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IMDbPro

L'Homme à la peau de serpent

Original title: The Fugitive Kind
  • 1960
  • Approved
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
7.9K
YOUR RATING
Marlon Brando, Anna Magnani, and Joanne Woodward in L'Homme à la peau de serpent (1960)
The Fugitive Kind: A Town Like This
Play clip5:29
Watch The Fugitive Kind: A Town Like This
1 Video
99+ Photos
Psychological DramaTragic RomanceDramaRomance

A guitar-playing drifter wanders into a small Mississippi town and inflames two troubled women.A guitar-playing drifter wanders into a small Mississippi town and inflames two troubled women.A guitar-playing drifter wanders into a small Mississippi town and inflames two troubled women.

  • Director
    • Sidney Lumet
  • Writers
    • Tennessee Williams
    • Meade Roberts
  • Stars
    • Marlon Brando
    • Joanne Woodward
    • Anna Magnani
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    7.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sidney Lumet
    • Writers
      • Tennessee Williams
      • Meade Roberts
    • Stars
      • Marlon Brando
      • Joanne Woodward
      • Anna Magnani
    • 57User reviews
    • 60Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Videos1

    The Fugitive Kind: A Town Like This
    Clip 5:29
    The Fugitive Kind: A Town Like This

    Photos115

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Marlon Brando
    Marlon Brando
    • Valentine Xavier
    Joanne Woodward
    Joanne Woodward
    • Carol Cutrere
    Anna Magnani
    Anna Magnani
    • Lady Torrance
    Maureen Stapleton
    Maureen Stapleton
    • Vee Talbot
    Victor Jory
    Victor Jory
    • Jabe Torrance
    R.G. Armstrong
    R.G. Armstrong
    • Sheriff Jordan Talbot
    Virgilia Chew
    • Nurse Porter
    Ben Yaffee
    • 'Dog' Hamma
    Joe Brown Jr.
    • 'Pee Wee' Binnings
    Mary Perry
    Madame Spivy
    Madame Spivy
    • Ruby Lightfoot
    • (as Spivy)
    John Baragrey
    John Baragrey
    • David Cutrere
    Sally Gracie
    • Dolly Hamma
    Lucille Benson
    Lucille Benson
    • Beulah Binnings
    Emory Richardson
    • Uncle Pleasant
    Neil Harrison
      Janice Mars
      • Gas Station Attendant's Wife
      Jeanne Barr
      Jeanne Barr
      • Bit Part
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Sidney Lumet
      • Writers
        • Tennessee Williams
        • Meade Roberts
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews57

      7.17.8K
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      Featured reviews

      7steiner-sam

      Tennessee Williams in his grimiest southern town

      It's set in smalltown Mississippi in the 1950s and follows a down-and-out character who is trying to turn his life around and the doomed relationships into which he stumbles.

      Valentine Xavier (Marlon Brando), also know as Snakeskin because of the snakeskin jacket he wears, gets out of jail in New Orleans and hits the road. His car breaks down in the middle of a rainstorm in a little Mississippi town, so he stops and gets a job in a little mercantile store run by Lady Torrance (Anna Magnani). She's lonely and has an older sick husband, Jabe (Victor Jory), who doesn't trust her or the good-looking clerk she just hired, especially when she fixes up a little bedroom for Xavier in the back of the store.

      Lady Torrance gets some competition from a young rich woman, Carol (Joanne Woodward), who is often drunk and remembers Xavier from New Orleans. She's too over the top to be real competition for Lady Torrence, however.

      After Lady Torrence learns her husband was among an earlier group of vigilantes that burned down her father's vineyards and home with her father inside, she is determined to open a "confectionary" attached to the mercantile store, that is designed like a vineyard. She wants Jabe to see before she allows him to die.

      However, there is a conflagration at the end that unhappily resolves the plot.

      This is Tennessee Williams with his grimiest southern town filled with malfunctioning human relationships. There are only dim flares of hope throughout, only to be extinguished by the end. Marlon Brando, as one reviewer put it, is "an astonishing physical specimen, a statuesque hunk with the intellectual ennui of a philosopher, who moves with a panther-like ease" and is "the misfit we all want to be." Anna Magnani is the earthy older woman who is finally trying to grasp some joy from life. They are a potent combination, though I sometimes find Tennessee Williams' words to be overwrought.
      8Quinoa1984

      not Williams, Lumet, or Brando's best, but it's still pretty damn good!

