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Reflets dans un oeil d'or

Original title: Reflections in a Golden Eye
  • 1967
  • 13
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
8.6K
YOUR RATING
Marlon Brando and Elizabeth Taylor in Reflets dans un oeil d'or (1967)
Trailer for this epic starring Marlon Brando
Play trailer2:42
1 Video
63 Photos
DramaRomanceThriller

Bizarre tale of sex, betrayal, and perversion at a military post.Bizarre tale of sex, betrayal, and perversion at a military post.Bizarre tale of sex, betrayal, and perversion at a military post.

  • Director
    • John Huston
  • Writers
    • Chapman Mortimer
    • Gladys Hill
    • Carson McCullers
  • Stars
    • Elizabeth Taylor
    • Marlon Brando
    • Brian Keith
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    8.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Huston
    • Writers
      • Chapman Mortimer
      • Gladys Hill
      • Carson McCullers
    • Stars
      • Elizabeth Taylor
      • Marlon Brando
      • Brian Keith
    • 104User reviews
    • 47Critic reviews
    • 67Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Reflections in a Golden Eye
    Trailer 2:42
    Reflections in a Golden Eye

    Photos63

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    Top cast22

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    Elizabeth Taylor
    Elizabeth Taylor
    • Leonora Penderton
    Marlon Brando
    Marlon Brando
    • Maj. Weldon Penderton
    Brian Keith
    Brian Keith
    • Lt. Col. Morris Langdon
    Julie Harris
    Julie Harris
    • Alison Langdon
    Zorro David
    • Anacleto
    Gordon Mitchell
    Gordon Mitchell
    • Stables Sergeant
    Irvin Dugan
    • Capt. Murray Weincheck
    Fay Sparks
    • Susie
    Robert Forster
    Robert Forster
    • Pvt. L.G. Williams
    Ed Metzger
    Ed Metzger
    • Pvt. Frank Brian
    Ted Beniades
    • Sergeant
    • (uncredited)
    Mary Boylan
    • Woman in Mental Institution
    • (uncredited)
    John Callaghan
    • Private
    • (uncredited)
    Jed Curtis
    Jed Curtis
    • Accordionist
    • (uncredited)
    Frank Flanagan
    • General Sugar
    • (uncredited)
    Trent Gough
    • Soldier
    • (uncredited)
    Harvey Keitel
    Harvey Keitel
    • Soldier
    • (uncredited)
    Alice Marchak
    • Woman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • John Huston
    • Writers
      • Chapman Mortimer
      • Gladys Hill
      • Carson McCullers
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews104

    6.78.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7Nazi_Fighter_David

    Admirable in many ways, beautifully staged and photographed and splendidly acted

    The time is late 1948 and the setting is a U.S. Army post in Georgia, bordering on a forest preserve…

    A Southern amoral wife called Leonora (Elizabeth Taylor) finds a way for her stream desire in an adulterous affair with Lt. Col. Langdon (Brian Keith), carried on almost openly…

    Leonora gives aperture to her forcefulness and vigor in a passion for horses and riding… She is attached to a handsome white horse she calls Firebird and she provokes her husband by telling him that the animal is indeed a stallion with the emotional nature of man...

    Leonora's husband (Marlon Brando) is a devious, insecure, impotent Army major, a hidden homosexual preoccupied with an unsociable, lonely rider who canters around the field in the nude and whose sexual emotional stress is diminished, secretively, at the bedside of the major's wife holding her clothes and looking fixedly at her marvelous hot body…

    Private Williams (Robert Forster) is another lonely man fascinated by the fiery Leonora and her thoughtful and gentle comments to him… He takes to visiting the Penderton house at night looking attentively in the windows, observing with total recall and complete joy Leonora's nakedness, but also watching the Major in his study…

    Keith's neurotic wife (Julie Harris) is well aware of her husband's affair with Leonora but she only feels well from her close friendship with her houseboy, Anacleto (Zorro David), an affected companion who shares her penchant for the arts and is in every way the opposite of her abrupt, strong husband…

