Tropic of Cancer (film)

Tropic of Cancer

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Joseph Strick
Produced by Joseph Strick
Screenplay by Betty Botley
Joseph Strick
Based on Tropic of Cancer 
by Henry Miller
Starring Rip Torn
James T. Callahan
David Baur
Laurence Lignères
Phil Brown
Dominique Delpierre
Music by Stanley Myers
Cinematography Alain Derobe
Edited by Sidney Meyers
Sylvia Sarner
Production
company
Tropic Productions
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release dates
  • February 27, 1970 (1970-02-27)
Running time
87 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Tropic of Cancer is a 1970 American film based on Henry Miller's loosely autobiographical novel of the same title. Filming took place on location in Paris, produced by Joseph Strick with some help from the author, whose persona was portrayed by Rip Torn and his wife Mona by Ellen Burstyn. The novel had provided a test for American laws on pornography in the early 1960s, and the film was rated X in the United States, which was later changed to an NC-17 rating.[1] In the UK the film was refused a theatrical 'X' certificate by the BBFC. Strick had previously adapted other works of literature - Jean Genet's The Balcony and James Joyce's Ulysses.

Plot

The film is a sex comedy, a series of 'vignettes and sex fantasies' about Americans abroad.

Strick's adaptation does not keep the book in its period - the bohemian Depression milieu of rootless Russian and American expatriates in the Paris of the early 1930s, something for which he was criticised by the critic Pauline Kael. " When the story is made timeless, the characters are out of nowhere, and the author-hero is not discovering a new kind of literary freedom in self-exposure, he's just a dirty not-so-young man hanging around the tourist spots of Paris."

Cast

See also

References

  1. Fox, Margalit (June 7, 2010). "Joseph Strick, Who Filmed the Unfilmable, Dies at 86". The New York Times. Retrieved April 1, 2014.

External links


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