One-Eyed Jacks and Mutiny on the Bounty
In 1961, Brando made his directorial debut in the western
One-Eyed Jacks. The picture was originally directed by Stanley Kubrick, but he
was fired early in the production. Paramount then made Brando the director.
Brando portrays the lead character Rio, and Karl Malden plays his partner "Dad" Longworth. The
supporting cast features Katy Jurado, Ben Johnson, and Slim Pickens. Brando's
penchant for multiple retakes and character exploration as an actor carried
over into his directing, however, and the film soon went over budget; Paramount
expected the film to take three months to complete but shooting stretched to
six and the cost doubled to more than six million dollars. Brando's
inexperience as an editor also delayed postproduction and Paramount eventually took
control of the film. Brando later wrote, "Paramount
said it didn't like my version of the story; I'd had everyone lie except Karl
Malden. The studio cut the movie to pieces and made him a liar, too. By then, I
was bored with the whole project and walked away from it". One-Eyed
Jacks was received with mixed reviews by critics.
Brando's revulsion with the film industry reportedly boiled
over on the set of his next film, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's remake of Mutiny on the
Bounty, which was filmed in Tahiti. The actor was accused of deliberately
sabotaging nearly every aspect of the production. On June 16, 1962, The
Saturday Evening Post ran an article by Bill Davidson with the headline "Six million dollars down the drain:
the mutiny of Marlon Brando". Mutiny director Lewis Milestone claimed
that the executives "deserve what
they get when they give a ham actor, a petulant child, complete control over an
expensive picture." Mutiny on the Bounty nearly capsized MGM and,
while the project had indeed been hampered with delays other than Brando's
behavior, the accusations would dog the actor for years as studios began to
fear Brando's difficult reputation. Critics also began taking note of his fluctuating
weight.
Box office decline:
1963–1971
Distracted by his personal life and becoming disillusioned
with his career, Brando began to view acting as a means to a financial end.
Critics protested when he started accepting roles in films many perceived as
being beneath his talent, or criticized him for failing to live up to the
better roles. Previously only signing short-term deals with film studios, in
1961 Brando uncharacteristically signed a five-picture deal with Universal
Studios that would haunt him for the rest of the decade. The Ugly American (1963)
was the first of these films. Based on the 1958 novel of the same title that
Pennebaker had optioned, the film, which featured Brando's sister Jocelyn, was
rated fairly positively but died at the box office. Brando was nominated for a
Golden Globe for his performance. All of Brando's other Universal films during
this period, including Bedtime Story (1964), The Appaloosa (1966), A Countess
from Hong Kong (1967) and The Night of the Following Day (1969), were also critical
and commercial flops. Countess in particular was a disappointment for Brando,
who had looked forward to working with one of his heroes, director Charlie
Chaplin. The experience turned out to be an unhappy one; Brando was horrified
at Chaplin's didactic style of direction and his authoritarian approach. Brando
had also appeared in the spy thriller Morituri in 1965; that, too, failed to
attract an audience.
Brando acknowledged his professional decline, writing later,
"Some of the films I made during the
sixties were successful; some weren't. Some, like The Night of the Following
Day, I made only for the money; others, like Candy, I did because a friend
asked me to and I didn't want to turn him down ... In some ways I think of my
middle age as the Fuck You Years." Candy was especially appalling for
many; a 1968 sex farce film directed by Christian Marquand and based on the
1958 novel by Terry Southern, the film satirizes pornographic stories through
the adventures of its naive heroine, Candy, played by Ewa Aulin. It is generally
regarded as the nadir of Brando's career. The Washington Post observed: "Brando's self-indulgence over a dozen
years is costing him and his public his talents." In the March 1966
issue of The Atlantic, Pauline Kael wrote that in his rebellious days, Brando "was antisocial because he knew society
was crap; he was a hero to youth because he was strong enough not to take the
crap", but now Brando and others like him had become "buffoons, shamelessly, pathetically
mocking their public reputations." In an earlier review of The
Appaloosa in 1966, Kael wrote that the actor was "trapped in another dog of a movie ... Not for the first time, Mr.
