Frank's Movie Log

Movie Reviews and commentary from a guy who loves movies.

Knock on Any Door (1949)

Grade: D

Knock on Any Door (1949) Poster

Synopsis: An attorney (Humphrey Bogart) builds a sob-story defense for a young man (John Derek) accused of murder.

Knock on Any Door is a preachy melodrama from director Nicholas Ray.

Ray, who’s probably best known for directing James Dean in Rebel Without a Cause (1955), takes something of a warm-up lap here, treading into the same teen angst and disaffected youth pool that defined the James Dean film.

Unfortunately, like most pre-Graduate films meant to portray the angst of an emerging generation, Knock on Any Door doesn’t age well at all. What might have been edgy in 1949 just seems corny now, likely, because the motion picture code wouldn’t allow the filmmakers to be honest. Kids couldn’t curse, nobody could get away with murder, and topics like abortion were completely off-limits. What’s left comes across as preachy and disingenuous.

Interspersed amongst the teen melodrama is a solid performance by Humphrey Bogart, who manages the impossible task of pulling off the film’s big finale speech. Like so much of the film’s dialog, Bogart’s monologue feels trite and self satsifying on paper, but Bogart pulls it off; a testament to his strength as an actor.

For his part, lead John Derek does the best he can with the material. While he certainly looks the part, he overacts badly in almost every scene, though with the script’s poor dialog, if Derek had really overdone it, Knock on Any Door would actually work as a satire.

Bottom Line: Overwrought and preachy, Knock on Any Door is a sub par entry for everyone involved and nowhere near the caliber of director Nicholas Ray and star Humphrey Bogart’s next collaboration In a Lonely Place (1950).

—Last viewed on Tuesday, March 4th 2008

“Knock on Any Door (1949)” was posted on March 10th, 2008 at 1:16 pm in Movie Reviews and Humphrey Bogart . View this film's entry in the IMDb.

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