24 out of 27 people found the following comment useful :- Taylor's Beard For Burton's Hustler, 29 July 2003
Author:
MGMboy from San Francisco
`Boom' is a blast! This is one of the most fun of the Burton - Taylor
films.
"Boom" is also a gassy misfire that draws one into the veiled world of
aging homosexual desire disguised as a heterosexual struggle between an
aging, dying woman and the unattainable youth in the angel of Death.
This is story wearing a beard. Taylor's role is really that of an aging
rich gay man who is trying to hang on to youth and the beauties that
great
beauty attract. After all, her name is `Sissy'. Burton's role is that of
the
hustler who is all that is left for the old queen to attract. But as with
so
many Williams works it all must be encrypted and coded so that the
America
of the late 50's and early 60's could handle his true intentions, the
soft
underbelly of his plays.
Burton is too old for the role that was written for a man in his
twenties
and Taylor is too young and too healthy looking to be the dying Sissy.
But
despite that, the story of a struggle of great wealth against the
inevitable
grows from loopy strangeness to a compelling and moving ending. Here
Taylor
gives one of her oddly finest post Virginia Woolf studies in a
dramatic/comic performance. There is in fact so much subversive humor in
her
performance that she is at times hilarious. Her vocal range dances from
the
shrill to the silly to the grand dame and all to serve her imperious and
ultimately terrified Sissy Goforth. In the last desperate half hour of
the
film she does some of her finest work. Burton is rather cool and distant
at
first but builds his Angelo De Morte into a truly fine character study.
In
particular, listen to his fine delivery of the speech about the old man
in
the sea.
Particular note should be made of the cinematography, which is
gorgeous,
and the stunning sun washed bone toned opulent glamour of the sets. I
understand that the Burtons owned the house in Sardinia for a while after
the film was completed. The spare and haunting score by John Barry is an
added delight to his impressive repertoire. And for you jewelry fans
there
is plenty of Miss Taylor's own jewelry on hand. So get out your copy of
`My
Love Affair With Jewelry' my Elizabeth and thumb along as she parades her
diamonds in the Mediterranean sun.
Campy? Yes! Great? Maybe we will know about that in another 40 years.
Is
it worth your time? Only if you like a challenge and are willing to let
the
Burtons take you into the world of Tennessee Williams camp classic.
22 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :- Failed Art? Yes. Camp Masterpiece? YES! YES! YES!, 23 June 2000
Author:
antonio-21 from New York City
Well, this is certainly SOME kind of classic!
I recently saw this film as it was meant to be seen, in a theater with a
packed audience of Gay men and Lesbians (and don't panic, some token
Heteros
too)! This was at the 2nd Annual Provincetown Film Festival, and this
evening was hosted by John Waters. (If I need to explain who he is, then
forget EVER seeing this movie)
John Waters informed us that this was the movie that he shows to friends
of
his as his "litmus" test, if they don't enjoy it, he claims to never
speak
to them again! I'm inclined to agree.
If you're a fan of camp, SEE THIS FILM! If you're a fan of Elizabeth
Taylor,
SEE THIS FILM! If you're a fan of Joanna Shimkus, well I don't know what
to
say then, except congratulations! You're the first one! (although, she is
great in this movie)
What more can you say about a film that has Elizabeth Taylor decked out in
Kabuki-Vegas drag holding an intimate bitchy dinner party with an aged and
drunken Noel Coward (in a role written for a woman, and first offered to
Katharine Hepburn!)
To watch Miss Taylor in action, is to behold a true screen legend fully
embrace her diva acting self. She lets rip with such abandon and power,
she
manages to wipe everybody else off the screen, including HERSELF!
While Richard Burton, Noel Coward, Joanna Shimkus, and Michael Dunn (of
Ship
of Fools and Wild Wild West[tv version, please!] fame) manage to deliver
the
goods in this Tennessee Williams free for all, it is the incredible Miss
Taylor who grounds this late 60's arthouse flop, and manages to transcend
it's failing qualities, to make it a screen orgy of bad taste and over the
top drama!
Try and keep a straight face during Miss Taylor's prolonged coughing fit
on
the balcony! I thought I was going to be sick just watching her hack up
her
lungs. Watch Richard Burton somnambulistically maneuver his way through a
role played on stage by Tab Hunter! (I can't help but think, that this
film
might have actually been pulled off as a straight drama with the original
casting of Simone Signoret and Sean Connery!)
We lovers of camp and all things over the top should revel in this failed
artistic masterpiece!
This film gets a 10 Star rating as Camp, and a 4 Star rating as anything
else!
endnote: Where is the DVD/Video release of this film????!!!!!!