    Flavored with bitter insinuations and insulting sarcasms, Brando and Taylor's few scenes have enough flames to burn the silver screen… He's a tormented human being while she's delicious but shrill and insensitive… Aware of her physical beauty she fights back when she's rejected, instigating him with her impudent, insolent, shameless manner that offend his very being
    8lee_eisenberg

    Marlon and Liz get John Huston's muted-color southern treatment

    Marlon Brando's career may have been in a rut at the time, but he got a fine role in John Huston's "Reflections in a Golden Eye". I had never heard of Carson McCullers or her works when I started watching it, but I'm now eager to read her works. This tale of sexual tension and repressed homosexuality on a military base in the 1940s has it all (and I don't just mean a certain scene of Elizabeth Taylor). These are some of the most intense performances that you'll ever see, and the movie features what must've been some of the most extreme scenes allowed on screen at the time.

    Definitely worth your time.
    8dave13-1

    Huston and Brando at something near their best

    Director John Huston paints life at a Georgia army base in odd pinkish and amber tones to point up its off-color nature beneath its khaki uniformity. Reflections features Brando as a Colonel, supposedly courageous and a leader of men, who turns out to be weak, cowardly, hag- ridden, and unsure of his sexual orientation. It was one of his best, most creative and least likely performances, and shocking to audiences of the time. If anybody but Brando had played that character it would have scarred his career and maybe ended it. Just taking on the role was a brave move, but he did so much with it to bring out the man's un- Brando nature. Bold, brilliant and daring as a lead performance, he plays off wonderfully against Taylor in one of her patented bitch queen roles as an unsatisfied man-eater stifled by the regimentation of living as an army wife. The scene in which she flogs him for a weakling in front of dinner guests is shocking to watch but wonderfully evocative of the nature of their relationship roles. Taylor's infidelity and Brando's weakness become two sides of the same co-dependent coin.

    Reflections was a watershed film in its day but at the same time years ahead of its day. It flopped at the box-office because the mid-60s were just not ready for it.
    Lechuguilla

    Those Cleopatra Eyebrows

    Apart from the barely discernible homosexual subtext, there really isn't much to this sudsy cinematic soap opera. The film provides a glimpse into the neurotic lives of two couples (Major Weldon Penderton and his pampered, beautiful wife Leonora; and Lt. Col. Morris Langdon and his spaced-out wife Alison). The four of them live at a military fort in the American South. A mysterious young soldier named Pvt. Williams (Robert Forster), who rides naked on horseback, and who stealthily creeps into Leonora's bedroom at night to contemplate who knows what, is the object of Major Penderton's implied fantasies.

    What makes this film so maddening is the unspoken passion, the tacitly erotic obsessions that drive the entire narrative. It's all beneath the surface. The dialogue is largely irrelevant. It's what is not said that's important.

    Even though this is a character study, we actually learn very little about the characters. Does Pvt. Williams even have a back-story? All of the characters seem to be in their own fog, their own delusional world, divorced from reality. Indeed, except for one sequence at an institution for the mentally ill, all the scenes take place at the military fort, isolated from the rest of the world.

    The film's lighting is neither B&W nor color; it is a dingy, yellowish sepia tone with occasional splats of color. Background music is intermittent and nondescript. The pace of the plot is excruciatingly slow, with very long camera "takes".

    The film's acting is acceptable. Elizabeth Taylor and her Cleopatra eyebrows give a nice performance, as does Brian Keith. Marlon Brando, as Major Penderton, nasally mumbles his lines, as if he had marbles in his mouth.

    Best remembered perhaps as one of the 1960's films that brought about the MPAA ratings system, "Reflections In A Golden Eye" is stodgy and dull by today's standards. But in its day, this film was bold and daring in its depiction of a topic that was all hush-hush. For that reason, even though its entertainment value is questionable, the film is historically significant.
    8bkoganbing

    A Murder Was Committed on an Army Post in the Deep South..........

