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Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966)

Drama | 131 minutes
3,74 602 votes

Genre: Drama

Duration: 131 minuten

Alternative title: Wie Is Er Bang voor Virginia Woolf?

Country: United States

Directed by: Mike Nichols

Stars: Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor and Sandy Dennis

IMDb score: 8,0 (81.135)

Releasedate: 22 June 1966

Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? plot

"You are cordially invited to George and Martha's for an evening of fun and games"

New biology teacher Nick and his wife Honey visit the home of the worn out history teacher George and his wife Martha. The encounter slowly degenerates into an ugly word battle between George and Martha, who use their guests to hurt each other.

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Full Cast & Crew

Actors and actresses

Roadhouse Waitress (uncredited)

Roadhouse Manager (uncredited)

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avatar van AGE-411

AGE-411

  • 10282 messages
  • 733 votes

A rock solid film that remains solid even after a second viewing.

And whether this was to my taste! The more melancholy, melancholy and chaotic a film is, the more I like it. And now let this one really be a superlative in all of this! The denouement is like standing under a waterfall of negative emotions.

Another important thing that raises the level of 'a movie' for me is the abundant use of wonderful one-liners, processed in strong dialogues. And this film is one big dialogue, in which the characters constantly (try to) outdo each other.

That's one thing, of course. As directors you also have to have actors who can bring it all convincingly. But that is really no problem in this film: the acting is really sublime.

Taylor rightly received an Oscar for this world performance, but secretly I think Burton is doing even better. Rarely seen actors who went even deeper into their roles and who came across more convincingly.

Maybe it has something to do with Burton and Taylor being married in real life too? (Later, after her divorce, Taylor stated that couples should never be allowed to star in this film).

Despite the fact that there is actually 2 hours of rambling, this film never gets boring. What's more: there is more going on in this movie than in the average action movie. It's like a train is racing over you.

You'll be on the edge of your seat from the start. There is no run-up that takes hours: after just a few minutes you will be torn apart.

I'm also really surprised that this movie isn't in the top 250 anymore. Because this is really good stuff!

A big 4.5 *

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avatar van Sir Djuke

Sir Djuke

  • 349 messages
  • 962 votes

Edward Albee wrote his famous piece 'Who's Afrsaid Of Virginia Woolf?' in 1962 and its impact was such that a film version appeared four years later. Director Mike Nichols had a theater background but a predisposition to excel on the film set as well. He does this with great respect for the actors without turning it into a film stage. And the actors are Burton & Taylor, society couple par excellence and both top performers in their field. The story, drenched in lots, lots and lots of alcohol gives them both the opportunity to shine and eventually culminates in a breakdown behind which you rather expect a pay-off from SIRE instead of the end title card: Booze destroys more than you want. Cheers!

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avatar van Dievegge

Dievegge

  • 3051 messages
  • 7845 votes

The coarse language and the daring content caused a stir at the time. The characters swear, curse and talk at the same time. They make intellectual jokes. George claims that his childhood took place during the Punic Wars. That title is the drunken version of Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf? from Three Little Pigs (1933). However, since they didn't get permission from Disney, they sing it to the tune of Five Little Ducks. The quote "What a dump!" comes from Beyond the Forest (1949).

There is unity of time, place and action. It only lasts one night, but we learn a lot about the characters' pasts. George is seen by himself and by his wife as a failure because he is “just” a visiting professor at a small university. The two couples partly resemble each other. They are both a professor and a housewife, and they drink too much. At the same time, they are each other's opposite. Martha can't have children, so she gave herself an imaginary son. Honey can have children, but has had an abortion. Her husband Nick convinced them that it was a hysterical pregnancy. For both couples, it's a matter of no longer clinging to lies, but facing the truth.

Richard Burton plays very naturally, as if he is shaking the lyrics on the spot. Liz Taylor has a messy head of hair and gained 15 pounds to look older. In the play, Martha is fifty-two, George is forty-six , and their imagined son is nearly twenty-one. They stay quite close to the text of Edward Albee, but also visually there is enough variation.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original