Background Warner Brothers had bought the rights to
Lindner's book, intending to use the title for a film. Attempts to create a film version in the late 1940s eventually ended without a film or even a full script being produced. When
Marlon Brando did a five-minute
screen test for the studio in 1947, he was given fragments of one of the partial scripts. However, Brando was not auditioning for
Rebel Without a Cause, and there was no offer of any part made by the studio. The film, as it later appeared, was the result of a totally new script written in the 1950s that had nothing to do with the Brando test. The screen test is included on a 2006 special edition
DVD of the 1951 film
A Streetcar Named Desire.
Irving Shulman, who adapted Nicholas Ray's initial film story into the screenplay, had considered changing the name of James Dean's character to Herman Deville, according to Jurgen Muller's ''Movies of the '50s''. He originally had written a number of scenes that were shot and later cut from the final version of the film. According to an AFI interview with Stewart Stern, with whom Shulman worked on the screenplay, one of the scenes was thought to be too emotionally provocative to be included in the final print of the film. It portrayed the character of Jim Stark inebriated to the point of belligerence screaming at a car in the parking lot "It's a little jeep jeep! Little jeep, jeep!" The scene was considered unproductive to the story's progression by head editor
William H. Ziegler and ultimately was cut. In 2006, members of the
Film Society of Lincoln Center petitioned to have the scene printed and archived for historical preservation. Nicholas Ray conducted extensive research months before filming commenced, including weeks spent travelling the country with screenwriter Stewart Stern in which they interviewed hundreds of police officers, judges, youth leaders, juvenile authorities, and welfare agency managers to gather material for the film. One of the experts who advised them was Dr.
Douglas Kelley, who had gained post-WWII renown after serving as the chief psychiatrist interviewing
Nazi prisoners, including
Hermann Göring, prior to their
Nuremberg Trials. Ray wanted to consult him on the criminological soundness of the screenplay. Ray stated his intention for the film was to "do a movie about the kids next door" as opposed to delinquent-themed films of the time set in a "slum condition", adding that
Rebel was to be about "middle-class kids, kids like my own, not kids from the wrong side of the tracks."
Casting Nicholas Ray had considered
Debbie Reynolds,
Margaret O'Brien,
Kathryn Grant and
Pat Crowley for the role of Judy, before selecting Natalie Wood. According to a biography of Natalie Wood, she almost did not get the role because Nicholas Ray thought that she did not fit the role of the wild teen character. While on a night out with friends, she was in a car accident. Upon hearing this, Ray rushed to the hospital. While in delirium, Wood overheard the doctor murmuring and calling her a "goddamn juvenile delinquent"; she soon yelled to Ray, "Did you hear what he called me, Nick?! He called me a goddamn juvenile delinquent!
Now do I get the part?!" Sal Mineo would later note in a 1972 interview that the character of Plato Crawford was intended to have been gay. Speaking to
Boze Hadleigh, he said, "[It m]akes sense [that Plato was killed off]: he was, in a way, the first gay teenager in films. You watch it now, you
know he had the hots for James Dean. You watch it now, and everyone knows about Jimmy['s bisexuality], so it's like he had the hots for Natalie [Wood] and me. Ergo, I had to be bumped off, out of the way."
Filming The film was in production from March 28 to May 26, 1955. When production began, Warner Bros. considered it a B-movie project, and Ray used black-and-white film stock. When
Jack L. Warner realized James Dean was a rising star and a hot property, filming was switched to color stock, and many scenes had to be reshot in color. It was shot in the widescreen
CinemaScope format, which had been introduced two years previously. With its densely expressive images, the film has been called a "landmark ... a quantum leap forward in the artistic and technical evolution of a format." Exterior scenes at the abandoned mansion to which the characters retreat were filmed at the
William O. Jenkins House, previously used in the film
Sunset Boulevard (1950). It was demolished just two years after filming. Dawson High School, the school in the film, was actually
Santa Monica High School, located in
Santa Monica, California. ==Reception==