Year: 1992 (USA)
Genre: Comedy Drama/Marriage Drama
Directed: Woody Allen
Stars: Woody Allen, Mia Farrow, Sydney Pollack, Judy Davis, Juliette Lewis, Liam Neeson, Blythe Danner, Ron Rifkin, Galaxy Craze, Bruce Jay Friedman, Jeffrey Kurland
Production: TriStar Pictures
Gabe (Woody Allen) and Judy (Mia Farrow) have invited their good friends Jack (Sydney Pollack) and Sally (Judy Davis) for a small dinner at their quaintManhattan
apartment. Their abode is full of books and knickknacks all pointing to a
comfortable urbanite life in the largest city in the world. Then Jack and Sally
reveal some surprising news…after years of seemingly happy marriage, the two
have agreed to a separation and eventual divorce. After that bomb is dropped
the two couples reexamine their relationships with each other, trying to find
meaning in romances both current and past while discovering the good, the bad
and the ugly in marriage.
Genre: Comedy Drama/Marriage Drama
Directed: Woody Allen
Stars: Woody Allen, Mia Farrow, Sydney Pollack, Judy Davis, Juliette Lewis, Liam Neeson, Blythe Danner, Ron Rifkin, Galaxy Craze, Bruce Jay Friedman, Jeffrey Kurland
Production: TriStar Pictures
Gabe (Woody Allen) and Judy (Mia Farrow) have invited their good friends Jack (Sydney Pollack) and Sally (Judy Davis) for a small dinner at their quaint
Woody Allen is mostly known for his comedies. But while Husbands and Wives has some pretty spot
on observational humor, the story is largely somber and dramatic. Not dramatic
in the sense of a Wednesday afternoon soap opera but a benign drama that with a
few spikes of activity focuses mostly on the characters. There is no clever
high concept or narrative liberties here like say, The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985); the film is more straight-laced
and character driven along the lines of Interiors
(1978) and Crimes and Misdemeanors
(1989).
And what of the characters or rather the actors who flesh
them out? Judy Davis, Mia Farrow and Juliette Lewis are the obvious standouts,
representing three very different women all of which are looking for the same
thing; someone to love and someone to love them back. Davis received an Oscar nomination for her
role as a bitter divorcee trying to come to terms with her ex-husband’s
infidelity and being single again. She’s continually frustrated and confused by
the yearnings of the heart occasionally even lashing out on her boyfriend Gates
(Liam Neeson). She’s cynical and wary of attachment yet deep down she knows
that her entanglements with Jack aren’t over.
First off those pictures of Soon-Yi were very tastefully done |
Juliette Lewis who plays one of Gabe’s young students from
his Literature course, has the appearance and vulnerability of a dewy-eyed
devotee. Yet when the amiable Gabe discovers he might be the object of desire here
and Lewis’s Rain the controller, he recoils. There’s a scene where the two are
in a cab discussing the latest draft of his book. Unable to take criticism,
Gabe calls Rain a 20-year-old twit and says “I’d hate to be your boyfriend, he
must go through hell.” Rain cavalierly responds “Well, I’m worth it.”
Those who bemoan
Allen’s post-Annie Hall (1977) work won’t
find relief from his more meditative works of the 1980’s. While most of the
characters are likeable they sometimes do unlikeable things, each on their own
journey of discovery. I suppose we all do things we regret for love and those
with a mature outlook on the subject matter will find a lot to enjoy and a lot
to flinch at in Husbands and Wives. I
suppose the heart wants what the heart wants.
Final Grade: B-
Final Grade: B-
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