A Streetcar Named Desire

5.00
    A Streetcar Named Desire
    1951

    Synopsis

    A fading southern belle tries to build a new life with her sister in New Orleans.

    Votre Filmothèque

    Cast

    • Vivien LeighBlanche DuBois
    • Marlon BrandoStanley Kowalski
    • Kim HunterStella Kowalski
    • Karl MaldenHarold Mitchell
    • Rudy BondSteve
    • Nick DennisPablo Gonzales
    • Peg HilliasEunice
    • Wright KingA Collector
    • Richard GarrickA Doctor
    • Ann DereThe Matron

    Recommandations

    • 100

      Chicago Sun-Times

      You could make a good case that no performance had more influence on modern film acting styles than Brando's work as Stanley Kowalski, Tennessee Williams' rough, smelly, sexually charged hero.
    • 100

      Empire

      Epic performances in a movie that seethes with atmosphere.
    • 100

      The New Yorker

      Elia Kazan’s direction is often stagy, and the sets and the arrangement of actors are frequently too transparently “worked out,” but who cares when you’re looking at two of the greatest performances ever put on film and listening to some of the finest dialogue ever written by an American?
    • 100

      The A.V. Club

      The movie Streetcar still seethes with lust, and retains so much of Williams’ florid dialogue and insinuation that it often feels like Kazan and his cast are getting away with something.
    • 90

      Variety

      Tennessee Williams' exciting Broadway stage play - winner of the Pulitzer Prize and New York Drama Critics award during the 1947-48 season - has been screenplayed into an even more absorbing drama of frustration and stark tragedy.
    • 90

      Washington Post

      Brando's performance as Stanley is one of those rare screen legends that are all they're cracked up to be: poetic, fearsome, so deeply felt you can barely take it in. In the hands of other actors, Stanley is like some nightmare feminist critique of maleness: brutish and infantile. Brando is brutish, infantile and full of a pain he can hardly comprehend or express. The monster suffers like a man. [Restored version]
    • 90

      Chicago Reader

      They are also great performances, and Hawks could have taken heart from Kim Hunter's work, which provides superb, understated balance to the famous fireworks of Marlon Brando and Vivien Leigh. Kazan's direction is often questionably, distractingly baroque, swelling up the considerable subtlety of the Tennessee Williams play, but if the hothouse style was ever justified, this is the occasion.
    • 88

      LarsenOnFilm

      A Streetcar Named Desire works itself up into a hurricane of emotional chaos, yet ironically, as these final scenes give in to hysteria, Brando starts dialing down. Depending on your reading, that makes Stanley either remorseful or sinister. Either way, he’s riveting. If Brando is calm at the end of Streetcar, that’s because he’s the center of the storm.

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