Paul Newman and Patricia Neal Bring Grit and Conviction to Martin Ritt's Rousing Hud
A key film indicating Hollywood
was entering an era wherein a new permissiveness and maturity onscreen was
emerging as the Production Code waned, Paramount’s 1963 drama Hud found
receptive audiences fully engrossed by a Western saga featuring a protagonist
unhindered by principle. Aided by a top cast offering trenchant performances
and evocative lensing by masterful cinematographer James Wong Howe, who
beautifully captures the barren landscapes, director Martin Ritt expertly renders
a sense of time and place, bringing the first-rate screenplay by Irving Ravetch
and Harriet Frank Jr. (based on Larry McMurtry’s 1961 novel Horseman, Pass
By) to vivid life. Concerning the trials of the Bannons, Texas ranchers
overseen by the ethical, somber Homer and his ne-er-do-well son Hud, who is idolized
by his nephew Lon but faces frequent conflict with his disapproving father, Hud
offers compelling viewing that holds up as an honest, adult depiction of
how a family spanning several generations can severely clash, based on each
individual’s perception of what’s right and wrong.
Paul
Newman had forged a great working relationship with Ritt prior to Hud,
including one of Newman’s best performances as the charismatic anti-hero in The
Long Hot Summer, one of the best adaptations of a William Faulkner novel
and possibly the best Newman-Joanne Woodward movie, and 1961’s Paris Blues,
an intriguing romantic drama also starring Newman and Woodward, alongside
Sidney Poitier and Dianne Carroll. The synchronicity between star and director
is evident throughout Hud, with Newman playing a full-out bastard with
relaxed relish and movie-star magnetism he later correctly defended as being
right for the role, as Hud manages to bewitch nearly everyone around him except
for his father; based solely on his unsavory behavior this wouldn’t play out
believably on film. However, with Ritt and Newman careful to include attractive
traits, physical and otherwise (for example, one senses Hud feels he’s
misunderstood and is sensitive in that respect, at least) it’s easy to buy into
the notion that Hud could be very popular among the rural townsfolks
(specifically the women), while remaining fundamentally a louse. Already a top
leading man in Hollywood after several major successes after his 1954 film
debut in not one of them, The Silver Chalice, including Oscar-nominated
work for Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and an early career peak in The Hustler,
Hud would allow Newman to ascend another echelon, with a third Best Actor
Oscar nod and a first-time placement among 1963’s top ten box-office stars
(according to the industry-standard Quigley poll), leading to a #1
box-office draw ranking by the end of the decade, and several more Oscar
nominations until his win for 1986’s The Color of Money. Hud would
remain one of the few examples of Newman playing an outright heel with little
of the vulnerability that made his artfully portrayed anti-heroes so appealing and therefore ranks among his most intriguing performances.
For
Patricia Neal, Hud would provide a perfect fusion of role and performer
rarely seen on film. At the start of her career, Neal gained immediate success
on Broadway, winning one of the first Tonys for Lillian Hellman’s Another
Part of the Forest, before Hollywood quickly beckoned. A highly publicized film
debut in 1949’s florid potboiler The Fountainhead, which was a failure
upon release but has attained cult status as one of director King Vidor’s most
mesmeric melodramas, led to a hit-and-miss filmography, with 1951’s sci-fi
classic The Day the Earth Stood Still, 1957’s still-relevant A Face
in the Crowd, and sly work in 1961’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s among
Neal’s best offerings. However, with Hud Neal reached new stature. As
Alma, the world-weary, kind and earthy housekeeper for the Bannons, Neal uses
her irreplaceable, rich Southern drawl and acute, mature acting ability to
create a beautiful portrait of a knowing, compassionate, sensible woman who’s
dealt with her share of setbacks, concerning men and otherwise, and is wary of
Hud’s advances. Neal has a terrific, easy chemistry with Newman, making it
clear Alma is sexually drawn to the caddish charmer, but understanding keeping
her distance might be in her and the Bannon’s best interests. Alma believes she
may have found a peaceful place in life, and in her few scenes Neal provides a
rich, fully rounded portrait of a character ready to live independently without
fuss or any complicated relationships. Post-Hud Neal would witness a
wealth of personal tragedies, but with admirable determination fight back to prevail
on screen, including gaining another Oscar nomination via moving work 1968’s The
Subject Was Roses, then scoring on television with 1971’s The Homecoming,
which introduced the Waltons and brought Neal a Golden Globe award and an Emmy
nomination.
