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A Streetcar Named Desire (1951 film)

A Streetcar Named Desire is a 1951 American Southern Gothic drama film adapted from Tennessee Williams's Pulitzer Prize-winning play of the same name. It is directed by Elia Kazan, and stars Vivien Leigh, Marlon Brando, Kim Hunter, and Karl Malden. The film tells the story of a Mississippi Southern belle, Blanche DuBois, who, after encountering a series of personal losses, seeks refuge with her sister and brother-in-law in a dilapidated New Orleans apartment building. The original Broadway production and cast was converted to film, albeit with several changes and sanitizations related to censorship.

A Streetcar Named Desire
Theatrical release poster by Bill Gold
Directed byElia Kazan
Screenplay by
Based onA Streetcar Named Desire
1947 play
by Tennessee Williams
Produced byCharles K. Feldman
Starring
CinematographyHarry Stradling
Edited byDavid Weisbart
Music byAlex North
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release date
  • September 19, 1951 (1951-09-19) (New York)[1]
Running time
125 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1.8 million[3]
Box office$8 million (North America)[3]

Tennessee Williams collaborated with Oscar Saul and Elia Kazan on the screenplay. Kazan, who directed the Broadway stage production, also directed the black-and-white film. Brando, Hunter, and Malden all reprised their original Broadway roles. Although Jessica Tandy originated the role of Blanche DuBois on Broadway, Vivien Leigh, who had appeared in the London theatre production, was cast in the film adaptation for her star power.[4] Upon release of the film, Marlon Brando, virtually unknown at the time of the play's casting, rose to prominence as a major Hollywood film star, and received the first of four consecutive Academy Award nominations for Best Actor, while Leigh won her second Academy Award for Best Actress for playing DuBois.

The film earned an estimated $4,250,000 at the US and Canadian box office in 1951, making it the fifth biggest hit of the year.[5] It received Oscar nominations in 10 other categories (including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Adapted Screenplay), and won Best Supporting Actor (Malden), Best Supporting Actress (Hunter), and Best Art Direction (Richard Day, George James Hopkins), making it the first film to win in three of the acting categories. In 1999, A Streetcar Named Desire was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".

Plot edit

Original trailer of the film A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)

Blanche DuBois, a middle-aged high school English teacher, arrives in New Orleans. She takes a streetcar named "Desire"[6] to the French Quarter, where her sister, Stella, and Stella's husband, Stanley Kowalski, live in a tenement apartment. Blanche claims to be on leave from her teaching job due to her nerves and wants to stay with Stella and Stanley. Blanche's demure, refined manner is a stark contrast to Stanley's crude, brutish behavior, making them mutually wary and antagonistic. Stella welcomes having her sister as a guest, but Stanley often patronizes and criticizes her.

Blanche reveals that the family estate, Belle Reve, was lost to creditors, and Blanche is broke with nowhere to go. She was widowed at a young age after her husband's suicide. When Stanley suspects Blanche may be hiding an inheritance, she shows him proof of the foreclosure. Stanley, looking for further proof, knocks some of Blanche's private papers to the floor. Weeping, she gathers them, saying they are poems from her dead husband. Stanley explains he was only looking out for his family, then announces Stella is pregnant.

Blanche meets Stanley's friend, Mitch, whose courteous manner is in sharp contrast to Stanley's other pals. Mitch is attracted to Blanche's flirtatious charm, and a romance blossoms. During a poker night with his friends, Stanley explodes in a drunken rage, striking Stella and ending the game; Blanche and Stella flee upstairs to neighbor Eunice Hubbell's upstairs apartment. After his anger subsides, Stanley remorsefully bellows for Stella from the courtyard below. Irresistibly drawn by her physical passion for him, she goes to Stanley, who carries her off to bed. The next morning, Blanche urges Stella to leave Stanley, calling him a sub-human animal. Stella disagrees and stays.

