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East Of Eden
Cal (James Dean) and Aron (Richard Davalos) are the sons of a modestly successful farmer and wartime draft board chairman. Cal is moody and embittered by his belief that his father favors Aron. Although both Cal and Aron had long been led to believe that their mother had died 'and gone to heaven,' the opening scene reveals Cal has apparently learned that his mother is still alive, owning and running a successful brothel in nearby Monterey.
















26 April 1904, Thessaly, Greece

3 November 1930, Topeka, Kansas, USA

14 June 1909, Hunt City, Illinois, USA

20 December 1905, Brooklyn, New York, USA

5 November 1930, Bronx, New York City, New York, USA

8 February 1931, Marion, Indiana, USA

9 August 1918, Brooklyn, New York, USA

30 August 1896, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

29 December 1915, Oakland, California, USA

2 December 1925, Grosse Pointe Park, Michigan, USA



December 02, 2007
Kazan had the bad sense to leave out the best parts from the lengthy book.
February 17, 2006
James Dean's finest performance
January 29, 2009
East of Eden is set in 1917 but [James] Dean feels completely modern and contemporary, a boy not quite comfortable in his body.
May 20, 2003
In short, there is energy and intensity but little clarity and emotion in this film. It is like a great, green iceberg: mammoth and imposing but very cold.
May 11, 2011
a reaction to our plutocracy's values and a further case for Dean as the sainted figure of rebellion that would fuel the generational schism of the '60s.
November 28, 2015
Rich historical detail and good visuals make interesting film.
January 26, 2006
It's a film of great performances, atmospheric photography, and a sure sense of period and place.
March 20, 2008
Fine James Dean vehicle, one of few that put him into immortality.
December 06, 2005
Not only one of Kazan's richest films and Dean's first significant role, it is also arguably the actor's best performance.
April 14, 2014
Catches fire in the clashes between Dean (as the bad brother) and Raymond Massey as his stiff-necked dad.
November 01, 2007
John Steinbeck's painful biblical allegory -- Genesis replayed in Monterey, California, circa 1917 -- is more palatable on the screen, thanks to the down-to-earth performances of James Dean as Cal/Cain and Richard Davalos as Aron/Abel.