Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle (1994)
Facts
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Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle
DVD Price: You save 13%! As of Oct 7 19:21 EDT (details)
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| Directed by | Alan Rudolph |
| Cast | Jennifer Jason Leigh, Campbell Scott, Matthew Broderick, Peter Gallagher, Jennifer Beals, Stephen Baldwin, Gary Basaraba, Nick Cassavetes, Heather Graham, James Le Gros, Andrew McCarthy, Gwyneth Paltrow, Martha Plimpton, Sam Robards, Wallace Shawn, Lili Taylor and David Thornton |
| Theatrical Release | November 23, 1994 |
| DVD Release | September 5, 2006 |
| Running Time | 125 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 014381208627 |
| Buy this item | $12.99 at Amazon.com As of Oct 7 19:21 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Image Entertainment, Usually ships in 24 hours, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Special Edition, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo) Or 33 new from $7.58, 11 used from $8.12 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| IT'S ONLY ME., BUT: |
| Hard core fans only |
Also, English teachers should not show this in class due to SOME naked people running around. November 24, 2007
| You won't be disappointed |
Let's face it, Broderick shared top billing with Leigh because he's a name. But it's Scott who deserved it; it's Scott's Benchley who provided an excellent foil for matching wits and barbs with Parker. They were, it seems, the perfect match -- but the film tells us they never consummated for fear of losing what closeness they already had.
Parker, Benchley and, to some extent, MacArthur were part of the Algonquin Round Table, the so-called "vicious circle" of the title, a regular gathering of the luminaries of the writing field back in the good ol' days of Prohibition. And director Alan Rudolph assembled a fine cast to round out the circle: Robert Sherwood (Nick Cassavetes), Edna Ferber (Lili Taylor), F. Scott Fitzgerald (Malcolm Gets), Harold Ross (Sam Robards) and Alexander Woollcott (Tom McGowan), among others, plus occasional cameos by the likes of Will Rogers (Keith Carradine) and a lively Harpo Marx (J.M. Henry).
We get to see them talk and drink at New York's Algonquin Hotel, we get to see them drink and talk at private parties. We also get to see them put on a variety show, the highlight of which is Benchley's fumbling financial report. Occasionally, we see a few of them working, as writers and editors of Vanity Fair and the fledgling New Yorker.
The film plays havoc with chronology, jumping around in the '20s, '30s, '40s and '50s, interspersed with brief scenes of Leigh reciting a few lines of Parker's immortal poetry. But most of the film is set in the '20s, and that's where the real color lies. (To drive that point home, Rudolph had later scenes filmed in black and white, while the early stuff in the '20s is in vivid color.) The Round Table comprised some of the finest literary minds of the age, and the lines popping out of their mouths throughout the film are classic literary gems. The best are traded between Parker and Benchley, who flirt outrageously across the years but never "misbehave" -- with each other, anyway -- like so many of their peers were doing.
Some of the best scenes are shot at the Table, with the camera panning from face to face as they drop lines -- many of which today crowd the pages of any good book of quotations -- with machine-gun rapidity and a surgeon's precision.
Of course, Parker's life wasn't all grins and giggles, and Leigh manages to show us the pain beneath the giddy facade. Parker, like many of her friends, was an alcoholic. She was unlucky in love and kept outliving her beloved dogs. She attempted suicide a few times; the movie shows only once. She was proud, but often too poor to sustain her lifestyle. She survived most of her friends, sank into senility and, despite her wishes, died on a sunny day. She also excelled in a field and an era dominated by men, and her name and writings outlasted the work of many of her male contemporaries.
This isn't a feel-good film by any stretch, but it's not dark and depressing, either. It's a slice of life -- in this case, a slice of several extraordinary lives from a very different time. The dialogue borrows heavily from the characters' actual words, and it's some of the most sparkling dialogue to show up on the big screen in a very long time.
by Tom Knapp, Rambles.(n e t) editor January 15, 2007
| Subtitles? |
| Top-flight writing and acting |
If you have any interest in the New York literary society of the 1920s; in the writers Dorothy Parker, Charles McArthur, Robert Benchley,Alexander Woolcott, etc; or if you just enjoy watching great acting, you should not be disappointed with this film. Even Harpo Marx (as a character) makes a brief appearance. October 17, 2006
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