Brando gives us a heavy-lidded, adenoidally openmouthed caricature of the
inarticulate, stalwart loner." Although he feigned indifference,
Brando was hurt by the critical mauling, admitting in the 2015 film Listen to
Me Marlon, "They can hit you every
day and you have no way of fighting back. I was very convincing in my pose of
indifference, but I was very sensitive and it hurt a lot."
Brando portrayed a repressed gay army officer in Reflections
in a Golden Eye, directed by John Huston and co-starring Elizabeth Taylor. The
role turned out as one of his most acclaimed in years, with Stanley Crouch marveling,
"Brando's main achievement was to
portray the taciturn but stoic gloom of those pulverized by circumstances."
The film overall received mixed reviews. Another notable film was The Chase
(1966), which paired the actor with director Arthur Penn, Jane Fonda, Robert
Redford and Robert Duvall. The film deals with themes of racism, sexual
revolution, small-town corruption, and vigilantism. The film was received mostly
positively.
Brando cited Burn! (1969) as his personal favorite of the
films he had made, writing in his autobiography, "I think I did some of the best acting I've ever done in that
picture, but few people came to see it." Brando dedicated a full
chapter to the film in his memoir, stating that the director, Gillo Pontecorvo,
was the best director he had ever worked with next to Kazan and Bernardo
Bertolucci. Brando also detailed his clashes with Pontecorvo on the set and how
"we nearly killed each other."
Loosely based on events in the history of Guadeloupe, the film got a hostile
reception from critics. In 1971, Michael Winner directed him in the British
horror film The Nightcomers with Stephanie Beacham, Thora Hird, Harry Andrews
and Anna Palk. It is a prequel to The Turn of the Screw, which had previously
been filmed as The Innocents (1961). Brando's performance earned him a
nomination for a Best Actor BAFTA, but the film bombed at the box office.
The Godfather and
Last Tango in Paris
During the 1970s, Brando was considered "unbankable". Critics were becoming increasingly dismissive
of his work and he had not appeared in a box office hit since The Young Lions
in 1958, the last year he had ranked as one of the Top Ten Box Office Stars and
the year of his last Academy Award nomination, for Sayonara. Brando's
performance as Vito Corleone, the "Don,"
in The Godfather (1972), Francis Ford Coppola's adaptation of Mario Puzo's 1969
bestselling novel of the same name, was a career turning point, putting him
back in the Top Ten and winning him his second Best Actor Oscar.
Paramount production chief Robert Evans, who had given Puzo
an advance to write The Godfather so that Paramount would own the film rights,
hired Coppola after many major directors had turned the film down. Evans wanted
an Italian-American director who could provide the film with cultural
authenticity. Coppola also came cheap. Evans was conscious of the fact that
Paramount's last Mafia film, The Brotherhood (1968) had been a box office bomb,
and he believed it was partly due to the fact that the director, Martin Ritt,
and the star, Kirk Douglas, were Jewish, and the film lacked an authentic
Italian flavor. The studio originally intended the film to be a low-budget
production set in contemporary times without any major actors, but the
phenomenal success of the novel gave Evans the clout to turn The Godfather into
a prestige picture.
Coppola had developed a list of actors for all the roles,
and his list of potential Dons included the Oscar-winning Italian-American
Ernest Borgnine, the Italian-American Frank de Kova (best known for playing
Chief Wild Eagle on the TV sitcom F-Troop), John Marley (a Best Supporting
Oscar-nominee for Paramount's 1970 hit film Love Story who was cast as the film
producer Jack Woltz in the picture), the Italian-American Richard Conte (who
was cast as Don Corleone's deadly rival Don Emilio Barzini), and Italian film
producer Carlo Ponti. Coppola admitted in a 1975 interview, "We finally figured we had to lure the
best actor in the world. It was that simple. That boiled down to Laurence
Olivier or Marlon Brando, who are the greatest actors in the world." Coppola's
hand-written cast list has Brando's name underlined.