      The Fugitive Kind is a hot story of desire and loss and craving and heartbreak between a man and two women set in the deep south. Sounds like quintessential Tenessee Williams, and it is in spurts. Sometimes Williams leans towards being a little preachy, however true (little moments like when Brando and Stapleton have a quiet back and forth about racism via her painting kind of nails it on the head much), but it's his skills at doing melodrama that strike up the coolest beats. In fact, this is one of those super-cool movies of the late 50s that could have only starred someone like Brando, who looks at times disinterested in the scene but at the same time completely engaged, curious, smooth, harsh, and knowing of what life can bring with his trusty Ledbelly-signed guitar. It's not necessarily a towering work for the ages ala Williams collaboration 1 Streetcar Named Desire. But that doesn't mean it should be much under-looked either.

      As an early effort for Lumet it's also a scorcher dramatically; he's so good with the actors that whatever little missteps the script might take in pouring on the poetic prose in how some of the characters talk (there's a scene between Brando and Anna Magnani's characters by some ruin of a spot where she says people used to make love that is actually quite boring) can be usually forgiven. Magnani especially is interesting because she should be a case of miscasting, which, apparently in later years, Lumet admitted to. She seems low-key at first, but her strengths bloom out tenfold when it comes time to act like the hard-knock-life kind of woman she is, who's in a crap marriage and had a horrible affair with a man who didn't do anything after the summer they spent together. Now she's put into a situation where she does and doesn't want this drifter, and vice versa, and she's sometimes just as cool (though also quite tough and demanding in that big Italian mama way) as her counterpart.

      Meanwhile there's also Joanne Woodard, who has the kind of part many actresses love to chew on; feisty, outspoken, loud but also emotionally moody to the point that she admirably tries (and doesn't quite get to) the heights of Vivien Leigh with her classic Blanche Dubois. Overall, Lumet gets a good feel for the period- and shot in New York state no less- while working with good material and an even better cast. It won't ever be as revered as his other work, and at the same time it's much better than some would give it credit for, where the tragedy acts like another sweaty Southern caricature bemoaning existence and fitting on a bad pair of shoes.
      8bkoganbing

      A Bird With No Feet Can't Land Anywhere

      I suspect that Tennessee Williams probably agreed to change the title of his classically sounding play Orpheus Descending to The Fugitive Kind in order to insure box office. Possibly some of Marlon Brando's fans garnered from The Wild One might pay their admissions thinking they were seeing something like that. I can think of worst ways to be exposed to one of America's most respected playwrights.

      This was Brando's second time doing Williams for the screen, the first time being A Streetcar Named Desire. Curiously enough this was Anna Magnani's second time doing Tennessee Williams for the screen as well, she won an Oscar in 1955 for The Rose Tattoo. So the combination of Brando and Magnani seemed a natural for the screen. I don't think The Fugitive Kind is as good as Streetcar or The Rose Tattoo, but the parts are meaty enough roles for both these honored players.

      Characters seem to drift in to The Fugitive Kind from other Williams work. Brando's Val Xavier is quite like Chance Wayne in Sweet Bird of Youth, in fact in the review's title is the illusion Brando himself makes of his character. He's an early 30 something drifter with a talent for sex and music, the former probably more than the latter.

      Unlike Chance, Xavier doesn't have a female keeper, but he'd like to find one. He passes up liaison with the town trollop played by a third Oscar winner in the cast, Joanne Woodward for the older and married Anna Magnani.

      Magnani is trapped in a loveless marriage to a dying Victor Jory, a petty tyrant who runs the town general store. Like Big Daddy in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Jory is dying of cancer at a much more advanced stage of the disease than Burl Ives had. Picture Big Mama from that play hot to trot for Chance Wayne and you've got the essence of The Fugitive Kind.

      Joanne Woodward has an interesting part. Part of her loose behavior is in rebellion against the time honored tradition of institutional racism that is the south that Tennessee Williams grew up in. I'm not an expert on Tennessee Williams, but of the works I've seen that are revived frequently, this is the only one where Williams directly brings up racism.

      Orpheus Descending on Broadway only ran 68 performances in 1957. Two members from the Broadway cast made it to the screen, R.G. Armstrong as the sheriff repeating his role and Maureen Stapleton who had Joanne Woodward's part on stage, essays the part of the sheriff's wife who also is married to another middle aged tyrant. Considered a lesser work of Williams at first, Orpheus Descending is now revived frequently by stock theater companies everywhere. A critically acclaimed revival on Broadway in 1989 with Vanessa Redgrave and Tammy Grimes and Kevin Anderson helped bring Orpheus Descending into its proper place in the sun.