Entering
his very fruitful period as a star character actor after maintaining leading
man status on stage and screen since the early 1930’s, Melvyn Douglas brings
gravitas and dignity to the highly moralistic Homer Bannon, a role far removed
from the urbane romantics he played opposite Joan Crawford, Marlene Dietrich,
Claudette Colbert, Garbo, and just about every other female star during his
1930’s-1940’s peak onscreen. Douglas strongly conveys Homer’s disenchantment
with Hud and loyalty to the family homestead and, significant to the plot, the
cattle therein. The stoicism central to Homer’s character leads to one of the
film’s most satisfying moments, when the heretofore serious-minded, gruff
rancher relaxes enough to sing along with Lonnie to “My Darling Clementine” at
the local movie house. This lighter scene allows Homer a little more dimension,
bringing the audience more to his side in the process, as opposed to placing
their interests and sympathy with the ultra-charismatic Hud, specifically
during a key verbal showdown between the two men. Douglas would win an Oscar
for Hud, then continue in films up to his death in 1981, with Best
Supporting Actor Oscar #2 coming into play via 1979’s Being There,
before his final role in Ghost Story, again costarring with Neal.
As Hud’s
impressionable but fairly well-grounded nephew Lonnie, Brandon deWilde has
perhaps the best of his juvenile leads, after his early fame as a 1950’s child
star, wherein he first broke through in the Broadway and film versions of
Carson McCuller’s poetic The Member of the Wedding alongside Julie
Harris and Ethel Waters, before becoming the youngest Best Supporting
Actor Oscar nominee ever (a record he would hold until 1980) for his role in
1953’s classic Shane, with deWilde’s “Shane, come back!” quickly
becoming one of the most famous final scenes in film history. He would
make the tricky transition from precocious youth to sympathetic, contemplative
young man with his skillful, attractively straightforward work in 1959’s Blue
Denim, avoiding the turbulent, overwrought playing marring some of his
contemporaries’ acting as they sought in vain to emulate James Dean. Thankfully
going his own way, deWilde followed up this success with another pleasant,
quietly observant performance in what could be regarded as a warmup to his Hud
role, in director John Frankenheimer’s underrated and fascinating All
Fall Down. In Hud deWilde’s Lonnie serves as a great counter to the
wily figure he admires, and he interacts with each of his costars in deft
fashion. DeWilde has one of the movie’s most touching moment with Neal, who as
Alma serves as a surrogate mother to Lonnie, in a wonderful scene wherein Lon
expresses to Alma how much she means to him, and concludes that she’s just
good, period, which sets up an even more moving passage between the characters’
later in the film. From this peak, deWilde would work in a variety of films and
television shows, with a role in Otto Preminger’s 1965 all-star In Harm’s
Way possibly his highest profile post-Hud undertaking, before his
untimely death at 30 in 1973.
The film is
largely centered around the four main characters, but a few other names can be
spotted among the cast. Whit Bissell, who could be counted on to show up in
just about every other movie during this period, shows up as Mr. Burris, whom
Homer and Hud have to work with in regards to a predicament with the Bannon’s
cattle. John Ashley, about to enjoy a run in the Beach Party franchise after
earlier work with American International Pictures can also be spotted, while
B-movie icon Yvette Vickers gets a rare chance to be glimpsed in an “A”
picture, making a brief but nice impression as the friendly, knowing Lily
Peters, a pretty housewife who shows up with Hud at the local café, to the
dismay of Homer.
Hud’s unorthodox storyline and obvious merits as a top-quality production caught on with viewers and reviewers upon the film’s release in 1963, with Ritt and his sterling cast singled out for praise while the film grossed $3,900,000 in U.S./Canada film rentals (according to Variety), placing it among the top twenty hits of the year. The film also gained much recognition as one of the finest dramas of 1963, placing among The New York Times and the National Board of Review’s Top Ten films (with Melvyn Douglas also winning Best Supporting Actor from NBR), and Best Screenplay honors from The New York Film Critics Circle and the Writer’s Guild of America. The film gained five Golden Globe nods for Picture, Newman, Neal, Douglas and Ritt but no wins, but fared much better at the Laurel Awards, with wins for Top Drama, Newman, Neal and Douglas. Ritt also gained a nomination from the Directors Guild of America and a win at the Venice Film Festival, while Patricia Neal in particular was singled out for acclaim, winning Best Actress from the NYFCC, National Board, and the British Academy Awards, as well as a much-deserved Best Actress Oscar (side note: there has been comment in recent years downplaying Neal’s achievement in Hud and ultimate Academy Award win, due to her limited screen time as Alma. The counter argument to this is her rich, earthy and very moving work is so powerful she dominated her scenes, allowing Alma to linger in memory when she’s off screen, and therefore justify her win over competition with much bigger parts to play, but who didn’t have the same impact with voters). Among the seven Academy Award nominations, in addition to Neal and Douglas, Wong Howe won for his sublime cinematography, and, along with Newman, Ritt gained a nomination, as did the screenplay and Art Direction-Set Direction. The relevance of Hud as a key 1960’s film was illustrated in 2018, when the movie was inducted into the National Film Preservation Board. Hud has lost none of its power to provoke an audience, and those looking for a stirring viewing experience featuring some of the finest acting of the era will be rewarded by choosing this western of merit.