Hud (1963) | |
Pages:
(1) |
|
Background
Hud (1963) is the story of the title character - a young Texas rancher named Hud Bannon (Paul Newman), the son of moral patriarch, law-abiding cattleman Homer Bannon (Melvyn Douglas) in modern day Texas. His crude nature was described in the film's tagline: The Story Hud is an anti-hero - he is therefore selfish, cocky, amoral, unscrupulous, crude, hard-drinking, irresponsible, and hedonistic, and known as a "Cadillac cowboy." He conspicuously parks his pink Cadillac convertible outside homes of married women. Hud is known to say:
Hud believes that if "...you don't look out for yourself, the only helping hand you'll ever get is when they lower the box." He and his rigid, principled patriarchal father Homer Bannon (Melvyn Douglas) clash over the fate of his hoof-and-mouth diseased cattle on their Texas ranch. When it is discovered that the Bannon herd is possibly stricken - Hud disregards for the law by shooting at a flock of assembled buzzards nearby, while principled patriarch Homer objects:
Hud wants to sell them before they can be condemned by government inspectors: "You gonna let them shoot your cows out from under you on account of a schoolbook disease?" Homer rejects selling them: "That would run the risk of starting an epidemic." Hud replies:
His father responds: "You're an unprincipled man, Hud." In one of the film's memorable scenes, Homer condemns his drunken son Hud, and criticizes his entire philosophy of life:
Hud responds and admits drunkenly and angrily - to end the conversation: "My mama loved me, but she died." The cattle are slaughtered, in the film's most harrowing sequence, as Homer remarks: "It don't take long to kill things, not like it takes to grow." In the well-acted, authentic-feeling story, Hud also develops a relationship with his innocent, idol-worshipping, adoring, 17-year-old nephew, Lon Bannon (Brandon de Wilde), who must choose between Hud's and Homer's lifestyles. Hud sets a bad example for his young nephew. But when Lon defends Hud in a talk with Homer, the old man delivers the famous line:
The earthy, warm-hearted housekeeper Alma Brown (Patricia Neal) is almost raped one night when Hud is uncontrollably drunk. After the rape attempt, Alma ventures to the bus station to leave town for good. She shows disgust-attraction at Hud while he tries to assuage her feelings:
Although she compliments his appearance and confesses that he might have eventually made love to her without brutal force, she is ready to leave: "You're rough on everybody...You want to know something funny, it would've happened eventually without the rough house. You look pretty good without your shirt on, you know. Sight of that through the kitchen window made me put down my dishtowel more than once." As she boards the bus, he shouts out: "I'll remember ya, honey. You're the one that got away." Homer's death comes soon after, when he falls from a horse, after which Hud shows little respect and compassion for his father. He asserts to Lon:
In the final scene, Lon walks off from the ranch in disgust as he speaks to Hud driving next to him in his car, and decides not to follow his ways: "I'm goin' somewhere else and work for awhile if I can happen onto a job...I won't be back this way." Left alone on the ranch, Hud shouts a rebuttal to his departing nephew in the final line:
|