Thursday, April 16, 2026

The Misfits (1961)

 


The Misfits is a 1961 American romantic drama film directed by John Huston and written by Arthur Miller, who adapted his own 1957 short story. It stars Clark Gable, Marilyn Monroe, and Montgomery Clift, alongside Thelma Ritter and Eli Wallach. The plot centers on a newly divorced woman (Monroe), and her relationships with a friendly landlady (Ritter), an old-school cowboy (Gable), his tow-truck driving and plane-flying best friend (Wallach), and their rodeo-riding, bronco-busting friend (Clift). The Misfits was the last completed film for both Gable (who died three months before the premiere) and Monroe (who died a year after its release).

The Misfits was released by United Artists on February 1, 1961. It was a commercial failure, but received critical acclaim for its script and performances. Its reputation has enhanced over the years, and many critics now consider it to be a masterpiece and one of the best films of the 1960s.

Plot

In Reno, Nevada, 30-year-old Roslyn Tabor seeks a six-week residency divorce from her inattentive husband, Raymond. Afterward, her landlady, Isabelle, takes her to Harrah's cocktail lounge, where they meet an aging cowboy, Gaylord Langland, and his tow-truck driver friend, Guido. Guido mentions an unfinished house he built for his late wife, and later, the group visits the property. After an evening of drinking and dancing, Gaylord drives an inebriated Roslyn home to Reno.

Roslyn and Gaylord eventually move into Guido's unfinished house to complete it together. Gaylord confides his regret over being estranged from his children, and later, when rabbits eat their garden's lettuce, he proposes shooting them—an idea Roslyn opposes. When Guido and Isabelle visit, Guido suggests rounding up wild mustangs for profit. At a Dayton rodeo, they meet Perce Howland, Gaylord's friend, who joins them after Gaylord pays his entry fee. Later, at a bar, tensions flare when a drunk harasses Roslyn.

During the rodeo, Roslyn is disturbed to learn that the horses are forced to buck with a flank strap. Perce is injured after two rides but refuses medical help. Roslyn later finds him unconscious in an alley; upon waking, he expresses gratitude for her compassion and recounts his troubled past. A drunken Gaylord interrupts, claiming he met his children, only to cause a scene when he discovers they have already left town. On the drive home, Guido drunkenly propositions Roslyn. Back at the house, he resumes building while Gaylord asks if she would ever have a child with him—she avoids answering.

The next day, Gaylord, Guido, and Perce set out to capture mustangs, with Roslyn reluctantly accompanying them. She is horrified to learn the horses are destined for slaughter. After they capture several, Roslyn pleads for their release. Gaylord resists, angered when she offers him money. Guido offers to release them if she leaves Gaylord, which she refuses. Perce releases the stallion despite her objections, prompting Gaylord to chase and subdue it before freeing it himself, declaring he simply did not want anyone deciding for him.

As they drive away, Roslyn tells Gaylord she will leave the next day. When they stop to untether his dog, the two share a moment of reconciliation, realizing they still love each other as they drive off into the night.

Cast

Production

Estelle Winwood, Marilyn Monroe and Clark Gable in foreground, Eli Wallach and Montgomery Clift in background at left

The making of The Misfits was troublesome on several accounts, not the least of which was the sometimes 100 °F (38 °C) heat[4] of the northern Nevada desert and the breakdown of Monroe's marriage to writer Arthur Miller. Miller revised the script throughout the shoot as the concepts of the film developed.

Meanwhile, with her marriage to Arthur Miller troubled, Marilyn Monroe was drinking too much after work and using prescription drugs. According to Huston in a 1981 retrospective interview, he felt "absolutely certain that she was doomed," a conclusion he reached while working on the film:[5] "There was evidence right before me almost every day. She was incapable of rescuing herself or of being rescued by anyone else. And it sometimes affected her work. We had to stop the picture while she went to a hospital for two weeks."[5] Huston shut down production in August 1960 when Monroe went to a hospital for relaxation and depression treatment. Some close-ups after her hospital discharge were shot using limited soft focus.[5] Monroe was nearly always an hour late to the set, sometimes not showing up at all. Monroe spent her nights learning newly written lines with her drama coach Paula Strasberg. Monroe's confidant and masseur, Ralph Roberts, was cast as an ambulance attendant in the film's rodeo scene. The other actors and Huston did not complain to Monroe about her lateness—they knew they needed her to finish the movie. Gable reminisced with The Making of the Misfits author James Goode saying, "Long ago, if an actor was late, they were fired."[citation needed]

