Rating: NR
Genre:
Drama
Release Date: 12/02/2003
SubTitles: English
Dubbed: English/French
Sound: DD1/DD5.1
Run Time: 111 Minutes
Flags: Adult Situations, Rape & Sexual Abuse, Questionable for Children
Distributor/Studio: Paramount
Having been burned by compromises to censors on his earlier films
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and
Sweet Bird of Youth,
Paul Newman decided to star in as uncompromising a property as he could find. That property was
Hud, inspired by a portion of
Larry McMurtry's novel,
Horseman Pass By.
Hud Bannon (
Newman) is a young Texas rancher who lives with his cattleman father
Homer (
Melvyn Douglas) and his hero-worshipping nephew
Lon (
Brandon DeWilde).
Hud is an amoral, cold-hearted creature; his father, who holds
Hud responsible for the death of his other son, tries to imbue
Lon with a sense of decency and responsibility to others, but
Lon is devoted to
Hud and isn't inclined to listen. When hoof and mouth disease shows up in one of the elder Bannon's cows,
Hud is all for selling the herd before the government inspectors find out. But
Homer orders the cattle destroyed (the film's most harrowing sequence), driving an even deeper wedge between himself and
Hud. Finally,
Hud steps over the line by attempting to rape
Alma (
Patricia Neal), the earthy but warm-hearted housekeeper.
Paul Newman was so repellantly brilliant as an unregenerate heel that his Oscar nomination for
Hud was a foregone conclusion. Although
Newman lost the Oscar to
Sidney Poitier in
Lilies of the Field, Oscars did go to
Neal for Best Actress,
Douglas for Best Supporting Actor, and cinematographer
James Wong Howe.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide