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Comments 1 - 5 of 5

Camille Deadpan's avatar

Camille Deadpan

The very last scene is heartbreaking.
7 years 5 months ago
Siskoid's avatar

Siskoid

Though it shared vague plot points with To Have and Have Not, Michael Curtiz's adaptation of the same Hemingway material, The Breaking Point, is an entirely different film. The first was a star-studded, patriotic, witty Hollywood movie. The Breaking Point is a hard-edged, down and dirty, class struggle where poverty is the real antagonist. John Garfield has a face that makes everyone want to cheat him, apparently, and he's pushed to the limit by money problems as the film asks whether poverty could make criminals of us all. There's also a love triangle, of sorts, that may feel unnecessary, but it does track Garfield's moral compass. We don't know what he's really thinking when it comes to taking criminals on board his boat, but we can extrapolate it from his relationship with his potential mistress. Eventually, push comes to shove, but there's a chance for a happy ending. Except Curtiz has one last gut punch to throw at us, bringing the class struggle element into sharp (but subtle) focus at the very end. Garfield's character may feel like he's run out of good options, but he did have options. Not everyone in the film is so lucky.
5 years 2 months ago
cfish80's avatar

cfish80

Wow, this generally just feels like a great movie, a really great movie that few people have seen.
6 years 4 months ago
anne_f_'s avatar

anne_f_

http://veehd.com/video/4838414_The-breaking-point-1950-John-Garfield-avi
Please let me know if this link stops working.
10 years ago
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