Nick-Davis.com: 100 Favorite Films
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#58: Suddenly, Last Summer
(USA, 1959; dir. Joseph L. Mankiewicz; cin. Jack Hildyard; with Montgomery Clift, Elizabeth Taylor, Katharine Hepburn,
Mercedes McCambridge, Gary Raymond, Albert Dekker, Mavis Villiers, Patricia Marmont, David Cameron)
IMDb
Sometimes even the major, personality-shaping fixations in
our lives recede for a while, but then forcefully reassert themselves
at unexpected moments. Literally, in this one week, I am experiencing a
mini-revival of my Tennessee Williams fandom, on three wholly different
fronts. Professionally, as my students pass in their senior thesis
projects, I have pulled my own undergraduate thesis out of the
mothballs: a structurally daffy, theoretically promiscuous, but
mercifully unhumiliating argument about Williams' plays as
pre-Foucauldian parables of panoptical social regulation, taking Not About Nightingales
as the central text. In a public context, Warner Bros. has just released a seven-disc box-set of films adapted from Williams
plays: Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, The Night of the Iguana, The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone, Baby Doll
(which is actually an original Williams screenplay), Sweet Bird of Youth (a slightly neutered version of one of my
favorite plays), and two DVDs devoted to A Streetcar Named Desire, which figured further
down on this list. Theologically, today is May 19, which was not Katharine Hepburn's birthday, but it was the day she often
cited as her birthdayMay 19, 1909, rather than May, 12, 1907in order to shave two years off of her age.
Suddenly, Last Summer features one of Hepburn's best and steeliest performances, and certainly her most gleamingly
villainous. She literally enters the movie from a great height, soaring down in a rococo elevator, spouting redolent
mythologies about herself and her dead son Sebastianthe ghostly, depraved Rosebud of this particular mystery. Now get
ready for this plot: Hepburn's fabulously venal Violet Venable has called one Dr. Cukrowicz (Montgomery Clift) to her eerie
palace in order to persuade him to lobotomize her niece Catharine (Elizabeth Taylor), whose first-hand account of Sebastian's
outlandish death has landed her straight in the booby-hatch. Catharine's story is
quite a whopper, pivoting on details like pedophilia, prostitution,
homosexuality, and cannibalism: it would seem that Sebastian has been
gobbled by a ravenous band of young Spanish street-hustlers. Being a
Williams play, this Guignol tale is, of course, a benchmark of truth.
Instead, it is high society and social institutions that are unmasked
as killing lies: the deceptive, carnivorous will of old-money
aristocracy, embodied by Hepburn's Violet and her garden of Venus
flytraps, and the buyable ethics of modern corporate medicine,
represented by the endowment-hungry trustees of Monty's hospital.
Granted, political content is not the first thing one might look for in
Gore Vidal's mad adaptation of Williams' play, itself as purple as a
low-hanging cluster of grapes. The script needlessly and distractingly
pads the sensational atmosphere with predictably googly-eyed sanatorium
scenes. Clift, recklessly sunk into this maelstrom of insanity, crosses
his arms and darts his pupils in several scenes as though he is barely,
quietly holding himself together, while his famous pal Liz Taylor
sallies forth with her lurid monologues without quite adding much to
them. Still, Suddenly, Last Summer fascinates almost as much as it entertains, which is tremendously. Director Mankiewicz, having helmed some
of the greatest Hollywood movies about dubious, contested tales (All About Eve, A Letter to Three Wives),
cleverly whets our appetite for the naked, bleeding truth, even as his
direction of the actors and his gamely bold production design make
clear that he is most interested in the nervy climate of repression and
panic that surrounds the breech-birth of a horrible family secret. When
Mercedes McCambridge, the most proudly perverse of 1950s character
actresses, shows up as a fluttering flibbertigibbet, the movie's fruity
compote gets even more aromatic and flavorful. It simmers enticingly,
and sometimes, gloriously, it boils right over.
In short, if it's camp you want, it's camp you'll get, as when Monty
gives a blond male nurse a visible once-over, or when Liz starts
struggling with a locked door in the wrong place at the wrong time,
triply imprisoned by an iron-barred causeway, an expressionist camera
angle, and a triangulated bra. The movie makes it so easy for
conservative culture vultures to tear away at it, like the flesh-eating
birds that feast on baby sea turtles in one of Hepburn's centerpiece
monologues. Tear they did: Suddenly, Last Summer sparked a bonfire of disgusted protest in 1959, but the movie, even more than the play, belongs in that beastly
menagerie with Faulkner's Sanctuary, Pasolini's Salò, and Mary Harron's film of American Psycho,
aggressively vulgar works in which a hard, proud skeleton of social
critique and complex implication is nonetheless palpable, even to
viewers as green as I was at age 15, when I first saw the movie.
Floating between its scenes of family terrorism, pulsing beneath the
shiny enamel of Williams' lyrical prose ("Most people's liveswhat are
they but long trails of debris, with nothing to clean it up but,
finally, death"), triumphing over the drag-revue flourishes like
Hepburn's emu-feather hat and Liz's perpetually breathy delivery ("We!
pro! cured! for! him!"), there is something remarkably formidable about
Suddenly, Last Summer. It makes you chuckle, sometimes against its own interests, but it also lingers like few "better" films ever do,
and in that way at least, it's a better Williams film than those bashfully catered affairs that Richard Brooks whipped up out
of Cat and Sweet Bird. Just you try flossing it from your mind.
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