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Man on a Tightrope

  • 1953
  • Approved
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2K
YOUR RATING
Cameron Mitchell and Terry Moore in Man on a Tightrope (1953)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer3:09
1 Video
99+ Photos
Political ThrillerDramaThriller

A Czech circus owner and clown and his entire troupe employ a daring stratagem in order to escape en masse from behind the Iron Curtain.A Czech circus owner and clown and his entire troupe employ a daring stratagem in order to escape en masse from behind the Iron Curtain.A Czech circus owner and clown and his entire troupe employ a daring stratagem in order to escape en masse from behind the Iron Curtain.

  • Director
    • Elia Kazan
  • Writers
    • Robert E. Sherwood
    • Neil Paterson
  • Stars
    • Fredric March
    • Terry Moore
    • Gloria Grahame
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Elia Kazan
    • Writers
      • Robert E. Sherwood
      • Neil Paterson
    • Stars
      • Fredric March
      • Terry Moore
      • Gloria Grahame
    • 46User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:09
    Trailer

    Photos105

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    Top cast22

    Edit
    Fredric March
    Fredric March
    • Karel Cernik
    Terry Moore
    Terry Moore
    • Tereza Cernik
    Gloria Grahame
    Gloria Grahame
    • Zama Cernik
    Cameron Mitchell
    Cameron Mitchell
    • Joe Vosdek
    Adolphe Menjou
    Adolphe Menjou
    • Fesker
    Robert Beatty
    Robert Beatty
    • Barovic
    Alexander D'Arcy
    Alexander D'Arcy
    • Rudolph
    • (as Alex D'Arcy)
    Richard Boone
    Richard Boone
    • Krofta
    Pat Henning
    Pat Henning
    • Konradin
    Paul Hartman
    Paul Hartman
    • Jaremir
    John Dehner
    John Dehner
    • The Chief
    Peter Beauvais
    • Secret Police Captain
    • (uncredited)
    Mme. Brumbach
    • Mme. Cernik
    • (uncredited)
    Willy Castello
    Willy Castello
    • Captain
    • (uncredited)
    Gert Fröbe
    Gert Fröbe
    • Police Agent
    • (uncredited)
    Hansi
    • Kalka
    • (uncredited)
    Philip Kenneally
    Philip Kenneally
    • The Sergeant
    • (uncredited)
    Edelweiß Malchin
    • Konradine
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Elia Kazan
    • Writers
      • Robert E. Sherwood
      • Neil Paterson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    7.21.9K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    8the_old_roman

    Intriguing and well-acted

    This is an interesting movie about the members of a circus troupe trying to flee Communist domination while battling amongst themselves. Adolphe Menjou is spectacular as a down-on-his-luck government functionary. Gloria Grahame is chilling in her scenes. Richard Boone and Cameron Mitchell lend professional support.
    9JackCrabbe

    Why isn't this movie considered a classic?

    This is a really fine movie, with some marvelous subtlety and powerful metaphor, despite the fact it shows its age. Great editing, good script, some superb scenes. I can't understand why it is not more widely known and appreciated. The Cold War is simply the setting; the unprepossessing story means far more.

    For those who might be interested, this was the favorite movie of American poet Richard Hugo (1923-1982), who wrote several pages about it in his posthumously published 1986 autobiography, The Real West Marginal Way. A couple of Hugo's comments:

    "The border becomes a kind of symbolic line separating the will from the imagination, the world of serious organizational adult responsibility from the paradise of childhood play."

    "More than anything else, the music {of the amateurish circus musicians} attests to the poor odds facing not only the tacky circus but humanity itself."
    8brower8

    The rare sleeper, a hidden gem

    Sleeper classics are rare. Esthetics do not change, but politics do. This movie has a political message -- that communism is horrible, and that life under communism is bare existence. That was not enough for the McCarthy Era, and this movie falls short of the standard anti-communist diatribe of its kind. The view of someone like Vaclav Havel that communism was mere degradation of people and the imposition of an absurd order was not "hard-line" enough for the McCarthy Era.

    This movie shows a more subtle critique of communism than the usual apocalyptic view of saber-rattling generals and madman tyrants. Czechoslovakia could have been the shopfront for communism because it wasn't as ravaged by World War II as were some other countries, and the Soviets didn't treat it as a conquered province grafted onto its empire. The country was prosperous before World War II and had a democratic government for twenty years after World War I. Even in Czechoslovakia, the communists imposed one degradation after another upon the people while promoting itself with demagogic rhetoric that communism was the desire of the working man -- except that nobody had the right to say "no" anymore. The communists nationalized Cernik's circus, only to pay him a very generous salary as compensation as a manager of a state enterprise; then they made the money worthless through currency "reforms" that pauperized all but the communists and enriched the communists. Sudden horror and slow degradation lead to the same misery, only at different rates.

