alr

Suddenly, Last Summer

10/11 & 10/12 SCREENINGS CANCELED DUE TO FLOOD
Screening on Film
Directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz.
With Elizabeth Taylor, Katharine Hepburn, Montgomery Clift.
US, 1959, 35mm, black & white, 114 min.
Print source: George Eastman Museum

Based on the 1958 play by Gore Vidal’s close friend Tennessee Williams, this was an adaptation Vidal wrote while under contract to MGM. The play was the third written by Williams in which he dealt with homosexuality, following A Streetcar Named Desire and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Suddenly, Last Summer, however, broached the topic much more explicitly than the two earlier films. In the depiction of the gay Sebastian Venable—told through flashbacks—the Production Code Administration gave the filmmakers special dispensation declaring, "Since the film illustrates the horrors of such a lifestyle, it can be considered moral in theme even though it deals with sexual perversion."

Mankiewicz’ spellbinding drama featured top stars—including a luminous Elizabeth Taylor, an unhinged Katharine Hepburn and a post-accident Montgomery Clift—in a delirious unravelling of family trauma. Williams told The Village Voice in 1973 that the film ran too far afield from his original play and "made [him] throw up." Vidal criticized the climactic ending, which had been altered by the director, and Mankiewicz himself blamed the source material, describing the play as "badly constructed ... based on the most elementary Freudian psychology."

Part of film series

Read more

Gore Vidal Goes to the Movies

Other film series with this film

Read more

The Complete Joseph L. Mankiewicz

Current and upcoming film series

Read more

Floating Clouds… The Cinema of Naruse Mikio

Read more

New Dog, New Tricks: Youth in Cinema

Read more

Columbia 101: The Rarities