13 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- Divinely bonkers (and cries out to be on video), 3 October 1999
Author:
NeelyO from W. Hollywood, CA
Where to begin in discussing the rococo lunacy of this ill-fated project?
Would it be Tennessee Williams' overripe script ("My heart beats blood
that
is not my blood, but the blood of anonymous donors")? Elizabeth Taylor's
screeching performance ("S*** on your mother!", she yells at a clumsy
servant)? Richard Burton's near-catatonic recitation of the title, or his
reading of Coleridge's "Xanadu" (which Taylor interrupts with a
"HUH?")?
Director John Waters' favorite movie (he calls it "failed art" and, thus,
"perfect") is a non-stop laugh riot, and since "Boom!" is not available on
video, you owe it to yourself to catch it on screen on those rare
opportunities when it is presented. (The LA County Museum of Art recently
screened it as part of its celebration of the Noel Coward centenary --
despite the fact that Mr. Coward appears in it for about 10 minutes -- and
it drew hearty laughs throughout its seemingly interminable running
time.)
So loony, so overdone, so 1968, this one's a camp classic.
"Boom" has garnered itself a something of a reputation. With
heavyweights Taylor, Burton, Noel Coward, Tennessee Williams and Joseph
Losey, one might be tempted to think, how bad could it be? Well, it's a
lot worse than you could possibly imagine.
The sad and disturbing fact of "Boom" is that is seems to signal the
decline and fall of the aforementioned heavyweights. It was only
director Joseph Losey who having plummeted the depths with "Modesty
Blaise" and "Boom" (some may wish to add "Secret Ceremony"), managed to
recuperate and in 1970 create his best work, the wonderful
"Go-Between".
Saddest of all is the work of Tennesee Williams. From the mid forties
until the early sixties, Williams penned a number of plays which have
gained classic status, remaining in theater repertory throughout the
world, many becoming much praised films. When William's muse deserted
him, probably owing to his notorious substance abuse, it deserted him
for good. Williams at his best is an actor's dream providing many
unforgettable performances. (Were Ava Gardner or Deborah Kerr ever
better than in "Night of the Iguana" ? ) Taylor in particular, shone in
both "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" and "Suddenly Last Summer". There is an
anecdote in which supposedly Taylor asks John Gielgud whether he would
teach her to play Shakespeare, to which he replied "if you will teach
me to play Tennessee Williams". Had Gielgud seen "Boom" he would have
held his tongue. Taylor simply has never been worse, turning in a
cringe inducing performance. Despite her face photographing well, she
is decidedly podgy. Besides the physical decline, from this time
onwards she would basically lose credibility as a serious actress with
a string of completely forgettable (and worse) roles to her credit.
Much the same could be said of Burton. Following his short lived
theatrical stardom, he won fame and fortune in Hollywood. But the body
of his work from this point onwards (1968) would be unremarkable to say
the least.
Noel Coward had long ceased being a force in the theater where his
drawing room comedies had been replaced by the likes of Williams and
the British "angry young men". He seems to be enjoying himself camping
it up, but barely manages to amuses, that from the man who claimed such
a talent.
The only cast member who maintains her dignity is young Joanna Shimkus,
who in a few years would forego a promising screen career to become
Mrs. Sidney Poitier.
"Boom" reeks of self indulgence; it's simply out of control. A rather
sad pointer to careers gone wrong rather than a camp fun fest as some
have suggested.
9 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- What sound does a bomb make?, 15 May 2006
Author:
Putzberger from Chicago IL
That's right . . . BOOM! This movie had such a loathsome reputation
that I had to watch it, and I must say, it didn't disappoint. Ghastly
as it is, "Boom!" is a great cautionary tale. Lesson 1: fame takes its
toll. Poor Liz Taylor was only in her mid-30s at this point, and still
more voluptuous than fat. But decades of stardom had warped her
personality, and a long career of "erotic vagrancy" had rendered her an
overexposed self-parody. Therefore, she is tragically convincing in
"Boom!" as a shrewish, washed-up old hag. Her performance is shrill,
monochromatic and dreadful, but her persona was so close to her
character that any acting is gratuitous. Lesson 2: homosexuals, even
brilliant ones, wind up in exile. To watch Noel Coward, as a character
idiotically named "the Witch of Capri," being toted up the beach on the
shoulders of a beefy manservant is to watch the tragic end of a stellar
career. It's an image that resonates with Oscar Wilde's sad decline
from a widely acclaimed wit to a sick, broke ex-convict, Truman
Capote's deterioration from literary genius to silly talk-show guest,
or even Coward's downward journey from Shaftesbury and Broadway to the
Vegas strip, and this lousy cameo. Lesson 3: at some point you have to
stop trading in on your name and give up. Tennessee Williams wrote a
handful of classic plays, and dozens of dreadful ones. "The Milk Train
Doesn't Stop Here Anymore," which is the basis for "Boom!", must have
been his tenth failed attempt to retell the story of "Streetcar Named
Desire:" a young stud stirs the passions of a vulnerable woman
(subtext: gay man) with dire results. And Lesson 4: a rich voice and a
regal bearing doth not an actor make. Richard Burton is ugly and
pompous here, all the moreso for appearing oblivious to the fact that
he's far too old for the role of a sexy, dangerous young poet. Coward
seems more his peer than his potential corrupter: when Coward
propositions Burton by inviting him back to his island, you think he's
suggesting they catch the Early Bird Special at Denny's. In fairness,
it's hard not to be ridiculous in a film that asks you to say "Boom!"
