Maddow's film career began when he answered an ad to write commentary for a short
documentary,
Harbor Scenes (1935), being made by photographer
Ralph Steiner. In 1936, NYKino initiated a left-wing
newsreel series,
The World Today. It was patterned after
The March of Time and produced two episodes, "Sunnyside" and "The Black Legion". In March 1937, NYKino was renamed Frontier Films. Maddow co-wrote, either using his own name or "David Wolff", the Frontier-made documentaries
People of the Cumberland (1937),
Heart of Spain (1937),
China Strikes Back (1937), and
United Action Means Victory (1939). The company's most successful effort was the 1942 documentary feature,
Native Land, narrated by
Paul Robeson and co-written by Maddow, Hurwitz, and
Paul Strand. During
World War II, Maddow served in the
U.S. Army's First Motion Picture Unit. After co-writing
The Man from Colorado (1948), he and fellow leftist
Walter Bernstein adapted
Gerald Butler's novel
Kiss the Blood Off My Hands into a
noir-
thriller of the
same title. In his next assignment, Maddow undertook the task of adapting
William Faulkner's
Intruder in the Dust, with its complex narrative structure, into an accessible screen drama. The resulting
film, directed by
Clarence Brown, is regarded as one of the better Faulkner adaptations. Maddow's most notable achievement was to adapt, with screenwriter-director
John Huston,
W. R. Burnett's 1949 crime novel
The Asphalt Jungle into the critically acclaimed
1950 film. For their work, Maddow and Huston received an
Academy Award nomination in the Adapted Screenplay category. Maddow continued his interest in the documentary genre; he wrote and directed
The Stairs (1950), which was commissioned by the National Bureau of Mental Health. In 1952 he published his only novel,
Forty-Four Gravel Street. ==Blacklist==