Hud as a Satire of Masculine Rebellion
Hud is often remembered as a portrait of toxic masculinity before the phrase existed, but it is also a sharp satire of rebellion without responsibility. Larry McMurtry presents Hud as charismatic, defiant, and hollow, then patiently shows the cost of mistaking attitude for independence.
The humor in Hud is uncomfortable. Hud believes himself modern and free, while behaving predictably and selfishly. His rebellion is not ideological. It is lazy. McMurtry lets that contradiction breathe, and the satire grows naturally.
The film adaptation amplifies this effect by allowing Hud to look cool while acting small. Viewers are invited to admire him briefly before realizing admiration itself is the joke.
McMurtry’s satire targets the fantasy of consequence-free masculinity. Hud wants freedom without obligation, strength without care, and desire without responsibility. The novel and film quietly show how unsustainable that posture is.
Hud remains funny because it never argues its case. It simply shows what happens when rebellion becomes a personality instead of a principle.