every few minutes, apropos of absolutely nothing. But Burton, one of
the most mannered actors in history, says "Boom!" with the smirking
self-satisfaction he brings to every role. "Boom," "I have a talent for
disaster" or "that wasn't very nice, Martha," it's all the same. It's
all Burton, and it's all horrible.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Boom! Ba Ba Boom! Ba Ba Boom!, 11 January 2007
Author:
sol1218 from brooklyn NY
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
(There are Spoilers) Based on the 1963 Tennessee Williams play "The
Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore" the movie "Boom" is about a
terminally ill rich high society widow who had outlived, not divorced,
her six husbands and is now in the process of working on her
autobiography before her final curtain call.
A horror to work for Flora "Sissy" Golforth, Elizabeth Taylor, treats
her servants that includes her ruthless and diminutive chief of
security Rudi, Michael Dunn, and the on call doctor Dr. Evilo, Romolo
Valli,worse then dirt. Consequently going into wild and uncountable
fits as she pops pills and gets daily injections to keep the pain of
the unknown and unnamed illness thats slowly killing her in check.
Unexpectedly showing up at the island is poet Chris Flanders, Richard
Burton, an odd sort of gentleman who hasn't really done anything
worthwhile in the literary department in over ten years. Flanders is
strangely attracted to the mad Mrs. Goforth who's looking to have one
last fling before she goes out for good. The movie filmed off the
island of Sardinia has Sissy living on this giant mansion atop a high
cliff and just about driving everyone crazy to the point where they
just, like her personal secretary Miss Black (Joanna Shimkus), can't
wait to take the first boat out. Yet at the same time are stuck there
knowing that it would be inhuman to leave the screaming but dying woman
to face death all by herself.
Besides the somewhat odd-ball Chris Flanders there's also the utterly
weird and even more mystifying Noel Coward playing, in a part that was
originally written by playwright Williams for a woman, someone called
The Witch of Capri. Coward, or the Witch, had so many
blood-transfusions over the years that he doesn't have a single drop of
his own blood left in his entire body. The Witch is also very privy to
who Flanders really is, the Angel of Death, and knows of a number of
persons, now all dead, whom he had visited over the years.
Flanders dressed, courtesy of the lady of the house Sissy, in a dark
and ominous looking samurai outfit together with a razor sharp samurai
sword is not at all fooled by Sissy's wild and crazy actions knowing
that her time of earth is fast coming to an end. He also archives the
odd and almost unenviable distinction of being the first and only man
in the glamorous Sissy Goforth's life to refuses to jump into the sack
with her after she invited him into her bedroom! A feat that must have
taken almost Herculean will power on his part.
We learn from both Flanders and the mysterious Witch of Capri, Noel
Coward, that he was just an ordinary man trying to make a living,
writing poetry, until some time back in California. Then Flanders
helped a rich old miser from a local nursing home kill himself, by
strolling into the Pacific Ocean, who like Sissy just couldn't take the
pain anymore. Later coming under the influence or wing of an old
Indian, or Native American, mystic Flanders then found his true reason
and role in life and that was to be at the side of rich and dying men
and women,like Flora "Sissy" Goforth. Flanders noble work is to ease
them into the next realm of existence, death, with as little pain as
possible.
A bit hard to take at times with the then worlds most famous couple
Dick & Liz having a ball interacting with each other on the screen to
the point that you almost forgot that the very healthy and obviously
well fed Sissy Goforth was actually on the brink of death. Richard
Burton was a bit to old, at 42, to be playing the young and wondering
poet of the Tennessee Williams play Chris Flanders and his wife
Elizabeth Taylor was much too young, at 35, to be playing the much
older Mrs. Goforth who had already been married six times. This took a
lot out of the authenticity of the two parts that the leading two
actors in the film played.