    Reflections in a Golden Eye came out at an interesting transitional period for gay people. The Code that had dominated what could and could not be shown on the screen was just being lifted. That Code had succeeded in making gay people all but invisible by Hollywood standards. But it was two years before the Stonewall Rebellion which gave the gay rights movement a political voice.

    Originally Montgomery Clift was scheduled to do this film with three time screen partner Elizabeth Taylor, but Clift died before the film started shooting. Marlon Brando took his place and in my opinion gave a very underrated performance as the repressed latent homosexual Major married to Elizabeth Taylor.

    Brando and Taylor dusted off a couple of southern accents previously used in films, Brando from Sayonara and Taylor from Raintree County. But the characters here are vastly different from the characters portrayed in both of those other films.

    Although certainly given Clift's background he was eminently qualified to play a repressed gay man, I'm not sure he would have been the type to have played an authority figure like Major Penderton here. Brando was far more the type. The part of the wife was Taylor made for Liz and she went to town with it.

    I wonder what those people who want to keep gays out of the military would say about Brando. Brando's burgeoning homosexuality is finding an outlet in a raging crush on a handsome private played by Robert Forster. Forster during his off hours likes to walk and ride horses in the buff and sneaks into Brando's house to play with Liz Taylor's lingerie. Liz is having an affair with Brando's immediate superior Brian Keith who has an invalid and mentally disturbed wife in Julie Harris. And Harris spends most of her time with her very effeminate Filipino houseboy, Zorro David.

    Of course this is a recipe for tragedy and tragedy does come. Author Carson McCullers, herself a lesbian, created some unforgettable characters here.

    Reflections in a Golden Eye was way before its time. Today the film and Director John Huston would have gotten far better reviews than the film did in 1967.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Originally released in a version in which all scenes were suffused with the color gold and one object in each scene (such as a rose) appeared normally colored. This was done in reference to the houseboy's statement regarding the golden peacock in a drawing that he shows to Alison: he states that the world is just a reflection in the eye of the golden peacock. However, that version puzzled audiences so it was withdrawn and a normal color version released. The DVD issued in 2020 by Warner Archive includes both versions.
    • Goofs
      Although movie is set in 1940s, all of Elizabeth Taylor's hairstyles, makeup and wardrobe are of the mid-1960s.
    • Quotes

      Maj. Weldon Penderton: I'm sorry, Leonora. It's just all this clutter is...

      Leonora: What's the matter with clutter? I like it.

      Maj. Weldon Penderton: I'd rather live without it. Bare floors. Plain white walls. No window curtains. Nothing but essentials.

      Leonora: If that's the way you feel about it, why don't you resign your commission and start all over again as an enlisted man?

      Maj. Weldon Penderton: Of course you're laughing at it, but there's much to be said for the life of men among men... with no... luxuries, no ornamentation. Utter simplicity. It's rough and it's coarse, perhaps, but it's also clean - it's clean as a rifle. There's no speck of dust inside or out... and it's immaculate in its hard young fitness... its chivalry. They're seldom out of one another's sight. They eat, and they train, and they shower, and they play jokes... and go to the brothel together. They sleep side by side. The barracks room offers many a lesson in courtesy and how not to give offense. They guard the next man's privacy as though it was their own. And the friendships, my lord. There are friendships formed that are stronger than... stronger than the fear of death. And - they're never lonely. They're never lonely. And sometimes I envy them... well, good night.

    • Alternate versions
      In the version of the film released in Brazil's cinemas in the late 1960s, it was Anacleto who announced that Mrs. Alison had cut off her nipples with the garden shears. But in the later VHS version, it is Leonora who makes the remark to Lt. Col. Langdon while they are playing cards.
    • Connections
      Featured in Apocalypse Now (1979)
    • Soundtracks
      Elegie Op. 3, No.1
      (uncredited)

      Music by Sergei Rachmaninoff

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 3, 1968 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Reflejos en tus ojos dorados
    • Filming locations
      • Long Island, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros./Seven Arts
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $4,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $65,351
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 48 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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