As weeks pass into months, tension mounts between Blanche and Stanley. Blanche is hopeful about Mitch, but anxiety and alcoholism have her teetering on mental collapse while anticipating a marriage proposal. Finally, Mitch says they should be together. Meanwhile, Stanley uncovers Blanche's hidden history of mental instability, promiscuity, and being fired for sleeping with an underage student. He passes this news on to Mitch, in full knowledge this will end Blanche's marriage prospects and leave her with no future. Stella angrily blames Stanley for the catastrophic revelation, but their fight is interrupted when Stella goes into labor.

Later, Mitch arrives and confronts Blanche about Stanley's claims. She initially denies everything, then breaks down confessing. She pleads for forgiveness, but Mitch, hurt and humiliated, roughly ends the relationship. Later that night, while Stella's labor continues, Stanley returns from the hospital to get some sleep. Blanche, dressed in a tattered old gown, pretends she is departing on a trip with an old admirer. She spins tale after tale about her fictitious future plans, and he pitilessly destroys her illusions. They engage in a struggle. She collapses and the scene ends with her impending rape.

Weeks later, during another poker game at the Kowalski apartment, doctors arrive to take the nearly catatonic Blanche to a mental hospital. Blanche has told Stella what happened, but Stella cannot bring herself to believe it. On seeing the doctor and nurse, Blanche resists at first. The nurse matron seizes her but the doctor talks to her gently and she goes with them, saying her last lines in the play about having "always depended on the kindness of strangers". Mitch, present at the poker game, is visibly upset, and although Stanley denies touching Blanche, Mitch attacks him but is no match for the shorter but tougher Stanley. Stella, now realizing that Blanche had told her the truth, takes the baby upstairs to the Hubbells' apartment, determined to leave her husband.

Cast edit

 
Leigh shown as Blanche in 1951 trailer for the film

Production edit

A Streetcar Named Desire was adapted directly from the successful 1947 Broadway production of the play, which won the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award for Best Play and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Many of the cast and crew were ported over from the stage production, including director Elia Kazan and actors Marlon Brando, Kim Hunter, Karl Malden, Rudy Bond, Nick Dennis, Peg Hillias, Ann Dere, Edna Thomas, and Richard Garrick. Kazan intended for Jessica Tandy, who won a Tony for her portrayal of Blanche, to also reprise her role on film, but producer Charles K. Feldman insisted on casting an actress with more box office appeal. The role was offered to both Bette Davis[7] and Olivia de Havilland, who both declined. Vivien Leigh, who had already played Blanche in Streetcar's London production (directed by then-husband Laurence Olivier), was eventually cast. In Brando's autobiography, he praised Tandy but felt that Vivien Leigh ended up being the definitive Blanche. "She was Blanche."

Aside from the opening and closing scenes, which were shot on location in New Orleans, A Streetcar Named Desire was filmed entirely on soundstages at the Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, California. The Kowalski apartment set was designed to gradually appear smaller over the course of the film, to reflect the characters' sense of claustrophobia.

For the opening scene, #922 was chosen to be the streetcar that dropped off Blanche. This streetcar is still in revenue earning service on the St. Charles Streetcar Line[8]

Marlon Brando is often displayed shirtless, in one of the first occurrences for a Hollywood movie.[9]

Censorship edit

Several scenes were shot, but cut, after filming was complete, to conform to the Production Code and later, to avoid condemnation by the National Legion of Decency. In 1993, after Warner Bros. discovered the censored footage during a routine inventory of archives,[10] several minutes of the censored scenes were restored in an 'original director's version' video re-release.[11]

Music edit

The jazz-infused score by Alex North was written in short sets of music that reflected the psychological dynamics of the characters. It was one of the first jazz scores composed for a mainstream feature film,[12] and earned North an Oscar nomination for Best Original Score, one of two nominations in that category that year.

