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Husbands and Wives (1992)
In Woody Allen's last true masterpiece to date, famously-filmed
during (and severely overshadowed by and paralleling) the real-life
breakup of Allen's marriage to longtime companion/actress Farrow,
and presented with interviews of the characters and some hand-held
camera work:
- the opening apartment scene of middle-aged married
man Jack Simmons (Sydney Pollack) and his distraught, neurotic
wife Sally's (Oscar-nominated Judy Davis) glib and calm announcement
about their separation-divorce before dinner to couple Gabriel "Gabe" Roth
(Woody Allen) and Judy (Mia Farrow): ("Jack and I are splitting
up"), and then their insistences that it wasn't a big deal
that they had grown apart: ("Don't turn this into a tragedy,
OK, 'cause it's a very positive step for both of us")
- the subsequent documentary-styled account of their
marriages all crumbling (with new flings) following the news - complete
with violently-panning handheld camera shots and jump-cutting
- the disastrous new romances: Jack with younger, sexy
yet ditzy 24 year-old blonde aerobics instructor Sam (Lysette Anthony)
and Sally's relationship with romantic Irishman Michael Gates (Liam
Neeson), one of Judy's co-worker colleagues
- the relationship between professor Gabe and his bright,
20 year-old creative writing student Rain (Juliette Lewis) - and
her (voice-over) reading of Gabe's sublimely-written manuscript about
relationships and sex: ("...of course men would make love at
any given moment with any number of women, while females were selective.
They were in each case catering to the demands of only one small
egg, while each male had millions and millions of frantic sperms
screaming wildly 'Let us out! Let us out!'...")
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Gabe with Student Rain
(Juliette Lewis)
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Rain's Voice-Over Reading of Gabe's Manuscript
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Rain's Assessment of Gabe's Book
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- during a car ride, Rain's honest assessment of Gabe's
book, and her expression of some disappointment, causing him to
feel defensive: ("I was a little disappointed, I guess, with,
uh, some of your attitudes...The way your people just casually
have affairs like that...Are our choices really between chronic
dissatisfaction and suburban drudgery?....You have to be careful
not to trivialize things like that (marriage)...The lead character's
views on women is so retrograde, it's so shallow, you know?...Isn't
it beneath you as a mature thinker, I mean, to allow your lead
character to waste so much of his emotional energy obsessing over
this psychotic relationship with a woman that you fantasize as
powerfully sexual and inspired when in fact she was pitifully sick")
- the sour, embarrassing party scene in which Jack
(who just learned that Sally was dating Michael) became jealous and
took it out, in an intense argument, with Sam; when he heard her
speaking about her logical belief in astrology: ("Why wouldn't
the position of the planets have an influence on our personalities?...Because,
you know, the position of the planets, it's like, is crucial to your
life"), he dragged her from a party after rudely berating her:
("If you don't know what the hell you're talkin' about, why
don't you try not talking?...I'm sick of listening to your crap about
soybeans and Zen foods, and the f--kin' Zodiac") - she screeched
at him and begged for "Help!" (to deliberately embarrass
him) when he tried to drag her to the car (twice!) - leading soon
after to their breakup when he realized his mistake in leaving Sally:
("God damn it, I must have been out of my mind. You're crazy!
Totally crazy!")
- during an interview, Sally's brilliant
"hedgehogs and foxes" internal, neurotic monologue about
unromantic, frigid sex with Michael, when she was asked: "Why
were you able to have an orgasm with Michael and not with your husband?...What
makes it so difficult for you?" - Her response: "I didn't.
I was trying very hard to go with it. I was tense. I came close...My
mind just gets racing with thoughts. You'd laugh if I told you. I get
so mentally hyperactive...I thought that I liked what Michael was doing
to me, and it felt different from Jack. More gentle and more exciting.
And I thought how different Michael was from Jack. How much deeper
his vision of life was. And I thought Michael was a hedgehog and Jack
was a fox. And then I thought Judy was a fox, and Gabe was a hedgehog.
And I thought about all the people I knew, and which were hedgehogs,
and which were foxes. Al Simon, a friend, was a hedgehog, and his wife
Jenny was a hedgehog. And Cindy Salkind was a fox. And Lou Patrino
was a hedgehog..."
- the awkward scene when Jack returned home in an effort
to reconcile with Sally, and he found Michael and Sally together
in bed: (Jack: "This is my f--king house!"
Sally: "No, this is MY f--king house!")
- the breathtaking kiss between Gabe and Rain (on the
occasion of her 21st birthday) during a rainstorm accompanied by
thunder and lightning: (Gabe: "Do you want a kiss? I mean, do
you want a real kiss?...You want an actual, professional kiss, right?...Both
lips, upper and lower simultaneously?"), and Gabe's decision
not to pursue a romantic relationship with his seductive student
- the downbeat final interview with Gabe, now single,
after Judy left him to marry Michael, and his musings about his life:
("I'm out of the race at the moment. I-I don't want to get involved
with anybody. I-I don't want to hurt anyone. I don't want to get
hurt. I just, you know, don't mind, you know, living by myself and
working. You know, it's temporary. I mean, these feelings will pass
and then I'll have the urge to get back into the swing of things.
And that seems to be how it goes....I'm writing, I'm working on a,
a novel, a new novel. Not the old one anymore, and, um - it's fine"),
with his closing line to the interviewer: "Can I go? Is this
over?"
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Gabe Roth with Judy
Jack Simmons with Sally
Intense Argument Between Jack and His New Fling Sam
Sally's "Hedgehogs and Foxes" Monologue About
Sex with Michael
Jack's Confrontation with Sally in His Home After
Finding Her in Bed with Michael
Kiss Between Rain and Gabe
Gabe's Final Interview: "Can I go? Is this
over?"
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