The beautiful photography of the Mediterranen coast with the sea waves
majestically crashing into the rocks did make the movie "Boom" more
then watchable. There's also Miss. Taylor in an unforgettable scene
dressed in a mind-blowing all-white Japanese Bobuki outfit, at a
private dinner with The Witch of Capri, which was so eye popping that
it would have turned heads and stopped traffic even at the very
accident prone Indianapolis 500.
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- A film rich in its vulgarity - I love it, 18 December 2003
Author:
Donald Casey from Saint John, New Brunswick
When this film opened in 1968, most patrons at the cinema either walked out
or stayed and scratched their heads. I came back to see it several times.
Everything about it is delightfully overdone. Elizabeth Taylor, while too
shrill, is wonderful to watch. I am not sure she understood the role she
was playing, but she attacked the film with a lot of gusto. This signalled
the end of the big Taylor-Burton films of the 1960s, and would be the death
knell of Elizabeth Taylor as number one at the Box Office. In the 1970s, I
managed to see this film several times on television, and I remember finding
additional delights on re-viewing. I recommed this to all Elizabeth Taylor
fans.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- The road of excess, 6 May 2007
Author:
dargossett from Atlanta
How can a film be a 10 and a 1 at the same time? As serious art, Boom
is a bomb. Yet, as a testimony, a very camp testimony, to the lives of
Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Noel Coward, and Tennessee Williams,
it is literally hysterical. As the Age of Aquarius was dawning on
America, what were these pioneers of love, lust, decadence, and
existential meaning to do? What is there to say, to do, to perform, two
years after Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? 1968. the play Hair is
delighting Broadway. The hippies have overtaken the Beats. Where can
the stars go? To the Old World, Europe, Italy, Capris... The movie
reveals their state of mind: preoccupation with death, the emptiness of
wealth, sex, and luxury. As we watch this undeniably amusing costume
melodrama, we can't help wondering just what Taylor and Burton's "real"
life there in Sardinia must have been like. Did they throw tantrums
when their whims went unsatisfied, or was it the opposite? I'll have to
leave the answer to the biographers. But this film makes it impossible
not to imagine them all there in Italy, trying with desperation NOT to
be what they were portraying. That is what makes the film intriguing.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- You can see the occasional flash of brilliance here if you wait!, 16 November 2002
Author:
(big_bellied_geezer@hotmail.com) from USA
"Boom!" is a film that requires a lot of patience, and if you wait it out
and can accept the meandering direction, it will give you an idea of where
Tennesee Williams head was at during this time! Williams was quoted to have
been pleased with this adaptation of his "The Milkman Doesn't Stop here
Anymore" play. Does this film work?...Well yes and no! Meandering direction
tries your patience but you do get a glimpse into the mind of a
self-obsessed woman by Ms. Taylor who's seen it all and done it all and
isn't used to hearing the word "NO". A tighter script would of helped. It's
KINDA campy but I tend to think the term "Camp" is overused a lot by too
many people. I think John Waters described this film best by declaring it
"failed art". I feel the acting is ok by the actors involved. You have to
pump up the volume in a film like this to draw you in! Remember Ms Taylor's
character is supposed to be essentially unlikeable and shrill and there is
no such thing as a happy ending in such a picture. A odd and strangely
compelling film if you have the patience!
4 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- Boom knocks Granny's socks off, 16 September 2006
Author:
csmreck
As a 24-year-old back in '68, I thought Liz and Dick were gauche, but
time has mellowed my judgments (particularly after seeing "Who's Afraid
of Virginia Wolfe" for a 2nd time and really appreciating it this time
around.) So, given the chance to see "Boom" for the 1st time, I said
"Sure!" Well, Boom got ole Granny all shook up! I LOVED it! If someone
disparagingly says "Camp!" to describe this movie, it isn't me. I
watched the movie with complete seriousness, took the story and
characters literally, and came away from the experience very moved! Liz
Taylor is at her luminous, beautiful best. So she's a little chunky. I
was mesmerized by her famous deep purple eyes and thick black
eyelashes. But it was her acting in this film that really knocked me
out. Yes, her accents vary - but that is Liz being true to the
character. Sissy Goforth is a grand lady now, but her lapses into
vulgarity suggest humbler beginnings.
I think Liz' acting is superb throughout. After all, this character IS
over-the-top. Liz goes from grandiose viciousness to moving pathos and
I found her believable at all times.
As for Burton, that sexy devil/angel - who cares if he was a little old
for the part. To this 62-year-old, he looked delicious, and that
mellifluous voice really m-o-v-e-d me.
