Give Us This Day
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Give Us This Day | |
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Directed by | Edward Dmytryk |
Produced by | Edward Dmytryk Nat A. Bronsten Rod E. Geiger |
Written by | Ben Barzman Hans Székely (uncredited) Pietro Di Donato (novel) |
Starring | Sam Wanamaker Lea Padovani Kathleen Ryan Charles Goldner |
Music by | Benjamin Frankel |
Cinematography | C.M. Pennington-Richards |
Distributed by | Eagle-Lion Distributors Limited |
Release date(s) | October 14, 1949 |
Country | Template:Great Britain |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
Give Us This Day was a 1949 motion picture, directed by Edward Dmytryk and starring Sam Wanamaker. It was released in the United States as Christ in Concrete. Another alternate title was Salt and the Devil.
This movie was based on the novel Christ in Concrete by Pietro Di Donato. The title is taken from the Lord's Prayer. It tells the story of the struggles of a Brooklyn bricklayer, played by Wanamaker.
At the time this movie was made, Dmytryk had been blacklisted as a member of the Hollywood Ten. Wanamaker had also been blacklisted. The movie was filmed entirely in London.
The film received a mixed review from New York Times film critic Bosley Crowther. He called it "a film drama of considerable graphicness but of oddly limited power." While praising the movie for its "careful and earnest attempt to capture the hard yet wistful quality of Mr. di Donato's tale," Crowther said that "the spirit and compulsion of this deeply distressing tale of poverty and frustration are absent from the film." [1]
[edit] External links
- "Give Us This Day" at the Internet Movie Database[2]
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