Evans told Coppola that he had been thinking of Brando for
the part two years earlier, and Puzo had imagined Brando in the part when he
wrote the novel and had actually written to him about the part, so Coppola and
Evans narrowed it down to Brando. (Coincidentally, Olivier would compete with
Brando for the Best Actor Oscar for his part in Sleuth. He bested Brando at the
1972 New York Film Critics Circle Awards.) Albert S. Ruddy, whom Paramount
assigned to produce the film, agreed with the choice of Brando. However,
Paramount studio executives were opposed to casting Brando due to his
reputation for difficulty and his long string of box office flops. Brando also
had One-Eyed Jacks working against him, a troubled production that lost money
for Paramount when it was released in 1961. Paramount Pictures President
Stanley Jaffe told an exasperated Coppola, "As
long as I'm president of this studio, Marlon Brando will not be in this
picture, and I will no longer allow you to discuss it."
Jaffe eventually set three conditions for the casting of
Brando: That he would have to take a fee far below what he typically received;
he would have to agree to accept financial responsibility for any production
delays his behavior cost; and he had to submit to a screen test. Coppola
convinced Brando to do a videotaped "make-up"
test, in which Brando did his own makeup (he used cotton balls to simulate the
character's puffed cheeks). Coppola had feared Brando might be too young to
play the Don, but was electrified by the actor's characterization as the head
of a crime family. Even so, he had to fight the studio in order to cast the
temperamental actor. Brando had doubts himself, stating in his autobiography, "I had never played an Italian before,
and I didn't think I could do it successfully." Eventually, Charles
Bluhdorn, the president of Paramount parent Gulf+Western, was won over to
letting Brando have the role; when he saw the screen test, he asked in
amazement, "What are we watching?
Who is this old guinea?" Brando was signed for a low fee of $50,000,
but in his contract, he was given a percentage of the gross on a sliding scale:
1% of the gross for each $10 million over a $10 million threshold, up to 5% if
the picture exceeded $60 million. According to Evans, Brando sold back his
points in the picture for $100,000, as he was in dire need of funds. "That $100,000 cost him $11 million,"
Evans claimed.
In a 1994 interview that can be found on the Academy of
Achievement website, Coppola insisted, "The
Godfather was a very unappreciated movie when we were making it. They were very
unhappy with it. They didn't like the cast. They didn't like the way I was
shooting it. I was always on the verge of getting fired." When word of
this reached Brando, he threatened to walk off the picture, writing in his
memoir, "I strongly believe that
directors are entitled to independence and freedom to realize their vision,
though Francis left the characterizations in our hands and we had to figure out
what to do." In a 2010 television interview with Larry King, Al Pacino
also talked about how Brando's support helped him keep the role of Michael
Corleone in the movie—despite the fact Coppola wanted to fire him. Pacino also
explained in the Larry King interview that, while Coppola expressed
disappointment in Pacino's early scenes, he did not specifically threaten to
fire him; Coppola himself was feeling pressure from studio executives who were
puzzled by Pacino's performance. In the same interview, Pacino credits Coppola
with getting him the part. Brando was on his best behavior during filming,
buoyed by a cast that included Pacino, Robert Duvall, James Caan, and Diane
Keaton. In the Vanity Fair article "The
Godfather Wars", Mark Seal writes, "With
the actors, as in the movie, Brando served as the head of the family. He broke
the ice by toasting the group with a glass of wine." 'When we were young, Brando was like the
godfather of actors,' says Robert Duvall. 'I used to meet with Dustin Hoffman
in Cromwell's Drugstore, and if we mentioned his name once, we mentioned it 25
times in a day.' Caan adds, 'The first day we met Brando everybody was in
awe.'"
Brando's performance was glowingly reviewed by critics. "I thought it would be interesting to
play a gangster, maybe for the first time in the movies, who wasn't like those
bad guys Edward G. Robinson played, but who is kind of a hero, a man to be
respected," Brando recalled in his autobiography. "Also, because he had so much power and unquestioned authority, I
thought it would be an interesting contrast to play him as a gentle man, unlike
Al Capone, who beat up people with baseball bats." Duvall later marveled
to A&E's Biography, "He
minimized the sense of beginning. In other words he, like, deemphasized the
word action. He would go in front of that camera just like he was before. Cut!
It was all the same. There was really no beginning. I learned a lot from
watching that." Brando won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his
performance, but he declined it, becoming the second actor to refuse a Best
Actor award (after George C. Scott for Patton). Brando did not attend the award
ceremony; instead, he sent actress Sacheen Littlefeather (who appeared in
Plains Indian-style regalia) to decline the Oscar on his behalf. After refusing
to touch the statue at the podium, she announced to the crowd that Brando was
rejecting the award in protest of "the
treatment of American Indians today by the film industry … and on television
and movie reruns and also with recent happenings at Wounded Knee." The
Wounded Knee Occupation of 1973 was occurring at the time of the ceremony.
