Rebel Without a Cause
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Rebel Without a Cause
A study of Nicholas Ray's 1955 drama, Rebel Without a Cause, in the BFI Film Classics series.
A study of Nicholas Ray's 1955 drama, Rebel Without a Cause, in the BFI Film Classics series.
Nicholas Rayโs 1955 film Rebel Without a Cause is a globally recognised landmark of post-war American cinema. The film follows twenty-four hours in the life of troubled teen Jim Stark (James Dean), the new boy in town, who becomes drawn into a maelstrom of shifting social allegiances, emotional turmoil, and violence. Rebel tackled head-on the thorny political issue of juvenile delinquency from the perspective of the adolescents, contributed to the genesis of the teen movie, and was pivotal in bringing The Method acting style to wider audiences. Deanโs nuanced and dextrous performance as the filmโs lead character was paramount in establishing the actorโs iconicity.
In his study of the film, Glyn Davis foregrounds the concept of rebellion, exploring in detail what it meant to be a rebel in the 1950s, the role that cinema has played in articulating rebellion and providing a haven for rebels, and why James Deanโs archetypal depiction of a teenage rebel has endured. Combining sharp close analysis with perceptive contextualisation, Davis scrutinises Nicholas Rayโs status as a maverick director, the challenges that The Method presented to calcified standards of performance in Hollywood, and the ways in which Rebel contributed to the shaping of new articulations of masculinity and sexuality. Rayโs film, Davis ultimately argues, has an ambiguous stance on rebellion, depicting both the lure and the terror of rejecting conformity.
Davis examines the significant contributions to Rebel Without a Cause made by an array of cast and crew members: from screenwriter Stewart Stern to composer Leonard Rosenman, from production designer Malcolm Bert to costume designer Moss Mabry, from lead actors such as Dean and Mineo to secondary players such as Marietta Canty and Edward Platt. Highlighting the film's shifting critical reception, he unpacks its legacy and the reasons that it continues to resonate with contemporary audiences.
Series: BFI Film Classics
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INFORMATION
ISBN: 9781839027765
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Format: Paperback / softback
Date Published: 13 November 2025
Country: United Kingdom
Imprint: BFI Publishing
Illustration: 60 colour illus
Audience: Tertiary education
DIMENSIONS
Spine width: 6.0mm
Width: 134.0mm
Height: 190.0mm
Weight: 160g
Pages: 96
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About the Author
Glyn Davis is Professor of Film Studies at the University of St Andrews, UK. His publications include Queer as Folk in the BFI TV Classics series (2007), Film Studies: A Global Introduction (co-authored with Kay Dickinson, Lisa Patti and Amy Villarejo, 2015), Queer Print in Europe (co-edited with Laura Guy, Bloomsbury, 2022), The Richard Dyer Reader (co-edited with Jaap Kooijman, BFI/Bloomsbury, 2023), and Pop Cinema (co-edited with Tom Day, 2024). From 2023 to 2025, Glyn was the Principal Investigator of โPerverse Collections: Building Europeโs Queer and Trans Archivesโ, a cultural heritage project funded by JPICH (www.percol.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk).
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