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There
are three reasons for watching A Streetcar Named Desire:
Brando. Brando. Brando.
Marlon
Brando's bestial heat still flares off that black and white
celluloid like the flashpots from the third row of a KISS
concert. It is obvious why his work in this movie has been
lauded, critiqued, dissected, imitated, codified and ultimately
iconicized - it's absolutely astounding! To this day, few
have captured that feral rawness and "natural-ness"
that he exuded; an actor boldly pioneering a new style,
a bravura "Method". The viewing medium becomes
all too two-dimensional when he is not onscreen.
On
the other hand, Vivien Leigh's acting style, though lauded
by film aficionados as a symbiotic, diametric marriage of
intensity with Brando's, is just plain hard to watch and
truthfully quite embarrassing at points. For modern viewers,
she cannot seem to "convince" with her old-school
Presentational/Theatrical style, clashing irreconcilably
with Brando's Method.
The
icy romance between Leigh and Karl Malden's character only
serves to pound home the truth that sexual morés
have moved too far from filmic 50s etiquette, to be in any
way considered vital or even interesting to modern viewers,
even though, for its day, much censorship was brought down
upon Streetcar. So we are left with aninordinate
amount of yapping that Leigh inflicts on Malden; enough
to make any man turn to drink, drugs, other women, other
men, football, synchronized swimming or forsaking humanity
and leaving for outer space like Chuck Heston in Planet
Of The Apes.
During
Leigh's incessant rambles, strewn passim to illustrate her
neuroticism, one continually wonders whether one is missing
innuendo which was considered innuendo Back Then but which
is now simply naiveté, or whether there was any innuendo
courted at all and it was as innocent and puling as it sounded.
Ultimately, it is too taxing to pretend filmic sophistication
and dissect character motivation - on a pure enjoyment level,
Leigh delivers only to historians and Serious Critics.
Surely,
'The Play's The Thing' and the story is as vital now as
it was then (that of the estranged sister - Leigh - with
the profligate and promiscuous past attempting to excise
her demons by immersing herself in a new life with her sister
and brother-in-law - Kim Hunter and Brando), but the manner
in which this tale is purveyed has dated, the only vital
remaining aspect being Brando.
Brando.
Brando.
END
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