The Defiant Ones

    The Defiant Ones
    1958

    Synopsis

    Two convicts—a white racist and an angry black man—escape while chained to each other.

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    Cast

    • Tony CurtisJohn 'Joker' Jackson
    • Sidney PoitierNoah Cullen
    • Theodore BikelSheriff Max Muller
    • Charles McGrawCapt. Frank Gibbons
    • Lon Chaney Jr.Big Sam
    • King DonovanSolly
    • Claude AkinsMack
    • Lawrence DobkinEditor
    • Whit BissellLou Gans
    • Carl SwitzerAngus

    Recommendations

    • 90

      Variety

      The performances by Tony Curtis and Sidney Poitier are virtually flawless. Poitier captures all of the moody violence of the convict, serving time because he assaulted a white man who had insulted him. It is a cunning, totally intelligent portrayal that rings powerfully true.
    • 80

      CineVue

      The Defiant Ones combines Stanley Kramer’s trademark liberal politics with a picaresque adventure that is deftly entertaining, tense and heartfelt.
    • 80

      The New York Times

      A remarkably apt and dramatic visualization of a social idea—the idea of men of different races brought together to face misfortune in a bond of brotherhood — is achieved by Producer Stanley Kramer in his new film, The Defiant Ones.
    • 80

      TV Guide Magazine

      Though the political lesson drives the movie, the action is also effective as the odd couple flees from their oppressors. This is an engrossing depiction of racial tensions and an oppressive penal system.
    • 78

      Austin Chronicle

      Nearly a decade before the supper-table racial detente of Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, Kramer mined the subject matter of racial divisiveness in the groundbreaking The Defiant Ones, which paired Curtis and Poitier as hunky prison escapees unhappily bonded to each other by means of metal chains and the mutual need to survive.
    • 63

      Chicago Reader

      Kramer was never much of a director, but there's still power in some of the performances, especially Poitier's.
    • 60

      Empire

      Uncomfortable viewing which isn't afraid to engage with race-related violence.
    • 50

      Time Out

      The suspense of the manhunt in the swamps never really overcomes the dead weight of Kramer's 'message', but pleasures are to be found in the supporting roles of McGraw and Chaney.

    Seen by

    • Antihero