8/10
We are dealing here with a very dangerous individual, an honest man.
13 February 2007
Warning: Spoilers
(Some Spoilers) One of the best depiction of Communism coming out of post-war Hollywood "Man on a Tightrope" shows what happens to a country taken over by band of mindless bean counting bureaucrats who feel that they have all the answers to all the country's, and worlds, problems and anyone who thinks otherwise is an enemy of the state that's to be liquidated or imprisoned. Trying to make a living as a circus master which is the only job he ever had Kanel Cernik, Fredrick March, is hamstrung by the Communist system controlling his country the Czecoslovkian People's Repubic.

With the country's controlling communist party running everything Karel's circus is having a hard time staying afloat with it being nationalized and it's many fine and entertaining circus acts, as well as performers, shut down or fired. All this because their being too capitalistic, so the Communist state party says, in their themes. This insane policy is formulated and followed by both the local commissar Fesker, Adolphe Menjou, and his boss only known as The Sergeant, Phillip Kennealy. Two by the books butt-kissers who's always trying to one up each other in order to gain favor with their superiors in both Prague and Moscow.

Just about having all he could take from his Communist masters Karel together with a numbers of his troupe including his wife and daughter Zema & Tereza, Gloria Grahame & Terry Moore, decide to make a break for it with the entire circus and its animal performers across the Czech/Austrian border. To gain complete surprise, from the Czech broader guards, it's decided by Karel to make this very daring and dangerous escape in broad daylight a time when it would be least expected.

We soon find out that Commissar Fesker has knowledge of the planned escaped from someone inside the circus troupe and just as he's about to clamp down on it, by giving Karel a permit in order to force his hand, he's overruled by the arrogant and power hungry Sergeant. Sargeant with his action unknowingly gives Karel all the leeway he needs to make make, with his entire circus family, his breathtaking run for daylight and freedom, across the Iron Curtain.

Unbelievably tense and exciting movie that keeps you glued to your seat until the final credits as Karl Cernik and his band of circus performers, together with his wife and daughter, make their way to the very border of Austria. Within yards of the border Karl & Co. then go for broke as the startled guards on both side of the border, the American and Czech, are left almost too paralyzed to either help, in the case of the Americans, or prevent, the Czech, them from doing so.

Karel who during the entire movie was anything but a hero in his dealing with both the Communist government officials and his wife Zama makes up for all his inadequacies by preventing his planned escape from being foiled by a traitor inside his circus. Karl shot and bleeding to death prevents the advancing Communist government troops and police, by insisting to be the last man out, from overtaking his circus performers and family. Thus not only forcing them back to their native country but to either curtain death or a Soviet concentration camp-like gulag in the wilds of Siberia.

Unlike the many anti-Communist movies that came out of Hollywood back in the 1940's and 1950's "Man on a Tightrope" is as watchable now as it was back then in 1953. The movie shows what Communism really is, a rotten and degrading system, and how it in its anti-humanistic and bankrupt economic philosophy was destined to have a total and complete collapse and meltdown some forty years later more then proved that point.
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