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SummaryBrick, an alcoholic ex-football player, drinks his days away and resists the affections of his wife, Maggie. His reunion with his father, Big Daddy, who is dying of cancer, jogs a host of memories and revelations for both father and son.

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof

Metascore
must-see
84
User score
Generally Favorable
7.9
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Metascore
84
75% Positive
12 Reviews
25% Mixed
4 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
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100
Chicago Sun-Times
A searing portrait of the human condition. [12 Oct 2007, p.B6]
100
Austin Chronicle
Tennessee Williams’ study of a crumbling Southern patriarchy is riveting stuff. Although the word homosexuality is never uttered, this Hollywood reworking brings a certain understanding of the son’s latent “immaturity” and his wife’s childlessness. Bolstered by extraordinary performances, this tale’s a summer sizzler.
91
Entertainment Weekly
The manipulative Maggie, irritated by the heat and by Gooper and Sister Woman’s ”no-neck monsters,” is among Taylor’s most accomplished creations and earned her a second Oscar nod; the performance has an inner coil in it, as if something were ready to spring at any second.
90
Village Voice
The 1958 film Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is not a good adaptation of Tennessee Williams’s play of the same name. But as a portrayal of the depths of loneliness we create for ourselves, and an example of the power of star performance, it’s a great film.
80
Los Angeles Times
Richard Brooks adapted and directed this superbly acted though watered-down -- all references to homosexuality were deleted -- 1958 version of Williams' popular 1955 play. [30 Apr 2006, p.E14]
60
Chicago Reader
The material has been bowdlerized to the point of abstraction, which makes Richard Brooks's sweaty, emphatic direction look a little silly—there just isn't that much to get worked up about. But Burl Ives and Judith Anderson are highly entertaining as the nightmare parents, Big Daddy and Big Mama, and Jack Carson has one of his last good roles as Newman's competitive older brother.
50
LarsenOnFilm
The performances are sweltering...This isn’t a good thing. Yes, it’s fitting for the setting – a humid, suffocating Louisiana mansion where the family of an ailing tycoon (Burl Ives) connives to inherit his fortune – but the overall result is like watching a melodrama in a sauna. It’s just too much.
See All 16 Critic Reviews
User score
Generally Favorable
7.9
96% Positive
23 Ratings
4% Mixed
1 Rating
0% Negative
0 Ratings
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Jan 23, 2022
8
gracjanski
Nice story about hypocrisy and lies in a rich family. Great acting by Ives, Taylor and Newman. But the movie exaggerate the amount of dialogues and there is drama all the time. It reminds to a soap opera.
Jan 29, 2021
8
FilipeNeto
This film is based on an interesting play by Tennessee Williams, that has already become a classic of American theater. Therefore, I believe that expectations for the film were high, when it opened, for the Anglophone audience. For me, who do not know the work of Williams, it is different: I cannot compare the film with a book I have never read or a play I have never seen. The script focuses on a birthday party at the southern plantation of Big Daddy. The party brings the whole family together because it is known that he will die soon, but that is something that everyone decided to hide from him. He has two children: Gooper, the youngest son, has always done everything his father wanted, married a self-interested woman and has a collection of annoying children; on the other hand, Brick is the opposite, having never had an easy relationship with his father. Alcoholic due to a past hurt and a failed sports career, he married the beautiful Maggie "the Cat", whom no one in the house seems to like. When Big Daddy returns from the hospital, convinced that he is in good health, he takes the opportunity to say a lot of what he always thought to each one of those present. This will be the catalyst for many family secrets to be revealed or unearthed. I found the film quite interesting because of the way it plays with a trivial family moment - a birthday party - to create a real family drama. I don't need to read Williams' book to believe that the film was faithful to him: even without having done so, I give credit to the screenwriter's work, even though I know that certain aspects, such as allusions to homosexuality, have been greatly diminished. However, I did not understand why Maggie is called (or calls herself) "Cat", even though I understand that she does not feel desired by her husband. The film has a luxurious and notable cast, which does very well both for the effort and the quality of its dialogues. Burl Ives is noteworthy for the effort with which he embodies his character, but Paul Newman is not far behind and is excellent in the way he gives Brick more pain, more psychological intensity than one might expect. Elizabeth Taylor, alongside her, obtains with this film one of the most iconic interpretations of her career, although the character is quite secondary in the story told. She can make Maggie a pleasant character, who is deeply interested, but she can be human and have a big heart too. She establishes a collaboration and chemistry with Newman that is admirable. Jack Carson and Madeleine Sherwood are quite competent in their roles. Technically, it is a very restrained film, leaving the actors' interpretation to speak for itself. Cinematography is extraordinarily beautiful for a film so many years old, the colors are vivid and the light was very well-used, like rain and night, with a storm outside to accompany the storm that unfolded inside. The costumes and sets are very good, the house looks a lot like the plantation of Twelve Oakes, from "Gone With The Wind". The soundtrack fulfills its role.
See All 24 User Reviews
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  • Avon Productions (II)
Aug 29, 1958
1 h 48 m
TV-PG
Just one pillow on her bed ... and just one desire in her heart!
Academy Awards, USA
• 6 Nominations
Golden Globes, USA
• 2 Nominations
Laurel Awards
• 1 Win & 3 Nominations
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