      Maybe if a remake is ever done, it will even be done under its proper original title. Till then we can be well satisfied with this version.
      7moonspinner55

      Wordy, good-looking soaper for grown-ups

      Tennessee Williams and Meade Roberts co-adapted Williams' play "Orpheus Descending" about a reluctant stud drifting through backwater town, stirring up the passions of an Italian shopkeeper who's married to a cranky invalid. Eerie and fabulously atmospheric piece gives the women in particular (Anna Magnani, Joanne Woodward, Maureen Stapleton) great roles to play. Marlon Brando, well-cast as the guitar-strumming gadabout with the bedroom eyes, doesn't seem as fully involved, and his focus tends to wander. Overall, an intriguing soap opera for mature audiences, beautifully photographed by Boris Kaufman and nimbly directed by Sidney Lumet. *** from ****
      9Nazi_Fighter_David

      Extremely poignant and captivating!

      Tennessee Williams was a stunning writer for the theater... The impact of his plays can overwhelm an audience with its superior force...

      Written in 1957, "Orpheus Descending" is a reconstruction of Williams' 1940 "Battle of Angels," filmed under Sidney Lumet's direction as "The Fugitive Kind."

      Williams subtracted elements of the ancient myth of Orpheus and Euridice to examine the sadistically patriarchal Southern Gothic town and to create a violent plot, involving ruined love, weakness, sex, betrayal, vengeance and lingering hatreds... "Orpheus Descending" shows how social prejudice threatens the lives of identified outsiders...

      This classic play is not quite his masterpiece... "A Streetcar Named Desire" is... It lacks some of the regretful charm of "The Glass Menagerie" and the entire impact of "Cat On a Hot Tin Roof." Nevertheless it is a deeply moving work of art...

      Williams was known for his compelling dialog and themes that - for their time - often seemed strange or shocking... He vividly suggested the sexual tensions and prevented violence of his tormented character, usually with compassion as well as irony...

      The film focuses on a handsome drifter from New Orleans, named Val Xavier, wearing a snake skin jacket - Williams' trademark of a rebel, non-conformist - Val is a "fugitive kind" who comes in off the highway... He is a rural Orpheus who descends to rescue his love, not in Hades precisely, but among the intrigue, chatter, and violence of the hot-tempered town of Two Rivers, Mississippi... He is a wandering guitar player who embarks on an affair with a lonely frustrated unhappy storekeeper's wife Lady Torrance...

      Anna Magnani is intelligently sensual and charming as Lady... Joanne Woodward is the hungry grotesque drunken Carol who tries to seduce Val in a cemetery... Both women are so intense, that they force you to become involved with them...

      The genuine community provides also interesting watching: Victor Jory, positively magnetic as the brutal oppressive husband Jabe Torrence; the vindictive sheriff R. G. Armstrong; and the soft-hearted Vee (Maureen Stapleton).

      Lady Torrence is a study of the immigrant woman who has acquired a patina of resilient toughness but who slowly admits her sensuality... She catches perfectly contradictory emotions of one who is wary of the stranger but who longs for his healing touch...

      With handsome magnetism, Brando is no less compelling... He is quite convincing avoiding all the clichés of the drifting Don Juan... With some kind of lucid intensity, he mixes his character's predatory and uncivil arrogance with flashes of sweet tenderness...

      The film (definitely worth seeing) is extremely poignant and captivating... The direction is excellent and the action moves very smoothly, never allowing you to relax...

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        Marlon Brando described Anna Magnani as being equally fiery and passionate off screen. He claimed she made a pass at him in a hotel before filming began.
      • Goofs
        At the cemetery, Xavier returns to the car and turns on its headlights. A much brighter studio light comes on a beat too late to further illuminate the right side of the frame.
      • Quotes

        Lady Torrance: Tell me some more about your self-control.

        Valentine Xavier: Well, they say that a woman can burn a man down, you know? But I can burn a woman down. I'm saying that I could. I'm not saying I would.

        Lady Torrance: What's the matter? Have they tired you out?

        Valentine Xavier: No, I'm not tired.

      • Connections
        Featured in American Masters: Tennessee Williams: Orpheus of the American Stage (1994)
      • Soundtracks
        Blanket Roll Blues
        Music by Kenyon Hopkins

        Lyrics by Tennessee Williams

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      FAQ18

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • January 6, 1961 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • El hombre de la piel de víbora
      • Filming locations
        • Gold Medal Studios, Bronx, New York City, New York, USA(Studio)
      • Production company
        • Pennebaker Productions
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Budget
        • $2,000,000 (estimated)
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 59m(119 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.66 : 1

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