Review: Nicholas Ray’s Rebel Without a Cause on Warner 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray

Warner has outfitted this classic tale of teenage angst and rebellion with a stellar transfer.

Rebel Without a CauseProfoundly romantic and lacerating in its despair, Nicholas Ray’s Rebel Without a Cause, a self-contained portrait of three isolated teenagers, is James Dean’s best film (it ranks high in Ray’s work as well). It’s true that some of its details and performances don’t ring true, especially the cartoonish portrayals of the teen’s parents; at revival houses, the scenes with the parents tend to get unwanted laughs, and they’re flawed, but only on the surface. Where the attitudes of East of Eden are hopelessly dated and broad, the poetic longing for connection in Rebel Without a Cause will always feel timeless.

Dean isn’t fussy here, as he is in his agonized Brando-esque contortions in East of Eden; he’s emotionally direct, tenderly seductive, protective of others, and blessed with courtly humor. The actor’s Jim Stark is clearly laboring under a burden of heightened sensitivity, which is why the ’50s complacency of his parents and their milieu is, in his words, tearing him apart.

Jim doesn’t want to be called a chicken by his peers, but he realizes that the tests of manhood that he’s forced to endure by the bullies at school are bullshit, as false in their way as the world of his parents. So, in the most magical section of Rebel Without a Cause, Jim and his friends Judy (Natalie Wood) and Plato (Sal Mineo) take over a deserted mansion and try to make a family for themselves. This sequence doesn’t last long, but it’s so primal and Borzage-like in nature that it’s easy to see why everyone who sees it is so impacted by it.

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Stewart Stern’s screenplay can be didactic, but Ray and his young trio of actors transcend this limitation. Ray emphasizes the reds and blues in his widescreen frame for an unforgettably neurotic effect, and he showcases savant-like Dean as gently as Jim takes care of Plato. Ray seems to understand the self-dramatizations and exaggerated melancholy of adolescence, but he portrays these qualities with deep affection, respect, and insight.

The most complicated aspect of Rebel Without a Cause, and the thing that makes it seem daring even today, is its portrayal of sexuality. Ray brings Wood’s beauty into full flowering and gets a simple, touching performance from her (though she’s overwrought in her first scene). With Mineo, Ray craftily put together a portrait of a tormented gay teenager. Stern’s script tells us that Plato is searching for a father figure in Jim (and Plato’s famed locker photo of Alan Ladd shows that he wants a Shane-type father, not a lover), but the way that Mineo looks at Dean leaves no modern audience in doubt as to what his real feelings are.

Ray’s sense of location is as keen as his sureness with actors. The sequence set at the Griffith Observatory, where the kids go on a field trip and later return to at night, is especially evocative. During the trip, a stentorian narrator tells of the upcoming destruction of the Earth, and says, “Man, existing alone, seems himself an episode of little consequence.” Then, after the kids have taken in this existential truth, he briskly says, “Thank you for your attention!” It’s that dash of humor in Rebel Without a Cause that’s little remarked upon; it gives you a nice ’50s hipster-style shot of relief, and it also sets you up for the raw tragedy of the ending.

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The teenagers’ idyll in the deserted mansion is ended by a group of thugs. Plato, confused and unbalanced, starts firing a gun he took from his mother’s room. He finds refuge in the planetarium, and Jim goes in to get him, talking him outside and surreptitiously taking the bullets from the gun. But Plato gets scared and runs, the cops see the gun, and they shoot him. When Plato is shot, Ray has Jim and Judy in the frame with him and he tilts the camera with the impact of the bullet. It’s one of the most devastating shots in film history because it visually annihilates the rapport that the three teenagers have built up in an instant.

Jim and Judy go off together, but Ray underlines Rebel Without a Cause’s sense of loss by saving the last close-up for the only other person who loved Plato, his family’s maid (Marietta Canty). As everyone drives away, it’s Ray himself who enters the planetarium at the break of day, a great film director surveying the blank slate left after Jim, Judy, and Plato’s wishful, improved civilization is wiped out in a flash of gunfire.

Image/Sound

Warner’s 4K release beautifully highlights Rebel Without a Cause’s expressive use of color, particularly the splashes of red in James Dean’s and Natalie Wood’s jackets. The high dynamic ratio captures the various shades of browns and reds that dominate the color palette, while the strong contrast displays deep, velvety blacks and ensures that the maximum visual information is visible in the darkest of scenes. On the audio front, the 5.1 mix is outstanding, lending additional resonance to Leonard Rosenman’s dramatic score and a subtle separation between all the minute background sounds that arose through improvisatory movements.

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Extras

Both the 4K and Blu-ray discs include the commentary track by Douglas L. Rathgeb, author of The Making of Rebel Without a Cause. Rathgeb wonderfully balances his discussion of the film’s production and reputation with aesthetic analysis. On the former front, his behind-the-scenes stories and detailing of Dean’s extensive improvisation techniques is particularly interesting. But it’s his specific scene analyses and breakdown of the film’s various visual motifs that will be most valuable to viewers who’ve already seen Rebel Without a Cause.

The remaining extras are all housed on the Blu-ray. The first of two behind-the-scenes extras, James Dean Remembered, is presented in low-grade SD, suggesting that it hasn’t been upgraded since its 1974 premiere on TV. Despite this, the one-hour extra offers a few interesting tidbits, like how Dean and Sammy Davis Jr. were close friends. The second, the 37-minute Defiant Innocents, focuses on the film’s approach to the rise of delinquency in middle-class teens in the early to mid-’50s and how Nicholas Ray attempted to present this as stemming from familial dysfunction at a time when old-school and modern values were clashing in the home.

The final significant extra is Dennis Hopper: Memories from the Warner Lot. Hopper is always a great interview, and while this is a fairly standard studio-produced featurette, his waxing nostalgic about his early years on the Warner lot and the improvisatory freedom on the set of Rebel Without a Cause isn’t a bad way to spend 10 minutes. The disc is rounded out with an array of screen and wardrobe tests, deleted scenes (sans sound), some very staged behind-the-scenes interviews with Dean, Natalie Wood, and Jim Backus, and the film’s theatrical trailer.

Overall

Warner has outfitted Nicholas Ray’s classic tale of teenage angst and rebellion with a stellar transfer and a healthy slate of extras.

Score: 
 Cast: James Dean, Natalie Wood, Sal Mineo, Jim Backus, Ann Doran, Corey Allen, William Hopper, Rochelle Hudson, Edward Platt, Marietta Canty, Virginia Brissac, Dennis Hopper, Jack Grinnage, Frank Mazzola  Director: Nicolas Ray  Screenwriter: Stewart Stern  Distributor: Warner Bros. Home Entertainment  Running Time: 111 min  Rating: NR  Year: 1955  Release Date: April 18, 2023  Buy: Video

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