Still image from the 1940 film Castle on the Hudson.

Castle on the Hudson

Directed by Anatole Litvak

A hardened crook behind bars comes up against a reform-minded warden.

1940 1h 17m Drama TV-PG

Expires: April 3rd


CAST
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Anatole Litvak, Director
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Anatole Litvak
Director

1

John Garfield, Tommy Gordon
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John Garfield
Tommy Gordon

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Ann Sheridan, Kay [Manners]
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Ann Sheridan
Kay [Manners]

3

Pat O'brien, Warden Long
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Pat O'brien
Warden Long

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Burgess Meredith, Steve Rockford
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Burgess Meredith
Steve Rockford

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Henry O'neill, District Attorney
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Henry O'neill
District Attorney

FULL SYNOPSIS

Tommy Gordon, a tough young crook, is sent to Sing Sing Prison for armed robbery and assault with a deadly weapon. When Tommy's lawyer, Ed Crowley, a corrupt ward boss, tries to make a deal with Warden Long to give Tommy special attention, Long burns the bribe and informs Crowley that prison is a democracy--no inmate is better than any other. Tommy resents the prison routine, but the understanding Long finally makes an impression on him. Steve Rockford, a well-educated convict, plans a prison break which the newly reformed Tommy refuses to join. A guard and a convict are killed in the unsuccessful prison break after which Steve commits suicide. Meanwhile in New York, Tommy's girl friend, Kay Manners, who has kept after Crowley to work for Tommy's release, is injured when she jumps from a car to escape his advances. Long allows Tommy to visit Kay on the promise that he will return to prison. At Kay's apartment, Tommy and Crowley exchange blows and Tommy is knocked unconscious. Crowley is about to kill Tommy when Kay shoots and kills Crowley instead. Tommy escapes and is about to leave the country on a boat when he learns that Long is about to be fired for allowing him to leave prison. To save his friend's reputation, Tommy returns and surrenders. Tommy is sentenced to the electric chair for Crowley's murder. Kay tries to convince Long that she is the actual murderer, but Tommy will not back up her story. When Kay visits him in prison, Tommy tells her that even if her confession was believed, they still would never be together. When Kay asks him to marry her before he dies, Tommy advises her to marry a swell guy, not someone like him, and goes to his death happy in the knowledge that he has done something decent in saving Kay from a prison sentence.


VIDEOS
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Original Trailer
Trailer

ARTICLES
John Garfield finds himself typecast by Warner Brothers once again in Castle on the Hudson (1940), a remarkably faithful remake of the Spencer Tracy vehicle 20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932). In Tracy's old role, Garfield stars as Tommy Gordon, a jewel thief serving a 25-year-minimum sentence but expecting his political pals on the outside to help spring him from prison. Pat O'Brien plays the reform-minded yet kind-hearted warden who helps Tommy see the error of his ways, and Ann Sheridan (in the role previously played by Bette Davis) is the faithful girl-he-left-behind. Garfield was on voluntary suspension from Warner Bros. because of dissatisfaction with roles the studio was offering him (usually criminals or prison inmates) when he was sent the script for Castle. His reported response when offered one more prison saga was, "Parole me!" It was director-screenwriter-producer Robert Rossen, a friend of Garfield's, who persuaded him to take on Tracy's old role. Garfield agreed to do the film provided the studio would not change the original ending, which had Tommy going to the electric chair to cover for the girlfriend, who had shot and killed a treacherous lawyer. When the film opened, The New York Times began its review by joking, "This is merely a routine notice that Mr. John Garfield, formerly of the Group Theatre, who was recently sentenced to a term in Warner Bros. Pictures, is still in prison." Garfield had some trepidation about succeeding the highly regard...

NOTES

Pre-release titles of the film were City of Lost Men and Years Without Days. An earlier film adaptation of Lewis E. Lawes' novel was made by Warner Bros. in 1932 under the title 20,000 Years in Sing Sing (see below). According to modern sources, extensive footage from 20,000 Years in Sing Sing was used in this film. Sets were designed to match the originals so that medium as well as long shots could be used.

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