| James Dean, Natalie Wood , Corey Allen
, Sal Mineo -, Dennis Hopper, William Hopper , Jim Backus When
people think of James Dean, they probably think first of the troubled
teen from Rebel Without a Cause: nervous, volatile, soulful, a kid
lost in a world that does not understand him. Made between his only
other starring roles, in East of Eden and Giant, Rebel sums up the
jangly, alienated image of Dean, but also happens to be one of the
key films of the 1950s. Director Nicholas Ray takes a strikingly
sympathetic look at the teenagers standing outside the white-picket-fence
'50s dream of America: juvenile delinquent (that's what they called
them then) Jim Stark (Dean), fast girl Judy (Natalie Wood), lost
boy Plato (Sal Mineo), slick hot-rodder Buzz (Corey Allen). At the
time, it was unusual for a movie to endorse the point of view of
teenagers, but Ray and screenwriter Stewart Stern captured the youthful
angst that was erupting at the same time in rock & roll. Dean
is heartbreaking, following the method acting style of Marlon Brando
but staking out a nakedly emotional honesty of his own. Going too
fast, in every way, he was killed in a car crash on September 30,
1955, a month before Rebel opened. He was no longer an actor, but
an icon, and Rebel is a lasting monument. |