Click here to watch Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf on YouTube Hello Gazers! Pour yourself something strong because this week we're spending an evening with cinema's most gloriously dysfunctional couple: George and Martha in 1966's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Fresh from a faculty party, the pair invite younger couple Nick and Honey back for what should be a quiet nightcap. Instead, everyone embarks on a marathon session of drinking, bickering, psychological warfare, emotional oversharing, and the sort of relationship dynamics that would have a modern therapist quietly reaching for the emergency exit. Before diving into the chaos, we take a trip back to 1966 with a Culture Corner packed with the news stories, television, music, and cultural moments that surrounded the film's release. We also explore the remarkable production itself: Mike Nichols' directorial debut, its astonishing 13 Oscar nominations, five wins, and its lasting place in film history. Naturally, we can't discuss the movie without talking about Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, whose famously turbulent real-life romance was almost as dramatic as anything happening on screen. The result is a pair of performances so convincing you'll occasionally forget they're acting and wonder whether the cameras simply happened to capture a real domestic argument. As the evening unfolds, we unpack George and Martha's increasingly cruel "games," the mystery surrounding their invented child, and the collateral damage inflicted upon poor Nick and Honey, who really should have left after the first drink. We discuss gender roles, ambition, academic snobbery, middle-class anxieties, and whether anyone in this film has ever experienced a healthy conversation. Surprisingly, despite all the emotional carnage, we find the film far less problematic than many of the titles we've covered. Instead, it's a sharp, uncomfortable, often funny examination of marriage, illusion, and the stories people tell themselves to get through life. Plus: Oscar trivia, admiration for Sandy Dennis, a look at how the film helped push Hollywood towards a more adult era, and plenty of appreciation for a movie that proves you don't need explosions when you've got Elizabeth Taylor armed with a martini and a devastating one-liner. It's funny, heartbreaking and exhausting: All words that have been used by critics to describe The Problematic Gaze at one point or another! Click here to follow us on all our socials Don't forget to hit that FOLLOW button to get every episode of The Problematic Gaze downloaded and ready to listen! Please leave us a review wherever you get your podcasts. They really help to spread the word of The Problematic Gaze. And if our fellow Gazers want to comment on what they've heard in our episodes, or to suggest future topics, please email us at theproblematicgaze@gmail.com. We love hearing from you! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.