Farrow, Hershey, and Weist |
"I particularly love the mother, just a boozy old flirt with a filthy mouth." --Hannah's mother basically talking about herself.
Hannah (Mia Farrow) has a happy life with her husband, Elliot (Michael Caine). but she's unaware that he has fallen in love with her free-spirited sister, Lee (Barbara Hershey of Black Swan). As Lee and Elliot begin a guilt-wracked affair, Hannah's other sister, Holly (Dianne Wiest), a struggling actress, starts a catering business with her friend, April (Carrie Fisher), and the two both fall for married architect, David (Sam Waterston). Hannah's ex-husband, Mickey (Woody Allen) is drawn to Holly years after they had a disastrous first date. Like most of Allen'\s films, Hannah and Her Sisters is quite entertaining, with some fine acting from virtually the entire cast, but Allen himself -- who comes off like a stand-up comic sprouting lines, many of which are admittedly amusing -- doesn't really fit that neatly into the picture. I\m not sufficiently interested in exploring Allen's psyche to delve into any so-called deep meanings in his movies, but Hannah is engaging enough but no real masterpiece, despite its popularity. The business with Mickey thinking he may have a brain tumor is tasteless. As usual, many of the characters, admirably cultured, do what's expedient, not necessarily what's right. Max von Sydow shows up briefly as an older man that Lee discards once things heat up with Elliot, and Maureen O'Sullivan [Tarzan Escapes], Mia Farrow's mother in real life, plays Hannah's mother, with Lloyd Nolan [Portrait in Black] as her husband. Julie Kavner, who has a small role as a co-worker of Mickey's, does the same tiresome shtick she's been doing since she played Rhoda's sister on TV.
Verdict: Interesting and fun, but also kind of minor all told. **1/2.
I like this one a lot more than you do, Bill, I consider it his masterpiece and the quintessential Woody Allen "relationship movie" and "meaning of life movie" and valentine to New York City, far more than Annie Hall or Manhattan. Every performance is brilliant, funny, thought-provoking and bittersweet...Michael Caine, Dianne Wiest, Mia, her mother Maureeen O'Sullivan, Barbara Hershey, and great supporting turns by Carrie Fisher, Julie Kavner...and Woody himself as the hypochondriac on a spiritual quest, is just perfect.
ReplyDeleteI think you can tell I own this movie!! Will watch it again in the next few days, too, thank to you, Bill!!
-Chris
Glad you enjoyed it. I do think it's better than "Annie Hall" and "Manhattan." It was very, very popular in its day.
ReplyDelete