Comparison to source material edit

  • The play was set entirely at the Kowalski apartment, but the story's visual scope is expanded in the film, which depicts locations only briefly mentioned or non-existent in the stage production, such as the train station, streets in the French Quarter, the bowling alley, the pier of a dance casino, and the machine factory.
  • Dialogue presented in the play is abbreviated or cut entirely in various scenes in the film, including, for example, when Blanche tries to convince Stella to leave Stanley and when Mitch confronts Blanche about her past.
  • The name of the town where Blanche was from was changed from the real-life town of Laurel, Mississippi, to the fictional "Auriol, Mississippi".
  • The play's themes were controversial, causing the screenplay to be modified to comply with the Hollywood Production Code. In the original play, Blanche's husband died by suicide after he was discovered having a homosexual affair. This reference was removed from the film; Blanche says instead that she showed scorn at her husband's sensitive nature, driving him to suicide. She does however make a vague reference to "his coming out", implying homosexuality without explicitly stating it.
  • The scene involving Stanley raping Blanche is cut short in the film, instead ending dramatically with Blanche smashing the mirror with the broken bottle in a failed attempt at self-defence.
  • At the end of the play, Stella, distraught at Blanche's fate, mutely allows Stanley to console her. In the film, this is changed to Stella blaming Stanley for Blanche's fate, and resolving to leave him.[13]
  • Close, tight photography altered the dramatic qualities of the play, for example in the lengthy scenes of escalating conflict between Stanley and Blanche, or when Mitch shines the light on Blanche to see how old she is, or when the camera hovers over Blanche, collapsed on the floor, with her head at the bottom of the screen, as though she were turned upside down.
  • In the film, Blanche is shown riding in the streetcar which was only mentioned in the play. By the time the film was in production, however, the Desire streetcar line had been converted into a bus service, and the production team had to gain permission from the authorities to hire out a streetcar with the "Desire" name on it.[14]

Reception edit

Box office edit

In the months after its release in September 1951, A Streetcar Named Desire grossed $4.2 million in the United States and Canada, with 15 million tickets sold against a production budget of $1.8 million.[15] A reissue of the film by 20th Century Fox in 1958 grossed an additional $700,000.[16]

Critical response edit

Upon release, the film drew very high praise. The New York Times critic Bosley Crowther stated that "inner torments are seldom projected with such sensitivity and clarity on the screen" and commending both Vivien Leigh's and Marlon Brando's performances. Film critic Roger Ebert has also expressed praise for the film, calling it a "great ensemble of the movies." The film has a 97% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 62 reviews, with an average rating of 8.60/10. The consensus reads, "A feverish rendition of a heart-rending story, A Streetcar Named Desire gives Tennessee Williams' stage play explosive power on the screen thanks to Elia Kazan's searing direction and a sterling ensemble at the peak of their craft."[17]

In his 2020 autobiography Apropos of Nothing, director Woody Allen praises every aspect of the production:

The movie Streetcar is for me total artistic perfection... It's the most perfect confluence of script, performance, and direction I’ve ever seen. I agree with Richard Schickel, who calls the play perfect. The characters are so perfectly written, every nuance, every instinct, every line of dialogue is the best choice of all those available in the known universe. All the performances are sensational. Vivien Leigh is incomparable, more real and vivid than real people I know. And Marlon Brando was a living poem. He was an actor who came on the scene and changed the history of acting. The magic, the setting, New Orleans, the French Quarter, the rainy humid afternoons, the poker night. Artistic genius, no holds barred.

The Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa cited this movie as one of his 100 favorite films.[18]

Awards and nominations edit

A Streetcar Named Desire won four Academy Awards, setting an Oscar record when it became the first film to win in three of the acting categories, a feat subsequently matched by Network in 1976 and Everything Everywhere All at Once in 2022.[19][20] It was also the first time since 1936 (Anthony Adverse) that a Warner Bros. movie won four or more Oscars.

