NFR Project: “A Streetcar Named Desire”
Dir: Elia Kazan
Scr: Tennessee Williams, Oscar Saul
Pho: Harry Stradling
Ed: David Weisbart
Premiere: Sept. 19, 1951
125 min.
It’s one of the best film adaptations of a great American play – until it
blows the ending.
This film features three actors – Marlon Brando, Him Hunter, and Karl
Malden -- in the roles they originated in this play on Broadway in 1947.
Tennessee Williams’ landmark drama was a huge hit, and soon spawned a British production
starring Vivian Leigh as the tragic heroine Blanche DuBois.
When the time came to make the film, the eminent director who opened
the play, Elia Kazan, was behind the camera. Jessica Tandy, who originated the
role of Blanche on stage, was out of the running as the producers wanted more
of a name in the title role. Fortunately, they engaged Vivian Leigh, who is
iconic here. Together with the three original actors, she staged the definitive
interpretation of a stunning and savagely beautiful drama. Leigh, Malden, and
Hunter won Oscars for their roles (Brando lost out to Bogart that year).
The film is largely stagebound, barring a few attempts to take the audience
out of the seedy New Orleans flat inhabited by crude, working-class Stanley
(Brando) and his wife Stella (Hunter). Along comes Stella’s sister, ex-teacher Blanche
(Leigh), who is at the end of her rope. A self-styled delicate Southern belle,
she is penniless – having lost the family home and been fired for a dalliance
with a young student.
She camps out in Stella and Stanley’s place, infuriating Stanley, who begins
to poke into her past. Meanwhile, Blanche sparks a courtship from Stanley’s
buddy Mitch (Malden). As Blanche becomes more and more delusional, Stanley
reveals Blanche’s indiscretions to Mitch, who rejects her. At the same time,
Stella has her baby. The night she’s at the hospital, Blanche and Stanley clash
for the final time, which ends in him raping her (it is implied – his famous
line, “We had this date with each other from the beginning,” is absent here).
Soon after, Blanche is committed to a mental asylum. The doctors come
for her; she leaves tentatively, now completely mad. “Whoever you are,” she
says, “I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.”
Then the movie blows it. In the play, nothing changes between Stanley
and Stella at the end. Due to the consideration of the film censors, Stanley
could not be seen as getting away with doing evil, as he does in the play. Therefore,
in the film Stella walks out on Stanley. Finis.
Despite this, it’s an extraordinary film document. The quartet of primary
characters – Blanche, Stanley, Stella, and Mitch – are expertly embodied. Leigh
is masterful. Her Blanche is like a ravaged, unstable Scarlett O’Hara, living
feebly on the remnants of her charm. Her world is gone; she drifts aimlessly in
the present, one step above homelessness. Her belief in the illusion of grace
and propriety is belied by her alcoholic, slatternly behavior – a division of personality
she resolves by losing her mind.
And Brando. He blew the door wide open with this performance. If he had
done nothing else in his decades-long career, he would be remembered for his
Stanley. He is a force of nature – completely immersed in the scene, violently
unable to do otherwise than to inhabit this frustrated, angry dynamo of a
character. Williams intended Blanche to be the heroine, but Stanley is played
with such a raw edge of energy and unpredictability that it almost becomes
Brando’s film. This performance would codify and popularize the acting
discipline known as “the Method.” The Oscars they won are a tribute to the
other three actors that they stand up to Brando and acquit themselves
honorably.
The NFR is one writer’s attempt to review all
the films listed in the National Film Registry in chronological order. Next time: The Thing from Another World.