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The Pawnbroker (1964)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
20 April 1965 (USA) moreTagline:
The Most Talked About Picture!Plot:
A Jewish pawnbroker, victim of Nazi persecution, loses all faith in his fellow man until he realizes too late the tragedy of his actions. full summary | add synopsisAwards:
Nominated for Oscar. Another 7 wins & 5 nominations moreNewsDesk:
(4 articles)
The Pawnbroker Movie Review (From MoviesOnline. 22 April 2009, 8:00 PM, PDT)
The Pawnbroker Movie Review
(From MoviesOnline. 19 April 2009, 8:00 PM, PDT)
User Comments:
Heavy Duty Lumet New York Drama. more (53 total)Cast
(Complete credited cast)| Rod Steiger | ... | Sol Nazerman | |
| Geraldine Fitzgerald | ... | Marilyn Birchfield | |
| Brock Peters | ... | Rodriguez | |
| Jaime Sánchez | ... | Jesus Ortiz (as Jaime Sanchez) | |
| Thelma Oliver | ... | Ortiz' Girl | |
| Marketa Kimbrell | ... | Tessie | |
| Baruch Lumet | ... | Mendel | |
| Juano Hernandez | ... | Mr. Smith | |
| Linda Geiser | ... | Ruth | |
| Nancy R. Pollock | ... | Bertha | |
| Raymond St. Jacques | ... | Tangee | |
| John McCurry | ... | Buck | |
| Ed Morehouse | ... | Robinson | |
| Eusebia Cosme | ... | Mrs. Ortiz | |
| Warren Finnerty | ... | Savarese |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Der Pfandleiher (West Germany) [de]El prestamista (Spain) [es]
L'uomo del banco dei pegni (Italy) [it]
Le prêteur sur gages (France) [fr]
Lichwiarz (Poland) [pl]
O Agiota (Portugal) [pt]
O Homem do Prego (Brazil) [pt]
O enehyrodaneistis (Greece) [el]
Pantelåneren (Denmark) [da]
Pantlånaren (Sweden) [sv]
Panttilainaaja (Finland) [fi]
more
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
116 minCountry:
USAColor:
Black and WhiteAspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 moreSound Mix:
MonoCertification:
Iceland:12 | Canada:R (Ontario) | Norway:16 | UK:12 (1998) | UK:X (1965) | Finland:K-16 | Sweden:15 | West Germany:16 (bw) | USA:ApprovedFun Stuff
Trivia:
Since the film was black and white, the blood seen is actually chocolate syrup. moreGoofs:
Continuity: As Jesus runs down the street, his shirt changes from a V-neck to a turtle neck, and then back again. moreQuotes:
Sol Nazerman: I do not believe in God, or art, or science, or newspapers, or politics, or philosophy.Jesus Ortiz: Then, Mr. Teacher, ain't there nothing you do believe in?
Sol Nazerman: Money.
more
Soundtrack:
I Don't Wanna Be a Loser moreFAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (53 total)
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Rod Steiger considered this his best performance and he might be right. He is, for him, subdued for most of the film, although towards the end he punctuates his performance with silent screams. He's pretty good as the survivor of Auschwitz, consumed by survivor guilt, and denying himself any pleasures except the money taken in his pawn shop.
Various figures come and go in his life, although he shows no particular interest in any of them, and aversion towards many. The characters are rather sketchily done, as they might be in a play. There is the ambitious assistant, the whore, the gangster, the lonely man who wants to talk about Herbert Spencer, Reni Santoni as a quivering junkie, the pregnant young girl who wants to sell her engagement ring. (Not a wedding ring, mind you, this is an illegitimate pregnancy and in 1964 you were still in trouble if you had no husband and no opportunity for an abortion.) "That diamond is glass," he tells the stricken girl brusquely. Steiger's Sol Nazerman is a pretty cold fish.
His relationship with his Latino assistant is key to Steiger's evolution. Steiger "teaches" him that nothing matters but money, so Ortiz very sensibly decides to help the local gangsters hold up Nazerman's shop. But the assistant, instead, teaches Nazerman something. Killed in the robbery, he teaches Nazerman to feel pain, which Nazerman then reaffirms by impaling his palm on one of those spikey receipt holders, a kind of stigma to go along with his concentration camp tattoos.
The movie was pretty much a shocker on its release. Partly because the audience got to see some naked breasts. Amusing now, isn't it? It was also knocked because of the way Latinos and blacks were treated. I don't know why. It would be surprising if the owner of a pawn shop on 116th street didn't have a lot of customers who were people of color -- good and bad.
The jazz score is loud and at times almost overwhelming. The photography makes 1964 New York grimy, smoggy, and dangerous.
If you haven't seen it, catch it if you have the chance. You're not likely to forget it in a hurry.