Marlon Brando and James Dean

Arvid 2022-03-23 09:01:54

Yesterday, I watched "A Streetcar Named Desire" when Marlon Brando appeared on the stage, and he was astonished. In 1951, when he was in his twenties, he was in his youth and reminded me of James in "East of Eden". Dean.
Someone once compared the two, saying that Dean died at the most beautiful moment of life, while Brando survived, decadent, old, and sad. Both of their lives were legendary, Dean only made three movies before passing away in a car accident, and Brando became an instant hit in "A Streetcar Named Desire", establishing a handsome and sexy "heartbeat". "Image, but the night scene is bleak. I still don't know why he took over a controversial film like "Last Tango in Paris". It is said that Brando was very dissatisfied with his performance in this film, just because there were too many The nudity footage of his bloated body is revealed.
I have heard people say that boys want to be James Dean, handsome, free and dashing, then Brando should be the ultimate goal of men, handsome, romantic, unruly, Dean always has an inexplicable sadness written on his face , Like a boy who can never get out of puberty, Brando has a little more sexual charm behind his handsomeness. Such a man is destined to become the fantasy of women.
Dean, who covered his lips with a sweater collar, and Brando, who was leaning against a motorcycle in a leather jacket, have been imitated over the years, and only film and posters have forever fixed them in their era.

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Extended Reading
  • Mabelle 2022-03-26 09:01:05

    Isn't the heroine played by Vivien Leigh a typical Drama Queen, such a woman is bound to be destroyed.

  • Ibrahim 2021-12-08 08:01:38

    Looking at the top five film reviews below, none of them mentioned that the South's refusal to reform after the Civil War led to social poverty, American geopolitics, etc. It was all about love and confusion. Soul, fragility, and gorgeous. So I always feel that from the perspective of history and politics/teacher speaks movies much better than Chinese or art department, because what really touches people is not technology but humanity. What is the difference between asking the audience to empathize with the difficult technology and leaving the original to the end?

A Streetcar Named Desire quotes

  • [first lines]

    A Sailor: Can I help you, ma'am?

    Blanche: Why, they told me to take a streetcar named Desire and then transfer to one called Cemetery and ride six blocks and get off at Elysian Fields.

  • [last lines]

    Stanley: Stella! Come on, Stella!

    Stella: No, I'm not. I'm not going back in there again, not this time, never going back, never.

    Stanley: Hey, Stella! Hey, Stellaaa!