Award Category Nominee(s) Result
Academy Awards Best Motion Picture Charles K. Feldman Nominated
Best Director Elia Kazan Nominated
Best Actor Marlon Brando Nominated
Best Actress Vivien Leigh Won
Best Supporting Actor Karl Malden Won
Best Supporting Actress Kim Hunter Won
Best Screenplay Tennessee Williams Nominated
Best Art Direction – Black-and-White Art Direction: Richard Day;
Set Decoration: George James Hopkins
Won
Best Cinematography – Black-and-White Harry Stradling Nominated
Best Costume Design – Black-and-White Lucinda Ballard Nominated
Best Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture Alex North Nominated
Best Sound Recording Nathan Levinson Nominated
British Academy Film Awards Best Film from any Source Nominated
Best British Actress Vivien Leigh Won
Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Elia Kazan Nominated
Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture – Drama Nominated
Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama Vivien Leigh Nominated
Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture Kim Hunter Won
Jussi Awards Best Foreign Actor Marlon Brando (also for The Men) Won
National Board of Review Awards Top 10 Films 6th Place
National Film Preservation Board National Film Registry Inducted
New York Film Critics Circle Awards Best Film Won
Best Director Elia Kazan Won
Best Actor Marlon Brando Nominated
Best Actress Vivien Leigh Won
Online Film & Television Association Awards Hall of Fame – Motion Picture Won
Sant Jordi Awards Special Jury Prize Vivien Leigh Won
Tennessee Williams Won
Venice International Film Festival Golden Lion Elia Kazan Nominated
Special Jury Prize Won
Best Actress Vivien Leigh Won
Writers Guild of America Awards Best Written American Drama Tennessee Williams Nominated

American Film Institute recognition

References edit

  1. ^ A Streetcar Named Desire at the American Film Institute Catalog. Retrieved Sept. 19, 2021
  2. ^ "A Streetcar Named Desire". American Film Institute. Retrieved July 4, 2017.
  3. ^ a b "A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)—Financial Information". The Numbers. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
  4. ^ Manvell, Roger. Theatre and Film: A Comparative Study of the Two Forms of Dramatic Art, and of the Problems of Adaptation of Stage Plays into Films. Cranbury, New Jersey: Associated University Presses Inc, 1979. 133
  5. ^ 'The Top Box Office Hits of 1951', Variety, January 2, 1952
  6. ^ "Named 'Desire'" in the sense that the streetcar has a roll sign up front declaring its route's destination, namely Rue Desiré in the Bywater neighborhood. The street was named at about the time of the Louisiana Purchase by the plantation owner, Robert Gautier de Montreuil, as a tribute to his third daughter, Desirée. Coincidentally, the streetcar company ceased that route in 1948, a year after the play was written.
  7. ^ "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved January 2, 2022.
  8. ^ "The real Desire Streetcar - A New Orleans Story". June 2022.
  9. ^ Frances Romero (August 18, 2011). "Top 10 Shirtless Movies: A Streetcar Named Desire".
  10. ^ Warner Archive Podcast (June 3, 2014).
  11. ^ Censored Films and Television at University of Virginia online
  12. ^ "Jazz on Film: the brilliance of 'A Streetcar Named Desire'". Jazzwise. Retrieved January 2, 2022.
  13. ^ Williams, Tennessee, Memoirs, 1977
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on May 19, 2011. Retrieved November 13, 2011.
  15. ^ Annual Movie Chart | 1951–1952 | the numbers
  16. ^ "'Streetcar' New Run Heads For $700,000". Variety. November 11, 1958. p. 5. Retrieved July 7, 2019 – via Archive.org.
  17. ^ A Streetcar Named Desire at Rotten Tomatoes
  18. ^ Thomas-Mason, Lee (January 12, 2021). "From Stanley Kubrick to Martin Scorsese: Akira Kurosawa once named his top 100 favourite films of all time". Far Out Magazine. Retrieved January 23, 2023.
  19. ^ "The 24th Academy Awards (1952) Nominees and Winners". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved August 20, 2011.
  20. ^ . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2009. Archived from the original on January 25, 2009. Retrieved December 19, 2008.