Clark Gable insisted on doing some of his own stunts, but not the scene of being dragged 400 feet (120 m) across the dry lake bed at more than 30 miles per hour (48 km/h). Director John Huston said after Gable's death that he would never have allowed Gable to do the more dangerous mustang stunts.[citation needed]

Veteran B-movie Western actor Rex Bell, who had been married to Clara Bow, made his final film appearance in a brief cameo as an amusing elderly cowboy. Bell was lieutenant governor of Nevada at the time.[citation needed]

Thomas B. Allen was assigned to create drawings of The Misfits as the film was made. Magnum Photos had numerous staff photographers, including Ernst Haas, Inge Morath, and Eve Arnold assigned to document the making of The Misfits.[citation needed] Inge Morath later married Arthur Miller, Monroe's former husband, a year after the film was released.[6]

During production, the cast's principals stayed at the now imploded Mapes Hotel in Reno. Film locations included the Washoe County Court House on Virginia Street, and Quail Canyon, near Pyramid Lake.[7][8] The bar scene wherein Monroe plays paddle ball and the rodeo scenes were filmed in Dayton, Nevada, east of Carson City. For the final three weeks of shooting, Miller and Monroe moved to the nearby Holiday Hotel and Casino, now the Renaissance Hotel, on Center Street in Reno. The Renaissance Hotel no longer has a casino. The climax of the film takes place during wrangling scenes on a Nevada dry lake twelve miles[8] east of Dayton,[9] near Stagecoach. The area today is known as "Misfits Flat".[10]

Filming was completed on November 4, 1960, twelve days before Clark Gable's death,[11] and The Misfits was released on February 1, 1961, on what would have been Gable's 60th birthday.[12]

Reception

Box office

The Misfits failed to meet expectations at the box office and has been historically referred to as a "box office disaster" of its day.[13] Despite being shot in black and white, the final cost was about $4 million, which was the estimated budget. The film grossed $4.1 million in its initial US release.[2]

Critical response

Larry Tubelle of Variety called the film "a robust, high-voltage adventure drama vibrating with explosive emotional histrionics, conceived and executed with a refreshing disdain for superficial and photographic slickness in favor of an uncommonly honest and direct approach."[14] Roger Angell of The New Yorker described the film as "absorbing but erratic," praising the performances while critiquing what it considered heavy-handed symbolism and a lack of narrative cohesion.[15] Philip K. Scheuer of the Los Angeles Times found the film "fascinating", stating: "It has a seriousness of purpose that most films do not, and by the time it is over it just about gets this seriousness across. Its theme—or one of its themes—is loneliness, the inability to communicate. The reaching out, the groping, can be pitiful and painful to look upon, and it is here—a reaching out whose smallness is intensified by the great size of the background."[16]

The performance of Clark Gable, the last in his career, was praised. Kate Cameron of the New York Daily News wrote: "Gable has never done anything better on the screen, nor has Marilyn Monroe. Gable's acting is vibrant and lusty, hers true to the character as written by Miller."[17] The Guardian wrote Gable's performance "is casually professional as ever, and yet he brings to the ageing cowboy an intensity of feeling one never suspected he possessed."[18] The Chicago Tribune felt Gable "was never better cast as a romancing cowboy who lives each day as it comes. In view of his recent death, the final scenes, in which he asserts his strength and independence, are forceful."[19]

On the other hand, Bosley Crowther of The New York Times was unimpressed, writing the characters "are scatterbrained, whimsical, lonely and, in the case of the character of Miss Monroe, inclined to adore all living creatures and have a quivering revulsion to pain. They are amusing people to be with, for a little while, anyhow. But they are shallow and inconsequential, and that is the dang-busted trouble with this film."[20] The Chicago Tribune was mixed on the film: "Uneven, overly long and talkative, this film proves again that the stage and the screen are different mediums that require different writing techniques. Author Arthur Miller seems to be trying hard to say something, as are all his characters, but it doesn't quite come off."[19] A review in Time magazine felt The Misfits was "a dozen pictures rolled into one. Most of them, unfortunately, are terrible."[21]

The Misfits has received a positive reevaluation, in which it is seen as a significant American drama with enduring relevance.[22] On Rotten Tomatoes, 94% of 32 critics gave the film a positive review.[23] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted score of 77 out of 100, based on 9 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews."[24]

Accolades

At the 14th Directors Guild of America Awards, John Huston received a nomination for Outstanding Directing – Feature Film. Marilyn Monroe was honored as "World Film Favorite" at the 19th Golden Globe Awards in 1962, five months before her death. The film also received recognition decades later when it was nominated for inclusion in the American Film Institute's 2005 list, AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores.[25]

