The Grapes of Wrath

    The Grapes of Wrath
    1940

    Synopsis

    Tom Joad returns to his home after a jail sentence to find his family kicked out of their farm due to foreclosure. He catches up with them on his Uncle’s farm, and joins them the next day as they head for California and a new life... Hopefully.

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    Cast

    • Henry FondaTom Joad
    • Jane DarwellMa Joad
    • John CarradineCasy
    • Charley GrapewinGrandpa Joad
    • Dorris BowdonRosasharn
    • Russell SimpsonPa Joad
    • O. Z. WhiteheadAl Joad
    • John QualenMuley Graves
    • Eddie QuillanConnie Rivers
    • Zeffie TilburyGrandma Joad

    Recommendations

    • 100

      Chicago Sun-Times

      The message is boldly displayed, but told with characters of such sympathy and images of such beauty that audiences leave the theater feeling more pity than anger or resolve. It's a message movie, but not a recruiting poster.
    • 100

      Empire

      Gregg Toland captures the open spaces and big skies of rural America, while the normally conservative Ford puts forward a sympathetic but radical plea for workers' rights and freedom for the people.
    • 100

      Slant Magazine

      Too many films these days trivialize poverty as an ironically, tastelessly over-produced pageant to earn kudos. The Grapes of Wrath is flawed, but it captures that shiver of panic that grips anyone for whom the money for the next meal is unknown. The film remains a vital document of the perversion and torment of the fantasy most commonly known as the American Dream.
    • 100

      Variety

      It is an absorbing, tense melodrama, starkly realistic, and loaded with social and political fireworks.
    • 100

      The New York Times

      In the vast library where the celluloid literature of the screen is stored there is one small, uncrowded shelf devoted to the cinema's masterworks, to those films which by dignity of theme and excellence of treatment seem to be of enduring artistry, seem destined to be recalled not merely at the end of their particular year but whenever great motion pictures are mentioned. To that shelf of screen classics Twentieth Century-Fox yesterday added its version of John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath.
    • 100

      Time

      The Grapes of Wrath is possibly the best picture ever made from a so-so book. It is certainly the best picture Darryl F. Zanuck has produced or Nunnally Johnson scripted. It would be the best John Ford had directed if he had not already made "The Informer."
    • 100

      The New Republic

      The word that comes in most handily for The Grapes of Wrath is magnificent. Movies will probably go on improving and broadening themselves; but in any event, The Grapes of Wrath is the most mature picture story that has ever been made, in feeling, in purpose, and in the use of the medium. You can drag out classics (it is often safer not to go back and see them) and you can roll off names in different tongues and times. But this is a best that has no very near comparison to date.
    • 100

      TV Guide Magazine

      Ford's visualization of Steinbeck's novel is so emotionally gripping that viewers have little time to collect themselves from one powerful scene to the next.

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