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A View from the Bridge Poster

A View from the Bridge

Arthur Miller's Drama of Love and Obsession
1962 | 110m | English

(632 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Details

Eddie Carbone, a Brooklyn longshoreman is unhappily married to Beatrice and unconsciously in love with Catherine, the niece that they have raised from childhood. Into his house come two brothers, illegal immigrants, Marco and Rodolpho. Catherine falls in love with Rudolpho; and Eddie, tormented but unable to admit even to himself his quasi-incestuous love, reports the illegal immigrants to the authorities.
Release Date: Jan 19, 1962
Director: Sidney Lumet
Writer: Norman Rosten, Arthur Miller
Genres: Drama
Keywords
Production Companies
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Jan 30, 2026
Entered: Apr 29, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Raf Vallone Eddie Carbone
Maureen Stapleton Beatrice Carbone
Carol Lawrence Catherine
Jean Sorel Rodolpho Paccia
Raymond Pellegrin Marco Paccia
Morris Carnovsky Mr. Alfieri
Harvey Lembeck Mike
Mickey Knox Louis
Vincent Gardenia Lipari
Frank Campanella Longshoreman (Sam)
Name Job
Sidney Lumet Director
Norman Rosten Screenplay
Raymond Voinquel Still Photographer
Maurice Dagonneau Boom Operator
Joseph de Bretagne Sound Engineer
Françoise Javet Editor
Edith Hamlin Casting
Jacques Saulnier Production Design
Charles Merangel Set Decoration
Yvonne Fortuna Makeup Artist
Janou Pottier Hairstylist
Louis Libérial Production Manager
Jean-Philippe Mérand Production Supervisor
Julien Rivière Production Manager
Marie-José Kling Script Supervisor
Charles Chieusse Location Manager
Nicole Gauduchon Assistant Editor
Hadassa Misrahi Assistant Editor
Marcel Gilot Second Assistant Camera
Roger Gleize First Assistant Camera
Wladimir Ivanov Camera Operator
Urbain Loiseau Sound Recordist
Jean-Claude Dolbert Props
Joseph Gerhard Props
Jean-Jacques Fabre Assistant Art Director
Georges Glon Assistant Art Director
Dossia Mage First Assistant Director
Angelo Laiacona Assistant Director
Arthur Miller Writer
Guy Séligmann Second Assistant Director
Michel Kelber Director of Photography
Maurice Le Roux Original Music Composer
Name Title
Paul Graetz Producer
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

Often, when you get films with multiple production countries behind them, you can end up with a bit of a mess that ties to pander more to its investors rather than its audience. Here, the casting of Raf Vallone as the increasingly troubled “Eddie” and a selection of other European actors actually he ... lped to authenticate the Tower of Babel that New York City actually was. He is a manual worker who has long since only being going through the motions with wife “Be” (Maureen Stapleton) whilst becoming increasingly infatuated with his niece “Catherine” (Carol Lawrence). When two of her cousins arrive on the doorstep, promising that they are looking for work, they sleep on the couch and fairly swiftly she takes a bit of a shine to “Rodolpho” (Jean Sorel) - much to the chagrin of “Eddie”. With the atmosphere in their tiny apartment becoming more and more toxic and claustrophobic, it may only be the presence of the elder and more savvy “Marco” (Raymond Pellegrin) that is restraining “Eddie” from asserting himself, violently, and despite the woes of both his wife and “Catherine”. When the two youngsters announce their impending nuptials, “Eddie” seeks legal advice from his friend to see if he can thwart their plans, but all he can do is report them to the immigration authorities. What might that achieve for all concerned? Though it’s quite heavily abridged, and we don’t really get to appreciate the supporting characters as fully as I’d have liked, Vallone really does deliver quite powerfully here. So does the underused Stapleton whose affection for her husband, despite his only thinly-veiled desire for “Catherine”, and her understanding nature would challenge the patience of any of the saints routinely referred to as this torrid scenario unfolds. The photography is up close and personal, and I thought Sidney Lumet allows the strength of the story to be played out by actors who almost sweat their roles onto the screen. I did not love the denouement, it is rushed and in many ways incomplete, but this is an authentic looking critique on the lives of immigrants hoping, optimistically, for the American dream, and is worth a watch.

Aug 17, 2025