Legacy

The Misfits is remembered as the final completed film for both Clark Gable and Marilyn Monroe. Gable suffered a heart attack two days after filming ended and died on November 16, 1960. The film premiered in New York City on February 1, 1961, which would have been Gable's 60th birthday; Monroe and Montgomery Clift attended the premiere, while Arthur Miller appeared with his children. Less than 18 months later, on August 5, 1962, Monroe died of an apparent drug overdose at the age of 36. Her death, combined with Gable's, cast a long shadow over the film's legacy. In her final interview, Monroe—who never knew her father—revealed that she often fantasized Gable was her father, underscoring the personal weight she attached to their collaboration. She later expressed dissatisfaction with both the film and her performance.[26]

The other principal cast members also met poignant fates: James Barton died in 1962; Clift died in 1966 after making only three more films; Thelma Ritter died in 1969; and Eli Wallach outlived all his co-stars, dying in 2014 at age 98.

Monroe in The Misfits

The documentary The Legend of Marilyn Monroe (1966) includes footage shot while The Misfits was being made. Miller's autobiography Timebends (1987) described the making of the film. The 2001 PBS documentary Making The Misfits did the same. Primary sources such as The Making of the Misfits by James Goode, Conversations with Marilyn by W.J. Weatherby, and Miller's account, particularly his assertion that The Misfits script was a "valentine" for Monroe, inspired the docu-drama play Misfits by Alex Finlayson, which was commissioned by director Greg Hersov. Misfits premiered at the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester, England, in 1996, directed by Hersov and starring Lisa Eichhorn as Marilyn Monroe.[27] Miller's last play Finishing the Picture (2004), although fiction, was based on the events involved in the making of The Misfits.

In August 2018, an unreleased nude scene where Monroe's character exposes herself while dressing after being woken up, and which was thought to have been lost, was discovered.[28]

The film has also been referenced in contemporary artistic discourse, including by artist and writer Amadour, who connects its production in Nevada to broader histories of mid-century entertainment and landscape, including through The Mapes Suite, a project developed in relation to the Mapes Hotel and presented at the Nevada State Museum, Carson City.[29][30][31]

Home media

The Misfits was released on Blu-ray by MGM Home Entertainment on May 10, 2011. A Region 1 widescreen DVD edition followed on May 8, 2012.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

The Comedians (1967)

 


The Comedians is a 1967 American political drama film based on a book by Graham Greene. It was directed and produced by British filmmaker Peter Glenville. Graham Greene wrote the screenplay. The stars were Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor, Peter Ustinov, and Alec Guinness. Paul Ford and Lillian Gish had supporting roles as a presidential candidate and wife, as did James Earl Jones as an island doctor.[3]

Set in Haiti during the regime of François Duvalier (known as Papa Doc), it was filmed in Dahomey (Benin since 1975). The film tells the story of a sardonic British hotel owner and his encroaching fatalism as he watches Haiti sink into barbarism and squalor under Duvalier.

Plot

In Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Mr. Brown owns a hotel which he inherited from his mother. Returning from New York, where he tried unsuccessfully to sell the floundering business, Brown finds some clientele among his shipmates: Major Jones of England and Mr. and Mrs. Smith of the United States.

Jones has come to sell arms to the government, run by François "Papa Doc" Duvalier, but his contact has fallen out of favour so Jones is arrested, beaten, and jailed by Captain Concasseur. The Smiths have come to promote vegetarianism but their contact, the Minister of Public Welfare, has also run afoul of the regime and has killed himself at Brown's hotel to avoid being tortured by the Tontons Macoute, Duvalier's secret police.

At the centre of the story is Brown's ongoing affair with Martha Pineda, the wife of a South American ambassador to Haiti.

Brown tries to help his guests navigate the treacherous regime, and introduces the Smiths to the new minister, who becomes interested when he learns how much money they are willing to invest. But after the Smiths witness several atrocities of the Tontons, they become disenchanted and leave Haiti.

Major Jones is able to interest the government in his arms deal and he is released from jail. When it becomes apparent that he can't deliver on his promises, he has to go into hiding. Brown smuggles him into the Pinedas' embassy for refuge, outwitting the ever-watchful Tontons. Over several weeks, Jones establishes himself as an entertaining houseguest, raising the ire of the jealous Brown, who suspects Jones and Mrs. Pineda of starting an affair.

Captain Concasseur offers Brown money to drive Jones to the airport under safe conduct. Knowing of Brown's affair with Martha, he threatens the expulsion of the Pinedas unless Brown cooperates. Realizing Jones would be killed, Brown refuses.

