1979 romantic comedy
Rating: 15/20
Plot: For aspiring writer Isaac, love doesn't come easy. His former wife and current lesbian has written a book containing every damning detail of their relationship. His newest fling likes him bunches, but the problem is that she's only seventeen and still in high school. And to make matters more complicated, he's fallen for pretentious Mary, the woman who his married friend Yale is sleeping with on the side.
It's not my favorite Woody Allen movie, and apparently it's not Woody's either. But I really like the last close-up of Woody, a guy who could really only be a leading man in a romantic comedy in his own movies, and that expression that he makes. As a comedy, this is pretty uneven and not really all that funny. The characters aren't easy to like except for maybe Mariel Hemingway's character and Woody himself. I do like the performers who play those characters even if I don't like the characters themselves though. Still, there's a certain charm and artfulness to the proceedings, and the black and white cinematography creates a sort of intimacy with the story's inhabitants. It also shows off the titular setting, almost working like a visual ode to the city at times. So this one kind of grows on you as it goes along, but it's ultimately such a downer, a comedy too cynical to be all that funny . It's a mixed bag of a movie, one that I've always wanted to like or maybe felt like I should like a lot better.
Another movie I mostly agree with you on. Its also a movie that has become a lot more interesting because of Allens private life in the years since the 1970's. Its taken on an entirely more slimey tone since we discovered that Woody is kind of a perv towards very young women. (Or girls actually) Its tough to watch this movie now without thinking of that. Its a lovely homage to New York though, but most of Allens movies do that anyway.
ReplyDeleteMy first Allen film. I liked it more than I thought I would, and would also give it a 15.
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