Husbands and Wives (1992) USA
Husbands and Wives Image Cover
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Director:Woody Allen
Studio:Sony Pictures
Producer:Robert Greenhut
Writer:Woody Allen
Rating:4.5
Rated:R
Date Added:2006-03-27
ASIN:B000062XE6
UPC:0043396515574
Price:$24.95
Awards:Nominated for 2 Oscars. Another 10 wins & 5 nominations
Genre:Satire
Release:2002-04-15
IMDb:0104466
Duration:108
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.85 : 1
Sound:Dolby SR
Languages:English
Subtitles:English, French, Portuguese, Spanish
Features:Dubbed
Subtitled
Woody Allen  ...  (Director)
Woody Allen  ...  (Writer)
 
Judy Davis  ...  Sally
Mia Farrow  ...  Judy Roth
Sydney Pollack  ...  Jack
Woody Allen  ...  Gabe Roth
Juliette Lewis  ...  Rain
Liam Neeson  ...  Michael Gates
Lysette Anthony  ...  Sam (Jack's girlfriend)
Cristi Conaway  ...  Shawn Grainger (call girl)
Timothy Jerome  ...  Paul (Sally's date)
Ron Rifkin  ...  Richard (Rain's analyst)
Bruce Jay Friedman  ...  Peter Styles
Jeffrey Kurland  ...  Interviewer / Narrator
Benno Schmidt  ...  Judy's ex-husband
Nick Metropolis  ...  TV Scientist
Rebecca Glenn  ...  Gail
Blythe Danner  ...  
Galaxy Craze  ...  Harriet
John Doumanian  ...  Hamptons' Party Guest
Summary: In 1992, Woody Allen and Mia Farrow--heretofore the Lunt and Fontanne of Hollywood on the Hudson--went public with a media-saturated battle over Allen's affair with Farrow's adopted daughter. Only a few months later, Allen released this film, starring himself and Farrow acting out a virtually identical plot line: an unhappy marriage begins to crumble when the husband strays with a much younger woman (in this case, one of his students, played by Juliette Lewis). It turned out to be one of Allen's most lacerating comedies, a story about the fragility of relationships and the foolishness of older men seeking to recapture their youth with younger women. It features strong performances by Judy Davis, Liam Neeson, and director Sydney Pollack, as a friend of Allen's who chucks his longtime wife for an aerobics instructor, thus planting seeds of marital dissolution in all of his friends' heads. Husbands and Wives provided an uncanny peek into Allen's image of himself and his personal life, despite all of his protestations to the contrary. --Marshall Fine