Though Brown professes no interest in politics, he knows some of the people who are keen to overthrow Duvalier, including Henri Philipot, the nephew of the suicide minister, and Dr. Magiot. Philipot has a tiny army of would-be revolutionaries and Magiot wants Major Jones to train them. Martha helps smuggle Jones out of the embassy, but as Magiot has been killed by the Tontons it is Brown who drives Jones into the mountains to meet up with the rebels.

During the journey, Brown's suspicions about Jones and Martha seem to be confirmed by the boasts and innuendo of the inebriated Jones, but while they are waiting at the rendezvous Jones confesses to lying, not only about Martha but also his military service.

Captain Concasseur arrives and kills Jones. Brown is about to be shot but is saved by Philipot. For the sake of his men's morale, Philipot convinces Brown to take the place of Jones and join the rebels.

Because they aided Jones, the Pinedas must leave the country. Having heard reports of rebel casualties, Martha doesn't know if Brown is alive as she flies home with her husband.

Cast

Production

Because political conditions in Haiti made filming there impossible, location shooting took place in Dahomey (now part of the Republic of Benin). Filming also took place on the Côte d'Azur in France. A short promotional documentary titled The Comedians in Africa was released in 1967, which chronicled the difficulties encountered by the on-location crew and cast.

The film featured a group of black American actors who would become famous into the 1970s: Raymond St. Jacques, James Earl Jones, and Cicely Tyson. Of these stars, both Tyson and Jones would be nominated for Academy Awards for other performances. Other black stars in the film included Zakes Mokae, Roscoe Lee Browne, Gloria Foster, and Georg Stanford Brown.

This was the final film directed by Glenville. Three years earlier he had directed Burton in an award-winning production of Becket. Glenville previously directed the premier of Graham Greene's first play, The Living Room, at Wyndham's Theatre in April 1953.

Several of the characters were based on historic people. The newspaper columnist Petit Pierre, for instance, was based on Aubelin Jolicoeur.[4]

Reception

The film was poorly received, despite the all-star cast.[3] On Rotten Tomatoes it has an approval rating of 27% based on reviews from 11 critics.[5]

Variety described the film as "plodding, low-key, and eventually tedious".[6] Roger Ebert wrote in the Chicago Sun-Times that "the movie tries to be serious and politically significant, and succeeds only in being tedious and pompous", and denounced the "long, very wordy discussions". He said that "the atmosphere of the Caribbean is invoked convincingly".[7] Leslie Halliwell called it "Clumsy and heavy-going ... Neither entertaining nor instructive, but bits of acting please."[8] He also quoted part of a review by critic Stanley Kaufmann: " 'It's pleasant to spend two hours again in Greenland, still well-stocked with bilious minor crucifixions, furtive fornication, cynical politics, and reluctant hope.' " [9] Bosley Crowther of The New York Times gave the film a mixed review, praising the atmosphere and some individual scenes, but writing:

"Mr. Greene's characteristic story of white men carrying their burdens cheerlessly and with an undisguised readiness to dump them as soon as they can get away from this God-forsaken place is no great shakes of a drama. It is conventional and obvious, indeed, and is rendered no better or more beguiling by some rather superfluous additions of amorous scenes".[10]

The film received some recognition from several critics' circles. Lillian Gish received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Supporting Actress.[11] Paul Ford won the 1967 National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role as Smith. Alec Guinness in his role as Jones tied with Robert Shaw in A Man for All Seasons for the 1968 Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor.[11]

The film was not successful financially.[12]

Barefoot in the Park (1967)

 


Barefoot in the Park is a 1967 American romantic comedy film directed by Gene Saks from a screenplay by Neil Simon, adapted from his 1963 play of the same name,[1] starring Robert Redford and Jane Fonda as a young newlywed couple. Paul, a conservative lawyer, marries the vivacious Corie, but their highly passionate relationship descends into comical discord in a five-flight New York City walk-up apartment. The supporting cast features Charles Boyer, Mildred Natwick, Herbert Edelman, and Mabel Albertson.

Barefoot in the Park was released theatrically by Paramount Pictures on May 25, 1967, to critical and commercial success, with critics praising its adaptation, light-hearted tone, and cast performances. The film grossed $30 million worldwide on a $2 million budget. For their performances in the film, Natwick was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress and Fonda was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Actress. Simon received a nomination for the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.

Plot

After a torrid week-long honeymoon at the Plaza Hotel, free-spirited Corie Bratter and husband, Paul, a conservative, uptight young attorney, move into a fifth-floor Greenwich Village apartment which has no elevator. Corie decorates the small, leaky space, turning it into a picturesque home. Among their many eccentric neighbors is the quirky Victor Velasco, who befriends Corie and flirts with her. He lives in the building's attic, so he climbs through the Bratters' window to get to his apartment. He also helps Corie with her place, showing her how to work the heating and plumbing.