Brando had written a longer speech for her to read but, as she explained, this
was not permitted due to time constraints. In the written speech Brando added
that he hoped his declining the Oscar would be seen as "an earnest effort to focus attention on an issue that might very
well determine whether or not this country has the right to say from this point
forward we believe in the inalienable rights of all people to remain free and
independent on lands that have supported their life beyond living memory."
The actor followed The Godfather with Bernardo Bertolucci's
1972 film Last Tango in Paris, playing opposite Maria Schneider, but Brando's
highly noted performance threatened to be overshadowed by an uproar over the
sexual content of the film. Brando portrays a recent American widower named
Paul, who begins an anonymous sexual relationship with a young, betrothed
Parisian woman named Jeanne. As with previous films, Brando refused to memorize
his lines for many scenes; instead, he wrote his lines on cue cards and posted
them around the set for easy reference, leaving Bertolucci with the problem of
keeping them out of the picture frame. The film features several intense,
graphic scenes involving Brando, including Paul anally raping Jeanne using
butter as a lubricant, which it was alleged was not consensual. The actress
confirmed that no actual sex occurred, but she complained that she was not told
what the scene would include until shortly prior to filming.
Bertolucci also shot a scene which showed Brando's genitals,
but in 1973 explained, "I had so
identified myself with Brando that I cut it out of shame for myself. To show
him naked would have been like showing me naked." Schneider declared
in an interview that "Marlon said he
felt raped and manipulated by it and he was 48. And he was Marlon
Brando!". Like Schneider, Brando confirmed that the sex was simulated.
Bertolucci said about Brando that he was "a
monster as an actor and a darling as a human being". Brando refused to
speak to Bertolucci for 15 years after the production was completed. Bertolucci
said:
I was thinking that it
was like a dialogue where he was really answering my questions in a way. When
at the end of the movie, when he saw it, I discovered that he realized what we
were doing, that he was delivering so much of his own experience. And he was
very upset with me, and I told him, "Listen, you are a grown-up. Older
than me. Didn't you realize what you were doing?" And he didn't talk to me
for years.
However;
I called him one day
in '93, I think, I was in LA and my wife was shooting a movie. First of all, he
answered the phone, and he was talking to me like we had seen each other a day
earlier. He said, "Come here." I said, "When?" He said,
"Now." So I remember driving on Mulholland Drive to his home and
thinking I think I won't make it, I think I will crash before [I get there]. I
was so emotional.
The film also features Paul's angry, emotionally charged
final confrontation with the corpse of his dead wife. The controversial movie
was a hit however, and Brando made the list of Top Ten Box Office Stars for the
last time. His gross participation deal earned him $3 million. The voting
membership of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences again nominated
Brando for Best Actor, his seventh nomination. Brando won the 1973 New York
Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor.
Pauline Kael, in The New Yorker review, wrote "The movie breakthrough has finally
come. Bertolucci and Brando have altered the face of an art form." Brando
confessed in his autobiography, "To
this day I can't say what Last Tango in Paris was about", and added
the film "required me to do a lot of
emotional arm wrestling with myself, and when it was finished, I decided that I
wasn't ever again going to destroy myself emotionally to make a movie".
In 1973, Brando was devastated by the death of his childhood
best friend Wally Cox. Brando wrenched his ashes from his widow, who was going
to sue for their return, but finally said, "Marlon
needed the ashes more than I did."
Late 1970s
In 1976, Brando appeared in The Missouri Breaks with his
friend Jack Nicholson. The movie also reunited the actor with director Arthur
Penn. As biographer Stefan Kanfer describes, Penn had difficulty controlling
Brando, who seemed intent on going over the top with his
border-ruffian-turned-contract-killer Robert E. Lee Clayton: "Marlon made him a cross-dressing
psychopath. Absent for the first hour of the movie, Clayton enters on
horseback, dangling upside down, caparisoned in white buckskin, Littlefeather-style.
