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A Woman Under the Influence: Difference between revisions
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{{DISPLAYTITLE:''A Woman Under the Influence''}} | {{DISPLAYTITLE:''A Woman Under the Influence''}} | ||
{{Mature}} | {{Mature}} | ||
{{NFR|'''Year''' = '''1990'''}} | {{NFR|'''Year''' = '''1990'''}} | ||
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==Comments== | ==Comments== | ||
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Woman Under the Influence, A}} | |||
[[Category:Full-length live-action films]] | [[Category:Full-length live-action films]] | ||
[[Category:Full-length films]] | [[Category:Full-length films]] |
Revision as of 15:51, February 3, 2024
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This film has been preserved in the National Film Registry in 1990.
"A tornado of raw emotions and virtuosic camerawork, John Cassavetes’s beloved masterpiece charts the disintegration of a Californian housewife. In a volatile yet vulnerable performance that has inspired generations of performers, Gena Rowlands buckles under the impossible weight of crumpled dreams."
— MUBI's take
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A Woman Under the Influence is a 1974 American drama film written and directed by John Cassavetes. The story follows a woman (Gena Rowlands) whose unusual behavior leads to conflict with her blue-collar husband (Peter Falk) and family. It received two Academy Award nominations, for Best Actress and Best Director.
Why It Rocks
- The story focuses on the marital and mental problems affecting a blue-collar family.
- John Cassavetes pretty much pioneered American independent film for the 1970s with his use of cinéma vérité in fictional narrative. Plus the film's one of the first feature films to be successfully self-distributed.
- Cassavetes' visual style of long takes, little concern for lighting, and handheld cameras really help make the events seem realistic and "convince the audience (…) that what's on the screen is really happening."
- About half the film was shot with telephoto lenses, which kept the camera at a distance from the actors
- Although the film may not have a true narrative, it still maintains an overall idea, which is a concept of how much you have to pay for love.
- Great and definitive performances from Gena Rowlands and Peter Falk.
- The film is pretty personal and a self-portrait for the director, as Mabel Longhetti was based on Cassavetes himself (even though she's a female) and her situation was John's representation of his own life.
- Mabel was the director's reflection on the pressures he felt he was subjected to not only by marriage but, more generally, by social conventions and expectations of what is and is not “normal” and “acceptable” behavior.
The Only Bad Quality
- It can often be uneven, overlong or contain weird decisions from some of the actors.
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