External links edit

streetcar, named, desire, 1951, film, other, uses, streetcar, named, desire, disambiguation, streetcar, named, desire, 1951, american, southern, gothic, drama, film, adapted, from, tennessee, williams, pulitzer, prize, winning, play, same, name, directed, elia. For other uses see A Streetcar Named Desire disambiguation A Streetcar Named Desire is a 1951 American Southern Gothic drama film adapted from Tennessee Williams s Pulitzer Prize winning play of the same name It is directed by Elia Kazan and stars Vivien Leigh Marlon Brando Kim Hunter and Karl Malden The film tells the story of a Mississippi Southern belle Blanche DuBois who after encountering a series of personal losses seeks refuge with her sister and brother in law in a dilapidated New Orleans apartment building The original Broadway production and cast was converted to film albeit with several changes and sanitizations related to censorship A Streetcar Named DesireTheatrical release poster by Bill GoldDirected byElia KazanScreenplay byTennessee Williams Oscar Saul adaptation Based onA Streetcar Named Desire1947 playby Tennessee WilliamsProduced byCharles K FeldmanStarringVivien Leigh Marlon Brando Kim Hunter Karl MaldenCinematographyHarry StradlingEdited byDavid WeisbartMusic byAlex NorthDistributed byWarner Bros PicturesRelease dateSeptember 19 1951 1951 09 19 New York 1 Running time125 minutes 2 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 1 8 million 3 Box office 8 million North America 3 Tennessee Williams collaborated with Oscar Saul and Elia Kazan on the screenplay Kazan who directed the Broadway stage production also directed the black and white film Brando Hunter and Malden all reprised their original Broadway roles Although Jessica Tandy originated the role of Blanche DuBois on Broadway Vivien Leigh who had appeared in the London theatre production was cast in the film adaptation for her star power 4 Upon release of the film Marlon Brando virtually unknown at the time of the play s casting rose to prominence as a major Hollywood film star and received the first of four consecutive Academy Award nominations for Best Actor while Leigh won her second Academy Award for Best Actress for playing DuBois The film earned an estimated 4 250 000 at the US and Canadian box office in 1951 making it the fifth biggest hit of the year 5 It received Oscar nominations in 10 other categories including Best Picture Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay and won Best Supporting Actor Malden Best Supporting Actress Hunter and Best Art Direction Richard Day George James Hopkins making it the first film to win in three of the acting categories In 1999 A Streetcar Named Desire was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being culturally historically or aesthetically significant Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Censorship 4 Music 5 Comparison to source material 6 Reception 6 1 Box office 6 2 Critical response 6 3 Awards and nominations 7 References 8 External linksPlot edit source source source source source Original trailer of the film A Streetcar Named Desire 1951 Blanche DuBois a middle aged high school English teacher arrives in New Orleans She takes a streetcar named Desire 6 to the French Quarter where her sister Stella and Stella s husband Stanley Kowalski live in a tenement apartment Blanche claims to be on leave from her teaching job due to her nerves and wants to stay with Stella and Stanley Blanche s demure refined manner is a stark contrast to Stanley s crude brutish behavior making them mutually wary and antagonistic Stella welcomes having her sister as a guest but Stanley often patronizes and criticizes her Blanche reveals that the family estate Belle Reve was lost to creditors and Blanche is broke with nowhere to go She was widowed at a young age after her husband s suicide When Stanley suspects Blanche may be hiding an inheritance she shows him proof of the foreclosure Stanley looking for further proof knocks some of Blanche s private papers to the floor Weeping she gathers them saying they are poems from her dead husband Stanley explains he was only looking out for his family then announces Stella is pregnant Blanche meets Stanley s friend Mitch whose courteous manner is in sharp contrast to Stanley s other pals Mitch is attracted to Blanche s flirtatious charm and a romance blossoms During a poker night with his friends Stanley explodes in a drunken rage striking Stella and ending the game Blanche and Stella flee upstairs to neighbor Eunice Hubbell s upstairs apartment After his anger subsides Stanley remorsefully bellows for Stella from the courtyard below Irresistibly drawn by her physical passion for him she goes to Stanley who carries her off to bed The