He Ran All the Way (1951)
June 20, 1951Release Date
He Ran All the Way (1951)
June 20, 1951Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Currently He Ran All the Way is available for streaming online, rent, buy or watch for free on: ScreenPix Amazon Channel , ScreenPix Apple TV Channel
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Cast & Crew.
John Garfield
Nick Robey
Shelley Winters
Peg Dobbs
Wallace Ford
Fred Dobbs
Selena Royle
Mrs. Dobbs
Gladys George
Mrs. Robey
Norman Lloyd
Al Molin
Robert Hyatt
Tommy Dobbs
Clancy Cooper
Stan
Vici Raaf
Marge
Keith Hetherington
Capt. of Detectives
Robert Karnes
Police Lieutenant
Jimmy Ames
Clerk (uncredited)
John Berry
Director
Gordon Armitage
Pedestrian (uncredited)
Hugo Butler
Writer
Arthur Berkeley
Workman (uncredited)
Guy Endore
Writer
Sam Ross
Writer
Willie Bloom
Pedestrian (uncredited)
Dalton Trumbo
Writer
Chet Brandenburg
Co-Worker (uncredited)
Bob Roberts
Producer
John Breen
Co-Worker (uncredited)
Franz Waxman
Composer
Ralph Brooks
Detective Lieutenant (uncredited)
James Wong Howe
Cinematographer
Johnny Duncan
Boy at Pool (uncredited)
Harry Horner
ProductionDesigner
A. Cameron Grant
Payroll Courier (uncredited)
Joe Hinds
Pedestrian (uncredited)
Shep Houghton
Pedestrian (uncredited)
Mark Lowell
Everett (uncredited)
James Magill
Workman (uncredited)
Renny McEvoy
Pool Attendant (uncredited)
Mike Morelli
Workman (uncredited)
John Morgan
Police Doctor (uncredited)
William H. O'Brien
Man Entering Apt. Building (uncredited)
Monty O'Grady
Man in Locker Room (uncredited)
Charles Perry
Pedestrian (uncredited)
Lucile Sewall
Mrs. Marsden (uncredited)
Media.
Details.
Release DateJune 20, 1951
StatusReleased
Running Time1h 17m
Content RatingNR
Genres
Wiki.
He Ran All the Way is a 1951 American crime drama and film noir directed by John Berry and starring John Garfield and Shelley Winters. Distributed by United Artists, it was produced independently by Roberts Pictures, a company named for Garfield's manager and business partner, Bob Roberts, and bankrolled by Garfield.The film was Garfield's last. He was "greylisted" following accusations of his involvement with the Communist Party USA. Testifying before the House Committee on Un-American Activities (aka HUAC), he repudiated communism, denied party membership, and claimed that he did not know any members of the Communist Party during his entire time in Hollywood, "because I was not a party member or associated in any shape, way, or form." He testified on April 23, 1951, just two months before He Ran All the Way was scheduled to open, on June 19. Garfield died less than a year later, on May 21, 1952, at age 39.
Dalton Trumbo had signed to write the screen adaptation of Sam Ross's novel just weeks from starting the jail term resulting from his own testimony to HUAC, in 1947. According to Trumbo's son, Christopher, Guy Endore did some revisions to Trumbo's script, as did director Berry. In a 1997 letter to the Writers Guild of America West, which was determining the restoration of credits to blacklisted members, Trumbo's widow Cleo stated that their friend and fellow writer Hugo Butler had been asked by Trumbo to ensure that the script not be altered while he was incarcerated, and Butler restored much of the original material, adding some of his own. The film opened in June 1951, the screenplay credited to Endore and Butler, and John Berry credited as the director. Just prior to the premiere, Berry and Butler were subpoenaed by HUAC, and producer Bob Roberts removed their names from advertising, first in the trade press, and then in the general press as the film circulated.Trumbo was paid $5,000 and five percent of the producers' profits on condition that the picture would cost no more than $400,000, with the possibility that it might cost $100,000 less than that, but he complained to Roberts that the costs had grown to about $650,000, adding, "and that came right out of my pocket." Variety reviewer "Bron." observed, "Production budget seems limited to insure safe returns," and predicted, "pic should do biz." At the end of the year, the trade paper estimated that He Ran All the Way would gross $1 million in the domestic market (i.e., USA and Canada), its threshold for reporting the "top grossers" of the year. Less than a month after Garfield's death in May 1952, United Artists announced it would rerelease the title, among three others, in summer of that year.