The spectacularly beautiful scenery of Sardinia and the magnificent
mansion provided an awesome setting - and Liz' costumes and jewelry
were to drool over.
What a treat to see Noel Coward. Who cares if this movie was beneath
him. He looked like he was having fun! Of course there's a "message" to
the movie, but to me it was secondary to all the glorious glamour and
glitz (Oh. Did I just describe "camp?")
Own the rights?
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24 out of 27 people found the following comment useful :-

Taylor's Beard For Burton's Hustler, 29 July 2003
Author: MGMboy from San Francisco
`Boom' is a blast! This is one of the most fun of the Burton - Taylor films. "Boom" is also a gassy misfire that draws one into the veiled world of aging homosexual desire disguised as a heterosexual struggle between an aging, dying woman and the unattainable youth in the angel of Death.
This is story wearing a beard. Taylor's role is really that of an aging rich gay man who is trying to hang on to youth and the beauties that great beauty attract. After all, her name is `Sissy'. Burton's role is that of the hustler who is all that is left for the old queen to attract. But as with so many Williams works it all must be encrypted and coded so that the America of the late 50's and early 60's could handle his true intentions, the soft underbelly of his plays. Burton is too old for the role that was written for a man in his twenties and Taylor is too young and too healthy looking to be the dying Sissy. But despite that, the story of a struggle of great wealth against the inevitable grows from loopy strangeness to a compelling and moving ending. Here Taylor gives one of her oddly finest post Virginia Woolf studies in a dramatic/comic performance. There is in fact so much subversive humor in her performance that she is at times hilarious. Her vocal range dances from the shrill to the silly to the grand dame and all to serve her imperious and ultimately terrified Sissy Goforth. In the last desperate half hour of the film she does some of her finest work. Burton is rather cool and distant at first but builds his Angelo De Morte into a truly fine character study. In particular, listen to his fine delivery of the speech about the old man in the sea.
Particular note should be made of the cinematography, which is gorgeous, and the stunning sun washed bone toned opulent glamour of the sets. I understand that the Burtons owned the house in Sardinia for a while after the film was completed. The spare and haunting score by John Barry is an added delight to his impressive repertoire. And for you jewelry fans there is plenty of Miss Taylor's own jewelry on hand. So get out your copy of `My Love Affair With Jewelry' my Elizabeth and thumb along as she parades her diamonds in the Mediterranean sun.
Campy? Yes! Great? Maybe we will know about that in another 40 years. Is it worth your time? Only if you like a challenge and are willing to let the Burtons take you into the world of Tennessee Williams camp classic.
22 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :-

Failed Art? Yes. Camp Masterpiece? YES! YES! YES!, 23 June 2000
Author: antonio-21 from New York City
Well, this is certainly SOME kind of classic!
I recently saw this film as it was meant to be seen, in a theater with a packed audience of Gay men and Lesbians (and don't panic, some token Heteros too)! This was at the 2nd Annual Provincetown Film Festival, and this evening was hosted by John Waters. (If I need to explain who he is, then forget EVER seeing this movie)
John Waters informed us that this was the movie that he shows to friends of his as his "litmus" test, if they don't enjoy it, he claims to never speak to them again! I'm inclined to agree.
If you're a fan of camp, SEE THIS FILM! If you're a fan of Elizabeth Taylor, SEE THIS FILM! If you're a fan of Joanna Shimkus, well I don't know what to say then, except congratulations! You're the first one! (although, she is great in this movie)
What more can you say about a film that has Elizabeth Taylor decked out in Kabuki-Vegas drag holding an intimate bitchy dinner party with an aged and drunken Noel Coward (in a role written for a woman, and first offered to Katharine Hepburn!) To watch Miss Taylor in action, is to behold a true screen legend fully embrace her diva acting self. She lets rip with such abandon and power, she manages to wipe everybody else off the screen, including HERSELF!
While Richard Burton, Noel Coward, Joanna Shimkus, and Michael Dunn (of Ship of Fools and Wild Wild West[tv version, please!] fame) manage to deliver the goods in this Tennessee Williams free for all, it is the incredible Miss Taylor who grounds this late 60's arthouse flop, and manages to transcend it's failing qualities, to make it a screen orgy of bad taste and over the top drama!
Try and keep a straight face during Miss Taylor's prolonged coughing fit on the balcony! I thought I was going to be sick just watching her hack up her lungs. Watch Richard Burton somnambulistically maneuver his way through a role played on stage by Tab Hunter! (I can't help but think, that this film might have actually been pulled off as a straight drama with the original casting of Simone Signoret and Sean Connery!)
We lovers of camp and all things over the top should revel in this failed artistic masterpiece!
