eight years secured hundreds of
convictions of corrupt union officials and tens of millions of
dollars in forced restitution over misspent union dues.
For its success, OLMS's budget was cut by the new Democratic
Congress in 2007 and likely to be further pared back under the
Obama administration. The previous OLMS also worked hard to force
the unions to come clean about their records. The current one has
gone in rather the other direction. In the film, a union official
in a hearing claims that all the records were stolen the night
before. In real life, sympathetic bureaucrats simply loosen
disclosure requirements.
Finally, there's the scarf. Near the end of the film, union boss
Friendly is at his most defiant when he appears in a suit and
scarf. I wouldn't mention it here except that it's eerily similar
to the one Service Employees International Union boss Andy Stern,
probably the most powerful union boss in America, wore to a labor
photo-op at the White House in February.
"Nice scarf," said President Obama.
topics:
Unions, Big Labor, Andrew Stern