next morning Blanche urges Stella to leave Stanley calling him a sub human animal Stella disagrees and stays As weeks pass into months tension mounts between Blanche and Stanley Blanche is hopeful about Mitch but anxiety and alcoholism have her teetering on mental collapse while anticipating a marriage proposal Finally Mitch says they should be together Meanwhile Stanley uncovers Blanche s hidden history of mental instability promiscuity and being fired for sleeping with an underage student He passes this news on to Mitch in full knowledge this will end Blanche s marriage prospects and leave her with no future Stella angrily blames Stanley for the catastrophic revelation but their fight is interrupted when Stella goes into labor Later Mitch arrives and confronts Blanche about Stanley s claims She initially denies everything then breaks down confessing She pleads for forgiveness but Mitch hurt and humiliated roughly ends the relationship Later that night while Stella s labor continues Stanley returns from the hospital to get some sleep Blanche dressed in a tattered old gown pretends she is departing on a trip with an old admirer She spins tale after tale about her fictitious future plans and he pitilessly destroys her illusions They engage in a struggle She collapses and the scene ends with her impending rape Weeks later during another poker game at the Kowalski apartment doctors arrive to take the nearly catatonic Blanche to a mental hospital Blanche has told Stella what happened but Stella cannot bring herself to believe it On seeing the doctor and nurse Blanche resists at first The nurse matron seizes her but the doctor talks to her gently and she goes with them saying her last lines in the play about having always depended on the kindness of strangers Mitch present at the poker game is visibly upset and although Stanley denies touching Blanche Mitch attacks him but is no match for the shorter but tougher Stanley Stella now realizing that Blanche had told her the truth takes the baby upstairs to the Hubbells apartment determined to leave her husband Cast edit nbsp Leigh shown as Blanche in 1951 trailer for the film Vivien Leigh as Blanche Marlon Brando as Stanley Kim Hunter as Stella Karl Malden as Mitch Rudy Bond as Steve Hubbell Peg Hillias as Eunice Hubbell Nick Dennis as Pablo Wright King as a collector Edna Thomas as Mexican Woman Ann Dere as Matron Nurse Richard Garrick as Doctor Mickey Kuhn as Sailor Lyle Latell as Policeman uncredited Production editA Streetcar Named Desire was adapted directly from the successful 1947 Broadway production of the play which won the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama Many of the cast and crew were ported over from the stage production including director Elia Kazan and actors Marlon Brando Kim Hunter Karl Malden Rudy Bond Nick Dennis Peg Hillias Ann Dere Edna Thomas and Richard Garrick Kazan intended for Jessica Tandy who won a Tony for her portrayal of Blanche to also reprise her role on film but producer Charles K Feldman insisted on casting an actress with more box office appeal The role was offered to both Bette Davis 7 and Olivia de Havilland who both declined Vivien Leigh who had already played Blanche in Streetcar s London production directed by then husband Laurence Olivier was eventually cast In Brando s autobiography he praised Tandy but felt that Vivien Leigh ended up being the definitive Blanche She was Blanche Aside from the opening and closing scenes which were shot on location in New Orleans A Streetcar Named Desire was filmed entirely on soundstages at the Warner Bros Studios in Burbank California The Kowalski apartment set was designed to gradually appear smaller over the course of the film to reflect the characters sense of claustrophobia For the opening scene 922 was chosen to be the streetcar that dropped off Blanche This streetcar is still in revenue earning service on the St Charles Streetcar Line 8 Marlon Brando is often displayed shirtless in one of the first occurrences for a Hollywood movie 9 Censorship edit Several scenes were shot but cut after filming was complete to conform to the Production Code and later to avoid condemnation by the National Legion of Decency In 1993 after Warner Bros discovered the censored footage during a routine inventory of archives 10 several minutes of the censored scenes were restored in an original director s version video re release 11 Music editThe jazz infused score by Alex North was written in short sets of music that reflected the psychological dynamics of the characters It was one of the first jazz scores composed for a mainstream feature film 12 and earned North an Oscar nomination for Best Original Score one of two nominations in that category that year Comparison to source