This film gets a 10 Star rating as Camp, and a 4 Star rating as anything else!
endnote: Where is the DVD/Video release of this film????!!!!!!
13 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-

Divinely bonkers (and cries out to be on video), 3 October 1999
Author: NeelyO from W. Hollywood, CA
Where to begin in discussing the rococo lunacy of this ill-fated project? Would it be Tennessee Williams' overripe script ("My heart beats blood that is not my blood, but the blood of anonymous donors")? Elizabeth Taylor's screeching performance ("S*** on your mother!", she yells at a clumsy servant)? Richard Burton's near-catatonic recitation of the title, or his reading of Coleridge's "Xanadu" (which Taylor interrupts with a "HUH?")?
Director John Waters' favorite movie (he calls it "failed art" and, thus, "perfect") is a non-stop laugh riot, and since "Boom!" is not available on video, you owe it to yourself to catch it on screen on those rare opportunities when it is presented. (The LA County Museum of Art recently screened it as part of its celebration of the Noel Coward centenary -- despite the fact that Mr. Coward appears in it for about 10 minutes -- and it drew hearty laughs throughout its seemingly interminable running time.)
So loony, so overdone, so 1968, this one's a camp classic.
11 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :-

Decline and Fall, 10 April 2005
Author: graham clarke (grahamclarke@earthling.net)
"Boom" has garnered itself a something of a reputation. With heavyweights Taylor, Burton, Noel Coward, Tennessee Williams and Joseph Losey, one might be tempted to think, how bad could it be? Well, it's a lot worse than you could possibly imagine.
The sad and disturbing fact of "Boom" is that is seems to signal the decline and fall of the aforementioned heavyweights. It was only director Joseph Losey who having plummeted the depths with "Modesty Blaise" and "Boom" (some may wish to add "Secret Ceremony"), managed to recuperate and in 1970 create his best work, the wonderful "Go-Between".
Saddest of all is the work of Tennesee Williams. From the mid forties until the early sixties, Williams penned a number of plays which have gained classic status, remaining in theater repertory throughout the world, many becoming much praised films. When William's muse deserted him, probably owing to his notorious substance abuse, it deserted him for good. Williams at his best is an actor's dream providing many unforgettable performances. (Were Ava Gardner or Deborah Kerr ever better than in "Night of the Iguana" ? ) Taylor in particular, shone in both "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" and "Suddenly Last Summer". There is an anecdote in which supposedly Taylor asks John Gielgud whether he would teach her to play Shakespeare, to which he replied "if you will teach me to play Tennessee Williams". Had Gielgud seen "Boom" he would have held his tongue. Taylor simply has never been worse, turning in a cringe inducing performance. Despite her face photographing well, she is decidedly podgy. Besides the physical decline, from this time onwards she would basically lose credibility as a serious actress with a string of completely forgettable (and worse) roles to her credit.
Much the same could be said of Burton. Following his short lived theatrical stardom, he won fame and fortune in Hollywood. But the body of his work from this point onwards (1968) would be unremarkable to say the least.
Noel Coward had long ceased being a force in the theater where his drawing room comedies had been replaced by the likes of Williams and the British "angry young men". He seems to be enjoying himself camping it up, but barely manages to amuses, that from the man who claimed such a talent.
The only cast member who maintains her dignity is young Joanna Shimkus, who in a few years would forego a promising screen career to become Mrs. Sidney Poitier.
"Boom" reeks of self indulgence; it's simply out of control. A rather sad pointer to careers gone wrong rather than a camp fun fest as some have suggested.