Corie sets up a dinner date with Paul, Victor, and Corie's mother, Ethel Banks, in a scheme to make her mother fall for Victor. Victor takes them all to an Albanian restaurant on Staten Island. There, the group drinks, and Corie and Victor dance with a belly dancer, while Paul and Ethel watch in embarrassment. Afterward, Corie and Victor return to their building in high spirits as Paul and Ethel drag themselves along in fatigue. As Victor escorts Ethel outside, Corie and Paul argue over their different personalities. Corie feels that her adventurous spirit is impeded by Paul's cautious attitude, noting that he refused to go barefoot in the park with her one evening. His excuse was that it was freezing. They eventually go to sleep, Corie in their tiny bedroom and Paul on the couch under a hole in the skylight on a snowy February night.

The next day, Paul comes down with a fever, but Corie still insists she wants a divorce. The two spend an awkward time in their apartment until Corie kicks Paul out. She then receives a call from her aunt, who says that Ethel never came home. Corie eventually learns that her mother was at Victor's apartment. While Victor was escorting her to her home in New Jersey the previous night, Ethel slipped on icy stairs and fell. Victor and some neighbors took her back to Victor's apartment, where they spent the night.

Washington Square Park's Alexander Lyman Holley monument, where Corie finds a drunken Paul late in the film

Meanwhile, a drunken Paul skips work and sits in Washington Square Park. Heeding her mother's advice, Corie goes out searching for Paul and finds him drunk and running barefoot through the park. The once cautious Paul is now a fun-loving drunk while Corie chases him in order to get him to sober up. Eventually, Paul says it is his apartment and he is going home. Corie follows. Back at the apartment, Paul, still drunk, climbs onto the roof of the apartment. Realizing where he is, Paul becomes scared, and almost falls off the building. Corie asks Paul to sing an Albanian folk song they had heard at the restaurant to calm himself down. While he sings, Corie climbs up to the roof to help him down. A crowd of onlookers gathers in the street, including Ethel and Victor. When Corie reaches Paul, they kiss and climb back down as the crowd cheers.

Cast

Reception

Robert Redford in Barefoot in the Park

Barefoot in the Park opened to positive reviews at the time of its release, although later reviews have been mixed. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 81% based on 54 reviews, with an average rating of 7.1/10. The website's critical consensus reads: "Barefoot in the Park may strike some modern viewers as dated, but what it lacks in timeliness, it more than makes up with the effervescent chemistry between its stars".[2] On Metacritic, which assigns a rating to reviews, the film has a weighted average score of 55 out of 100, based on 8 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[3]

Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote, "If it's romantic farce you delight in – old-fashioned romantic farce loaded with incongruities and snappy verbal gags – then you should find the movie version of Barefoot in the Park to your taste ... But if you are in for a certain measure of intelligence and plausibility in what is presumed to be take-out of what might happen to reckless newlyweds today; if you expect a wisp of logic in the make-up of comic characters, which is, after all, what makes them funny, instead of sheer gagging it up, then beware."[4] Arthur D. Murphy of Variety called the film "a thoroughly entertaining comedy delight about young marriage."[5] Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times stated, "High-gloss, low-density comedy requires a special touch and Robert Redford and Jane Fonda handle themselves with a fine, deft charm ... As after a souffle, you may shortly be hungry for something more substantial but while it lasts it's very tasty."[6] Brendan Gill of The New Yorker called the film "a funny adaptation by Neil Simon of his funny play."[7] Leo Sullivan of The Washington Post wrote, "An excellent cast plays the light-as-air plot as coolly as possible. What's most important, it is as funny as ever it was and makes an ideal summer attraction."[8]

Barefoot in the Park spent a record 12 weeks at Radio City Music Hall in New York City grossing a house record $2.3 million.[9]

Accolades

Ceremony Category Recipient Result
Academy Awards Best Supporting Actress Mildred Natwick Nominated
British Academy Film Awards Best Foreign Actress Jane Fonda Nominated
Laurel Awards Top Comedy Barefoot in the Park 4th Place
Top Male Comedy Performance Robert Redford Nominated
Top Female Comedy Performance Jane Fonda Nominated
Top Female Supporting Performance Mildred Natwick Nominated
Writers Guild of America Awards Best Written American Comedy Neil Simon Nominated

In 2002, the film ranked number 96 on AFI's 100 Years... 100 Passions.[10]