material editThe play was set entirely at the Kowalski apartment but the story s visual scope is expanded in the film which depicts locations only briefly mentioned or non existent in the stage production such as the train station streets in the French Quarter the bowling alley the pier of a dance casino and the machine factory Dialogue presented in the play is abbreviated or cut entirely in various scenes in the film including for example when Blanche tries to convince Stella to leave Stanley and when Mitch confronts Blanche about her past The name of the town where Blanche was from was changed from the real life town of Laurel Mississippi to the fictional Auriol Mississippi The play s themes were controversial causing the screenplay to be modified to comply with the Hollywood Production Code In the original play Blanche s husband died by suicide after he was discovered having a homosexual affair This reference was removed from the film Blanche says instead that she showed scorn at her husband s sensitive nature driving him to suicide She does however make a vague reference to his coming out implying homosexuality without explicitly stating it The scene involving Stanley raping Blanche is cut short in the film instead ending dramatically with Blanche smashing the mirror with the broken bottle in a failed attempt at self defence At the end of the play Stella distraught at Blanche s fate mutely allows Stanley to console her In the film this is changed to Stella blaming Stanley for Blanche s fate and resolving to leave him 13 Close tight photography altered the dramatic qualities of the play for example in the lengthy scenes of escalating conflict between Stanley and Blanche or when Mitch shines the light on Blanche to see how old she is or when the camera hovers over Blanche collapsed on the floor with her head at the bottom of the screen as though she were turned upside down In the film Blanche is shown riding in the streetcar which was only mentioned in the play By the time the film was in production however the Desire streetcar line had been converted into a bus service and the production team had to gain permission from the authorities to hire out a streetcar with the Desire name on it 14 Reception editBox office edit In the months after its release in September 1951 A Streetcar Named Desire grossed 4 2 million in the United States and Canada with 15 million tickets sold against a production budget of 1 8 million 15 A reissue of the film by 20th Century Fox in 1958 grossed an additional 700 000 16 Critical response edit Upon release the film drew very high praise The New York Times critic Bosley Crowther stated that inner torments are seldom projected with such sensitivity and clarity on the screen and commending both Vivien Leigh s and Marlon Brando s performances Film critic Roger Ebert has also expressed praise for the film calling it a great ensemble of the movies The film has a 97 rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 62 reviews with an average rating of 8 60 10 The consensus reads A feverish rendition of a heart rending story A Streetcar Named Desire gives Tennessee Williams stage play explosive power on the screen thanks to Elia Kazan s searing direction and a sterling ensemble at the peak of their craft 17 In his 2020 autobiography Apropos of Nothing director Woody Allen praises every aspect of the production The movie Streetcar is for me total artistic perfection It s the most perfect confluence of script performance and direction I ve ever seen I agree with Richard Schickel who calls the play perfect The characters are so perfectly written every nuance every instinct every line of dialogue is the best choice of all those available in the known universe All the performances are sensational Vivien Leigh is incomparable more real and vivid than real people I know And Marlon Brando was a living poem He was an actor who came on the scene and changed the history of acting The magic the setting New Orleans the French Quarter the rainy humid afternoons the poker night Artistic genius no holds barred The Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa cited this movie as one of his 100 favorite films 18 Awards and nominations edit A Streetcar Named Desire won four Academy Awards setting an Oscar record when it became the first film to win in three of the acting categories a feat subsequently matched by Network in 1976 and Everything Everywhere All at Once in 2022 19 20 It was also the first time since 1936 Anthony Adverse that a Warner Bros movie won four or more Oscars Award Category Nominee s Result Academy Awards Best Motion Picture Charles K Feldman Nominated Best Director Elia Kazan Nominated Best Actor Marlon Brando Nominated Best Actress Vivien Leigh Won Best