The Cross and the Switchblade

1970

Action / Biography / Crime / Drama

7
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 72% · 2 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 72% · 500 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.0/10 10 1281 1.3K

Plot summary

David Wilkerson's first five years in New York City, where he ministered to disillusioned youth, encouraging them to turn away from the drugs and gang violence they were involved with.

Director

Top cast

Erik Estrada as Nicky Cruz
Pat Boone as David Wilkerson
Hechter Ubarry as Moonlight
Vince O'Brien as Judge
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
980.09 MB
1280*694
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
29.97 fps
1 hr 46 min
Seeds ...
1.77 GB
1920*1040
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
29.97 fps
1 hr 46 min
Seeds 7

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by beth-554-898100 7 / 10

The Cross and the Switchblade 50th Anniversary Edition

Long before faith-based films became a regular feature of mainstream movie theaters, there was The Cross and The Switchblade. The film was made squarely within the Hollywood system. For instance, it was directed by Don Murray, famous for his acting roles in such films as Bus Stop, in which he starred opposite Marilyn Monroe. The lead roles were played by Pat Boone, an entertainer with a long career in Hollywood, and Eric Estrada who would go on to fame as a TV star. Yet, despite its mainstream pedigree, the film was set apart by the unashamedly Christian vision of its producers who set out to produce a slate of mainstream films with redemptive themes in the late 60's and early 70's.The book, The Cross and the Switchblade by David Wilkerson was first published in 1963. It depicts Wilkerson's experience with gang members in the mean streets of New York City in the late 1950's. This was a world of "jitter-bugging bee-boppers" and "rumbles" in the park using the eras' weapons of choice, baseball bats and chains. The 1970 film adaptation partially updated the setting with the late 1960's youth culture in mind, a decision that led to some incongruous scenes that seem caught somewhere between the world of groovy pot-smoking hippies and the world of the greaser-gangs from West Side Story.But, despite that curiosity and other now-dated (maybe always dated) elements, The Cross and the Switchblade stands up to scrutiny, not least of all because of the truth of the story it portrays. The life-changing solution that David Wilkerson brought to desperate lives is forever relevant.The change in the life of notorious gang leader Nicky Cruz, as shown in the film, led to a decades long evangelistic ministry that in turned changed the lives of countless people around the globe. And the work of the skinny country preacher, David Wilkerson, who braved the meanest streets of New York to tell desperate and lost young people that there was a better way, is still going strong. The ministry of Teen Challenge and World Challenge is still changing lives and offering genuine hope to countless souls who had given up on life.There has been much criticism of the film's production values over the years but, a lot of this is unfair. Sure, the duel time-periods the movie seems to exist in and the now dated dialogue and hokey songs used on the soundtrack are all fair game for criticism. But other elements of the film are impressive including some intricately choreographed action scenes filmed on New York City rooftops and fire escapes and a rock-jazz fusion soundtrack by Ralph Carmichael. The film also features some truly sincere acting by Boone, one of Hollywood's most famous Christians, who at one time called the role the most important he had ever played. Eric Estrada also gives a gritty and emotional performance as Nicky Cruz. Estrada is perfect for the part and he displays some real leading-man charisma here.This 50th anniversary re-release was professionally restored and re-mastered using the original 35mm camera negative and rendered in 4K.
Reviewed by

Reviewed by mentummike 6 / 10

Outdated before it was released

I agree with most every review on here: this was an important film, an important story, the story is true. . . and, it is laughable, embarrassing, engrossing in that is so hard to watch, like a really bad, tragic accident.

I've always had some affection for really mediocre cinema and TV. That's enough to flag this with a spoiler alert in my book, although anyone not familiar with this story by now must have been a toddler when I was in my 30's. So there's that, and the incredibly inane music of this film; honestly, the movies from this period always contained music and songwriting that was 20+ years behind, if not belonging to another dimension that reflected sentiments that never existed in the most naive or plain mindset of anyone, anywhere.

As with many low-budget, and Christian, films (which are almost always low-budget), the attempts to portray "cool" "street" behavior, with a matching soundtrack, are a true exercise in futility. It is honestly hard to believe that the 1950's (when the actual story took place) were even that dumb.

Watching this for the first time in 2015, however, was a real treat, although it took me several attempts to actually go through with it. The initial fight scene reminds me of "West Side Story" (someone had to have mentioned this already), but Pat Boone and Erik Estrada both did far better acting jobs here than they will ever get credit for.

Of course, Pat Boone versus street gangs reminds me somehow of Pat Boone singing heavy metal. . . it just ends up sounding like Pat Boone singing Pat Boone.

For the record, I am a Christian, one who is perpetually disappointed with most Christian art of any kind. But all things considered, this film is really not too bad. But if I'd seen it when I was 12 (when it was released), I may have found it believable. Much older than that I would have seen right through it, much like "Lost in Space" or the Billy Jack series.

Read more IMDb reviews

2 Comments

Be the first to leave a comment