He speaks in an Irish accent for no apparent reason. Over the next hour, also
for no apparent reason, Clayton assumes the intonation of a British upper-class
twit and an elderly frontier woman, complete with a granny dress and matching bonnet.
Penn, who believed in letting actors, do their thing, indulged Marlon all the
way." Critics were unkind, with The Observer calling Brando's
performance "one of the most
extravagant displays of grandedamerie since Sarah Bernhardt", while The Sun
complained, "Marlon Brando at fifty-two has the sloppy belly of a
sixty-two-year-old, the white hair of a seventy-two-year-old, and the lack of
discipline of a precocious twelve-year-old." However, Kanfer noted: "Even though his late work was met with
disapproval, a re-examination shows that often, in the middle of the most
pedestrian scene, there would be a sudden, luminous occurrence, a flash of the
old Marlon that showed how capable he remained."
In 1978, Brando narrated the English version of Raoni, a
French-Belgian documentary film directed by Jean-Pierre Dutilleux and Luiz
Carlos Saldanha that focused on the life of Raoni Metuktire and issues
surrounding the survival of the Indigenous tribes in north central Brazil.
Brando portrayed Superman's father Jor-El in the 1978 film Superman. He agreed
to the role only on assurance that he would be paid a large sum for what
amounted to a small part, that he would not have to read the script beforehand,
and that his lines would be displayed somewhere off-camera. It was revealed in
a documentary contained in the 2001 DVD release of Superman that he was paid
$3.7 million for two weeks of work. Brando also filmed scenes for the movie's
sequel, Superman II, but after producers refused to pay him the same percentage
he received for the first movie, he denied them permission to use the footage. "I asked for my usual percentage,"
he recollected in his memoir, "but they refused, and so did I." However,
after Brando's death, the footage was reincorporated into the 2006 recut of the
film, Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut and in the 2006 "loose sequel" Superman Returns, in which both used and
unused archive footage of him as Jor-El from the first two Superman films was
remastered for a scene in the Fortress of Solitude, and Brando's voice-overs
were used throughout the film. In 1979, he made a rare television appearance in
the miniseries Roots: The Next Generations, portraying George Lincoln Rockwell;
he won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries
or a Movie for his performance.
Brando starred as Colonel Walter E. Kurtz in Francis Ford
Coppola's Vietnam epic Apocalypse Now (1979). He plays a highly decorated U.S.
Army Special Forces officer who goes renegade, running his own operation based
in Cambodia and is feared by the U.S. military as much as the Vietnamese.
Brando was paid $1 million a week for 3 weeks work. The film drew attention for
its lengthy and troubled production, as Eleanor Coppola's documentary Hearts of
Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse documents: Brando showed up on the set
overweight, Martin Sheen suffered a heart attack, and severe weather destroyed
several expensive sets. The film's release was also postponed several times
while Coppola edited millions of feet of footage. In the documentary, Coppola
talks about how astonished he was when an overweight Brando turned up for his
scenes and, feeling desperate, decided to portray Kurtz, who appears emaciated
in the original story, as a man who had indulged every aspect of himself.
Coppola: "He was already heavy when
I hired him and he promised me that he was going to get in shape and I imagined
that I would, if he were heavy, I could use that. But he was so fat, he was
very, very shy about it ... He was very, very adamant about how he didn't want
to portray himself that way." Brando admitted to Coppola that he had
not read the book, Heart of Darkness, as the director had asked him to, and the
pair spent days exploring the story and the character of Kurtz, much to the
actor's financial benefit, according to producer Fred Roos: "The clock was ticking on this deal he
had and we had to finish him within three weeks or we'd go into this very
expensive overage ... And Francis and Marlon would be talking about the
character and whole days would go by. And this is at Marlon's urging—and yet
he's getting paid for it."
Upon release, Apocalypse Now earned critical acclaim, as did
Brando's performance. His whispering of Kurtz's final words "The horror! The horror!", has
become particularly famous. Roger Ebert, writing in the Chicago Sun-Times,
defended the movie's controversial denouement, opining that the ending, "with Brando's fuzzy, brooding
monologues and the final violence, feels much more satisfactory than any
conventional ending possibly could.” Brando received a fee of $2 million
plus 10% of the gross theatrical rental and 10% of the TV sale rights, earning
him around $9 million.
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