Supporting Actor Karl Malden Won Best Supporting Actress Kim Hunter Won Best Screenplay Tennessee Williams Nominated Best Art Direction Black and White Art Direction Richard Day Set Decoration George James Hopkins Won Best Cinematography Black and White Harry Stradling Nominated Best Costume Design Black and White Lucinda Ballard Nominated Best Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture Alex North Nominated Best Sound Recording Nathan Levinson Nominated British Academy Film Awards Best Film from any Source Nominated Best British Actress Vivien Leigh Won Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Elia Kazan Nominated Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture Drama Nominated Best Actress in a Motion Picture Drama Vivien Leigh Nominated Best Supporting Actress Motion Picture Kim Hunter Won Jussi Awards Best Foreign Actor Marlon Brando also for The Men Won National Board of Review Awards Top 10 Films 6th Place National Film Preservation Board National Film Registry Inducted New York Film Critics Circle Awards Best Film Won Best Director Elia Kazan Won Best Actor Marlon Brando Nominated Best Actress Vivien Leigh Won Online Film amp Television Association Awards Hall of Fame Motion Picture Won Sant Jordi Awards Special Jury Prize Vivien Leigh Won Tennessee Williams Won Venice International Film Festival Golden Lion Elia Kazan Nominated Special Jury Prize Won Best Actress Vivien Leigh Won Writers Guild of America Awards Best Written American Drama Tennessee Williams Nominated American Film Institute recognition 1998 AFI s 100 Years 100 Movies No 45 2002 AFI s 100 Years 100 Passions No 67 2005 AFI s 100 Years 100 Movie Quotes Stella Hey Stella No 45 I ve always depended on the kindness of strangers No 75 2005 AFI s 100 Years of Film Scores No 19 2007 AFI s 100 Years 100 Movies 10th Anniversary Edition No 47References edit A Streetcar Named Desire at the American Film Institute Catalog Retrieved Sept 19 2021 A Streetcar Named Desire American Film Institute Retrieved July 4 2017 a b A Streetcar Named Desire 1951 Financial Information The Numbers Retrieved May 9 2019 Manvell Roger Theatre and Film A Comparative Study of the Two Forms of Dramatic Art and of the Problems of Adaptation of Stage Plays into Films Cranbury New Jersey Associated University Presses Inc 1979 133 The Top Box Office Hits of 1951 Variety January 2 1952 Named Desire in the sense that the streetcar has a roll sign up front declaring its route s destination namely Rue Desire in the Bywater neighborhood The street was named at about the time of the Louisiana Purchase by the plantation owner Robert Gautier de Montreuil as a tribute to his third daughter Desiree Coincidentally the streetcar company ceased that route in 1948 a year after the play was written AFI Catalog catalog afi com Retrieved January 2 2022 The real Desire Streetcar A New Orleans Story June 2022 Frances Romero August 18 2011 Top 10 Shirtless Movies A Streetcar Named Desire Warner Archive Podcast June 3 2014 Censored Films and Television at University of Virginia online Jazz on Film the brilliance of A Streetcar Named Desire Jazzwise Retrieved January 2 2022 Williams Tennessee Memoirs 1977 New Orleans Public Service Inc 832 Archived from the original on May 19 2011 Retrieved November 13 2011 Annual Movie Chart 1951 1952 the numbers Streetcar New Run Heads For 700 000 Variety November 11 1958 p 5 Retrieved July 7 2019 via Archive org A Streetcar Named Desire at Rotten Tomatoes Thomas Mason Lee January 12 2021 From Stanley Kubrick to Martin Scorsese Akira Kurosawa once named his top 100 favourite films of all time Far Out Magazine Retrieved January 23 2023 The 24th Academy Awards 1952 Nominees and Winners Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Archived from the original on July 6 2011 Retrieved August 20 2011 NY Times A Streetcar Named Desire Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times 2009 Archived from the original on January 25 2009 Retrieved December 19 2008 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to A Streetcar Named Desire 1951 film nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to A Streetcar Named Desire 1951 film A Streetcar Named Desire at the American Film Institute Catalog A Streetcar Named Desire at IMDb nbsp A Streetcar Named Desire at the TCM Movie Database A Streetcar Named Desire at AllMovie A Streetcar Named Desire at Rotten Tomatoes Werner Stephen A In Search of Stanley Kowalski St Louis Cultural History Project Summer 2022 Portals nbsp Film nbsp United States nbsp 1950s Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Streetcar Named Desire 1951 film amp oldid 1217098089, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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