    Politics aside, this is a good adventure film with some comic elements as the circus crew fights among itself to seek escape from the madhouse (note that Milos Forman said that his image of an asylum for the insane was much like his native Czechoslovakia in comments on "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest"

    Too subtle for the 1950's, it got lost. In the cable-TV era "movie archive" channels try out some lost movies and occasionally find a gem. This one is a gem.
    8AlsExGal

    One of Elia Kazan's least known films...

    ...which is set in the Communist-ruled Czechoslovakia of 1952. Fredric March owns a small-time circus, except that now it's been taken over by the state, which wants to micromanage everything, right down to the clown acts. March and his performers want to escape across the border to part of Germany controlled by the Americans.

    The film was shot in Bavaria, which is a big plus. The gritty, run-down circus atmosphere is nicely caught. We can see that although this is hardly a first-rate outfit, it still provides needed entertainment and escape for those who watch the show. As one might expect, the Communists have spies in the circus, and March doesn't know who to trust. His daughter (Terry Moore) has the hots for a young roustabout (Cameron Mitchell) who seems to have come from nowhere. His wife (Gloria Grahame) has the Gloria Grahame thing going on of despising her husband and looking around for someone to betray him with (Richard Boone seems a likely prospect). Betrayal is one of the big themes of the film. Even the Communist officials are looking for ways to betray each other.

    This is one of my favorite Fredric March performances, particularly from this part of his career. Among a number of strong supporting performances by men, Adolphe Menjou stands out as a Communist official who sees March as dangerous precisely because he is an honest man. Menjou has remarkable presence every moment he's on screen.

    Kazan gave a lot of credit to his producer, Gerd Oswald, and his cameraman, Georg Kraus. It's a solid film, and I look forward to seeing it again.
    7bkoganbing

    Freedom Circus

    One of the more intelligent anti-Communist movies that came out in the Fifties was Man On A Tightrope, shot in Bavaria as close as 20th Century Fox could get to Czechoslovakia where the story takes place. Fredric March plays the lead, a circus owner who seemingly knuckles under to the new rulers of his country. For that his daughter Terry Moore is concerned with his mental health. His second wife Gloria Grahame thinks he's become a spineless weakling and starts casting her eyes about the rest of the show.

    Not so because March has been ruminating about a plan to get over the border to West Germany and freedom and it's quite the scheme. But it will involve split second timing and the right opportunity which seems to have presented itself. He does have a traitor in his ranks who reports to the local party things in the performance that don't quite tow the party line. When local commissar Adolphe Menjou gives March an ideological pep talk about his clown routine, March realizes he'd better flee and fast.

    This film was directed by Elia Kazan who has come down to us sadly as a friendly House Un-American Activities witness and was sadly booed at the Academy Awards when he got a lifetime achievement award. Kazan's long life ended in irony when Pat Buchanan spoke a eulogy on one of the talk shows. Then as now Buchanan was a guy Kazan would have despised, he always considered himself a man of the left.

    But in his theater days he saw just how rigid and ideological Communists can be. I've long been convinced that each and every person who appeared at HUAC, friendly or hostile, each did it with his own motives and agenda, some good, some evil. Adolphe Menjou for instance was a rabid rightwinger who left a nice size bequest to the John Birch Society. His agenda was different certainly than Kazan's.

    More than On The Waterfront which has come down in film history as Elia Kazan's apologia for being a stool pigeon, Man On A Tightrope is a far more personal work. March is playing Kazan as artist resenting any political intrusion of any kind in his work. Unless you realize that this film will have no meaning.

    Kazan assembled a truly good cast and got some great performances, especially from Fredric March. Man On A Tightrope should be seen by today's audience for a real understanding of the era and of Elia Kazan.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Karel Cernik mentions the train that broke through the Czech border into West Germany. That happened on September 11, 1951.
    • Goofs
      When Fredric March is being interrogated, the inkwell in front of him is uncovered, when the camera switches between him and his interrogator, the inkwell's cover is on.
    • Quotes

      Rudolph: [to Cernik] The curse of my life is that I'm a handsome man.

    • Connections
      Featured in TCM Guest Programmer: Dana Delaney (2021)
    • Soundtracks
      The Moldau
      (uncredited)

      from "Ma Vlast (My Country)"

      Music by Bedrich Smetana

      Arranged by Franz Waxman and Earle Hagen

      Played during circus sequences by a band and as background music by the orchestra several times, during the opening credits as a circus march, and in the film's final musical cue by the upper strings over the circus march.

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 29, 1953 (West Germany)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • West Germany
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • International Incident
    • Filming locations
      • Bavaria Studios, Bavariafilmplatz 7, Geiselgasteig, Grünwald, Bavaria, Germany
    • Production companies
      • Twentieth Century Fox
      • Bavaria Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $1,200,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 45 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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