The 1951 movie directed by Elia Kazan is a "flagrantly theatrical film, ironically, [giving] birth to Hollywood's age of neorealism, marking the demise of plot contrivance, musty acting technique, and faux back-lot atmosphere," write Kinn and Piazza. "It can't be stressed enough that Marlon Brando's performance here was a pioneering journey into the stratosphere."
According to Turner Classic Movies, the Hays Motion Picture Code Office objected to parts of the film and they were deleted or changed. Examples include references to Blanche (Vivien Leigh)'s husband's homosexuality, which were taken out, and the ending of the film – Stella (Kim Hunter) originally stayed with her husband but says she will not return to him in the new ending.
According to the Examiner, playwright Tennessee Williams, whose play of the same name was the basis of the movie, named Stanley Kowalski after a co-worker.