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Racket dans la couture

1957

R

1 h 28 m

États-Unis

Crime

Drame

Film-Noir

The struggle of a lady's garment workers' organization to unionize a New York clothing sweat shop; the owner of which is determined to keep the union out of his business at any cost.
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6.6 /10

1379 people rated

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Meilleurs acteurs(18)
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Lee J. Cobb
Walter Mitchell
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Kerwin Mathews
Alan Mitchell
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Gia Scala
Theresa Renata
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Richard Boone
Artie Ravidge
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Valerie French
Lee Hackett
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Robert Loggia
Tulio Renata
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Joseph Wiseman
George Kovan
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Harold J. Stone
Tony
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Adam Williams
Ox
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Wesley Addy
Mr. Paul
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Willis Bouchey
Dave Bronson
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Robert Ellenstein
Fred Kenner
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Celia Lovsky
Tulio's Mother
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Suzanne Alexander
Joanne
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Benjie Bancroft
Worker
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Joanna Barnes
Bit Model
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John Barton
Worker
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Harry Baum
Worker

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🧚🏻مولات ضحيكة🤤كزاوية❤️popiâ

29/05/2023 21:46
source: The Garment Jungle
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Branded kamina

18/11/2022 08:31
Trailer—The Garment Jungle
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Sejar Jasani

16/11/2022 13:12
The Garment Jungle
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Snit hailemaryam😜

16/11/2022 02:23
Like many of these 'expose' dramas, this one is overblown, pedantic, and makes it's point with a sledgehammer. Add to that the bland and boring (not to mention unattractive) Kerwin Matthews and you have a result that tries too hard to make it's point. Cobb is mercifully somewhat understated in what could have been another 'blowhard' role, and Boone is suitably sleazy (as are his henchmen). The only woman of any depth is actually the great Celia Lovsky (playing an Italian?) as Loggia's mother. In general a disappointing misfire. Perhaps it would have been better left in Aldrich's hands as Sherman was a 'Hollyweed product' at best.
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MULAMWAH™

16/11/2022 02:23
No pun intended - and talks may be stretching it. There was a time when workers did not have it easy. Well there are still workplaces and countries where this is true (allegedly Qatar is one of those places). Still I doubt they can make an engaging movie like this one - or have a coherent storyline like we have here that is. All that aside, the movie starts off with a bang. And an interesting way to show us an elevator scene going down (no pun intended). Things happen you say? Question is how controlled they are and who controls them? There is always some speculation of course ... and the suspense the movie builds is helping. Great acting helps the whole thing of course.
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Olwe2Lesh

16/11/2022 02:23
I was lucky enough to see a VHS-transfer copy of this, and despite the poor quality, I can recommend this as a top-notch Crime/Mob/Racket thriller. Not exactly noir, but shares many many similar qualities - fast pace, seedy NY locations, opening voice-over etc. Think 'Phenix City Story' and you won't go far wrong - though this is actually even better than that. As usual, Lee J. Cobb is outstanding. And it seems strange to see Cobb here, in such an unashamedly 'leftish' film, after the trouble he had with HUAC earlier in the decade. There's not one mention of the 'C' word, though "anti-communism" would undoubtedly have been the cover for the Mob's anti-union activities... This is only one of very few films I can think of from Hollywood with a pro-Union message - and I doubt if it could even have been made during the height of the McCarthyite witch-hunt. Find it, watch it, enjoy it. And then join your local trade union, organise to keep the mobsters and agitators out.
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_j.mi______

16/11/2022 02:23
Vincent Sherman was always a good director of melodramas, particularly if he had a strong leading lady. He made "The Garment Jungle" in 1957 after the original director, Robert Aldrich, was taken off the picture. You could hardly call it a problem picture but it did deal with the issue of Trade Unions and, in its way, it did find Sherman out of his comfort zone, (Aldrich was much better suited to the material). Nevertheless, it's a good example of its kind with a strong cast headed by Lee J. Cobb and featuring the likes of Robert Loggia, Richard Boone, Wesley Addy and Joseph Wiseman in supporting roles. However it's let down somewhat by its handsome, wooden lead, Kerwin Mathews, who always looked better shirtless, in baggy pants and with a scimitar in his hand. It was also lacking in a strong female lead; Gia Scala and Valerie French are as good as we get here and while both are very pretty neither was ever likely to be Oscar-bait. No "On the Waterfront" then but still worth seeing.
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Tima M

16/11/2022 02:23
Certainly among the lesser-known 50's racket-noirs (even many inferior are more discussed and collected), this one hits hard, looks good and has the unmistakable touch of prime-era Aldrich, though it was only partially done by him. Frequent cinematography collaborator Joe Biroc puts the stamp on that ensures a vivid look at a harsh story. The cast is uniformly good, with Cobb leading in one of his best performances. The blending of two directors' work here unusually doesn't detract from the impact of this one. Look for it on television, or the hard-to-find, out-of-print video, whenever possible.
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Julie Anne San Jose

16/11/2022 02:23
The struggle for the worker to get a decent living wage with a few benefits has been removed from the consciousness of the proletariat since Ronald Reagan broke the ATC union in the eighties. Since then the populace has been persuaded into believing that the worker is best left to the trickle down generosity of the employer. This film is a throwback to that struggle and has a message packed with a powerhouse persona of greed, violence, and suppression. It utilizes realistic on location street photography to give a hard boiled and bitter verisimilitude. There are other flashes of "realism" not usually found in typical Hollywood films. Some very slick indoor photography and gripping performances throughout deliver this expose in a package marked "stay out of it, or its your baby's legs next". Tough stuff for the conservative, establishment, 1950's.
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Preeyada Sitthachai

16/11/2022 02:23
I'm in total agreement with the other reviewers here. This is a sharply-made film about a battle at a garment factory over unionization with terrific performances from Lee J. Cobb, a young Robert Loggia, and a menacing Richard Boone as a union buster. Kerwin Mathews gives only a passable lead performance, but then again his novice acting sort of fits his role as an outsider, which was necessary to give the audience a view of the garment industry from an outsider's perspective. Whether or not one scene or another was directed by Sherman or Aldrich makes little difference - the movie fits together fantastically, and has aged quite well. This movie would make a fine contrast to Paul Schrader's excellent 1978 expose movie "Blue Collar", which took an opposing negative view of the union.
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