9 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-

What sound does a bomb make?, 15 May 2006
Author: Putzberger from Chicago IL
That's right . . . BOOM! This movie had such a loathsome reputation that I had to watch it, and I must say, it didn't disappoint. Ghastly as it is, "Boom!" is a great cautionary tale. Lesson 1: fame takes its toll. Poor Liz Taylor was only in her mid-30s at this point, and still more voluptuous than fat. But decades of stardom had warped her personality, and a long career of "erotic vagrancy" had rendered her an overexposed self-parody. Therefore, she is tragically convincing in "Boom!" as a shrewish, washed-up old hag. Her performance is shrill, monochromatic and dreadful, but her persona was so close to her character that any acting is gratuitous. Lesson 2: homosexuals, even brilliant ones, wind up in exile. To watch Noel Coward, as a character idiotically named "the Witch of Capri," being toted up the beach on the shoulders of a beefy manservant is to watch the tragic end of a stellar career. It's an image that resonates with Oscar Wilde's sad decline from a widely acclaimed wit to a sick, broke ex-convict, Truman Capote's deterioration from literary genius to silly talk-show guest, or even Coward's downward journey from Shaftesbury and Broadway to the Vegas strip, and this lousy cameo. Lesson 3: at some point you have to stop trading in on your name and give up. Tennessee Williams wrote a handful of classic plays, and dozens of dreadful ones. "The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore," which is the basis for "Boom!", must have been his tenth failed attempt to retell the story of "Streetcar Named Desire:" a young stud stirs the passions of a vulnerable woman (subtext: gay man) with dire results. And Lesson 4: a rich voice and a regal bearing doth not an actor make. Richard Burton is ugly and pompous here, all the moreso for appearing oblivious to the fact that he's far too old for the role of a sexy, dangerous young poet. Coward seems more his peer than his potential corrupter: when Coward propositions Burton by inviting him back to his island, you think he's suggesting they catch the Early Bird Special at Denny's. In fairness, it's hard not to be ridiculous in a film that asks you to say "Boom!" every few minutes, apropos of absolutely nothing. But Burton, one of the most mannered actors in history, says "Boom!" with the smirking self-satisfaction he brings to every role. "Boom," "I have a talent for disaster" or "that wasn't very nice, Martha," it's all the same. It's all Burton, and it's all horrible.
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Boom! Ba Ba Boom! Ba Ba Boom!, 11 January 2007
Author: sol1218 from brooklyn NY
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
(There are Spoilers) Based on the 1963 Tennessee Williams play "The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore" the movie "Boom" is about a terminally ill rich high society widow who had outlived, not divorced, her six husbands and is now in the process of working on her autobiography before her final curtain call.
A horror to work for Flora "Sissy" Golforth, Elizabeth Taylor, treats her servants that includes her ruthless and diminutive chief of security Rudi, Michael Dunn, and the on call doctor Dr. Evilo, Romolo Valli,worse then dirt. Consequently going into wild and uncountable fits as she pops pills and gets daily injections to keep the pain of the unknown and unnamed illness thats slowly killing her in check.
Unexpectedly showing up at the island is poet Chris Flanders, Richard Burton, an odd sort of gentleman who hasn't really done anything worthwhile in the literary department in over ten years. Flanders is strangely attracted to the mad Mrs. Goforth who's looking to have one last fling before she goes out for good. The movie filmed off the island of Sardinia has Sissy living on this giant mansion atop a high cliff and just about driving everyone crazy to the point where they just, like her personal secretary Miss Black (Joanna Shimkus), can't wait to take the first boat out. Yet at the same time are stuck there knowing that it would be inhuman to leave the screaming but dying woman to face death all by herself.
Besides the somewhat odd-ball Chris Flanders there's also the utterly weird and even more mystifying Noel Coward playing, in a part that was originally written by playwright Williams for a woman, someone called The Witch of Capri. Coward, or the Witch, had so many blood-transfusions over the years that he doesn't have a single drop of his own blood left in his entire body. The Witch is also very privy to who Flanders really is, the Angel of Death, and knows of a number of persons, now all dead, whom he had visited over the years.
Flanders dressed, courtesy of the lady of the house Sissy, in a dark and ominous looking samurai outfit together with a razor sharp samurai sword is not at all fooled by Sissy's wild and crazy actions knowing that her time of earth is fast coming to an end. He also archives the odd and almost unenviable distinction of being the first and only man in the glamorous Sissy Goforth's life to refuses to jump into the sack with her after she invited him into her bedroom! A feat that must have taken almost Herculean will power on his part.
We learn from both Flanders and the mysterious Witch of Capri, Noel Coward, that he was just an ordinary man trying to make a living, writing poetry, until some time back in California. Then Flanders helped a rich old miser from a local nursing home kill himself, by strolling into the Pacific Ocean, who like Sissy just couldn't take the pain anymore. Later coming under the influence or wing of an old Indian, or Native American, mystic Flanders then found his true reason and role in life and that was to be at the side of rich and dying men and women,like Flora "Sissy" Goforth. Flanders noble work is to ease them into the next realm of existence, death, with as little pain as possible.
A bit hard to take at times with the then worlds most famous couple Dick & Liz having a ball interacting with each other on the screen to the point that you almost forgot that the very healthy and obviously well fed Sissy Goforth was actually on the brink of death. Richard Burton was a bit to old, at 42, to be playing the young and wondering poet of the Tennessee Williams play Chris Flanders and his wife Elizabeth Taylor was much too young, at 35, to be playing the much older Mrs. Goforth who had already been married six times. This took a lot out of the authenticity of the two parts that the leading two actors in the film played.
