Superbly adapted with blistering performances from Taylor and Hepburn.
78
Austin ChronicleMarjorie Baumgarten
Austin ChronicleMarjorie Baumgarten
The battles between the imperious Hepburn and the presumed-mad Taylor are pure theatricality, while sensitive shrink Clift observes it all and emotes.
70
Time Out
Time Out
An outrageous, melodramatic shocker touching on madness, homosexual prostitution, incest, disease and cannibalism, replete with enough imagery to sustain an American Lit seminar for months.
The cast packs enough sexual ambiguity to satisfy the most rabid Williams fan (not to mention a screenplay by Gore Vidal), but Mankiewicz leaves much of the innuendo unexplored—thankfully, perhaps.
50
TV Guide Magazine
TV Guide Magazine
It was the first time that homosexuality and cannibalism had ever been handled by a mainstream studio as a commercial venture. Let's hope that it remains the last time those two practices will be presented in tandem.
Joseph L. Mankiewicz' direction is strained and sluggish, as is, indeed, the whole conceit of the drama. It should have been left to the off-Broadway stage.
40
The New YorkerPauline Kael
The New YorkerPauline Kael
They should never have allowed the audience so much time to think about what's going on: the short play turns into a ludicrous, lumbering horror movie.