Review of The Front

The Front (1976)
9/10
A Really Bad Time
22 December 2011
It seems almost impossible to believe that in the early Fifties there was such a thing as a blacklist. The best summation of this whole situation I ever heard was that there is no use blaming the various people in the film and television industry who worked at their craft, in front or behind the camera. Blame the studio heads who just knuckled under to a bunch or corrupt politicians who were looking to exploit the situations.

Players went to the stage where the blacklist did not exist or to foreign countries to work. But writers submitted a lot of work under pseudonyms. So Woody Allen playing his usual schlepp role is approached by a friend he goes way back with to become a front, to take credit for writing scripts for 10% of the salary. Woody who has a real gambling problem with Danny Aiello looking to break his legs for unpaid debts decides this could prove lucrative and some other writers start using him as a front as well.

Of course he does come to the thought police at the House Un-American Activities Committee and eventually responds to the whole business in a singularly appropriate manner. If some of the bigger fish in Hollywood had done the same, there would never have been a blacklist. As it was the blacklist kind of ran out of steam in the Sixties, but not before a lot of lives had been ruined.

One of those lives was Zero Mostel who gave a farewell performance as comedian Hecky Brown who was blacklisted as was Mostel in real life. Mostel in fact gave said singular response in real life and it cost him. But not as much as his character in The Front.

Mostel was one of many involved in The Front who were blacklisted back in the bad old days. I'm glad Zero and the rest lived long enough and outlasted the blacklist to make this wonderful entertaining and educational film about a really bad time.
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