The beautiful photography of the Mediterranen coast with the sea waves majestically crashing into the rocks did make the movie "Boom" more then watchable. There's also Miss. Taylor in an unforgettable scene dressed in a mind-blowing all-white Japanese Bobuki outfit, at a private dinner with The Witch of Capri, which was so eye popping that it would have turned heads and stopped traffic even at the very accident prone Indianapolis 500.
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A film rich in its vulgarity - I love it, 18 December 2003
Author: Donald Casey from Saint John, New Brunswick
When this film opened in 1968, most patrons at the cinema either walked out or stayed and scratched their heads. I came back to see it several times. Everything about it is delightfully overdone. Elizabeth Taylor, while too shrill, is wonderful to watch. I am not sure she understood the role she was playing, but she attacked the film with a lot of gusto. This signalled the end of the big Taylor-Burton films of the 1960s, and would be the death knell of Elizabeth Taylor as number one at the Box Office. In the 1970s, I managed to see this film several times on television, and I remember finding additional delights on re-viewing. I recommed this to all Elizabeth Taylor fans.
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The road of excess, 6 May 2007
Author: dargossett from Atlanta
How can a film be a 10 and a 1 at the same time? As serious art, Boom is a bomb. Yet, as a testimony, a very camp testimony, to the lives of Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Noel Coward, and Tennessee Williams, it is literally hysterical. As the Age of Aquarius was dawning on America, what were these pioneers of love, lust, decadence, and existential meaning to do? What is there to say, to do, to perform, two years after Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? 1968. the play Hair is delighting Broadway. The hippies have overtaken the Beats. Where can the stars go? To the Old World, Europe, Italy, Capris... The movie reveals their state of mind: preoccupation with death, the emptiness of wealth, sex, and luxury. As we watch this undeniably amusing costume melodrama, we can't help wondering just what Taylor and Burton's "real" life there in Sardinia must have been like. Did they throw tantrums when their whims went unsatisfied, or was it the opposite? I'll have to leave the answer to the biographers. But this film makes it impossible not to imagine them all there in Italy, trying with desperation NOT to be what they were portraying. That is what makes the film intriguing.
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You can see the occasional flash of brilliance here if you wait!, 16 November 2002
Author: (big_bellied_geezer@hotmail.com) from USA
"Boom!" is a film that requires a lot of patience, and if you wait it out and can accept the meandering direction, it will give you an idea of where Tennesee Williams head was at during this time! Williams was quoted to have been pleased with this adaptation of his "The Milkman Doesn't Stop here Anymore" play. Does this film work?...Well yes and no! Meandering direction tries your patience but you do get a glimpse into the mind of a self-obsessed woman by Ms. Taylor who's seen it all and done it all and isn't used to hearing the word "NO". A tighter script would of helped. It's KINDA campy but I tend to think the term "Camp" is overused a lot by too many people. I think John Waters described this film best by declaring it "failed art". I feel the acting is ok by the actors involved. You have to pump up the volume in a film like this to draw you in! Remember Ms Taylor's character is supposed to be essentially unlikeable and shrill and there is no such thing as a happy ending in such a picture. A odd and strangely compelling film if you have the patience!
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Boom knocks Granny's socks off, 16 September 2006
Author: csmreck
As a 24-year-old back in '68, I thought Liz and Dick were gauche, but time has mellowed my judgments (particularly after seeing "Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolfe" for a 2nd time and really appreciating it this time around.) So, given the chance to see "Boom" for the 1st time, I said "Sure!" Well, Boom got ole Granny all shook up! I LOVED it! If someone disparagingly says "Camp!" to describe this movie, it isn't me. I watched the movie with complete seriousness, took the story and characters literally, and came away from the experience very moved! Liz Taylor is at her luminous, beautiful best. So she's a little chunky. I was mesmerized by her famous deep purple eyes and thick black eyelashes. But it was her acting in this film that really knocked me out. Yes, her accents vary - but that is Liz being true to the character. Sissy Goforth is a grand lady now, but her lapses into vulgarity suggest humbler beginnings.
I think Liz' acting is superb throughout. After all, this character IS over-the-top. Liz goes from grandiose viciousness to moving pathos and I found her believable at all times.
As for Burton, that sexy devil/angel - who cares if he was a little old for the part. To this 62-year-old, he looked delicious, and that mellifluous voice really m-o-v-e-d me.
The spectacularly beautiful scenery of Sardinia and the magnificent mansion provided an awesome setting - and Liz' costumes and jewelry were to drool over.
What a treat to see Noel Coward. Who cares if this movie was beneath him. He looked like he was having fun! Of course there's a "message" to the movie, but to me it was secondary to all the glorious glamour and glitz (Oh. Did I just describe "camp?")
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