The Women
Dir: Diane
English
2008
****
Diane English's comedy
drama The Women was met with negative reviews upon
release back in 2008. It was written off as a charmless and badly written Sex
and the City rip-off but that couldn't be further away from the truth. I admit,
on paper it looks bad. A film about four Manhattan socialites, who
spend their days gossiping, having their nails done and generally
bad-mouthing men is not my idea of a good time. This is no SATC rip-off though,
this is a remake of the charming but woefully outdated The Women, directed by
George Cukor and released in 1939. The big difference, apart from the trend
and fashion, is that all the women in this updated version
are independent and working. Like the original, there are no male
actors at all throughout the film and the story centres around four friends.
The big difference is that 2008's version is very
self-aware, exaggerates but never stereotypes and is
remarkably believable. It is also very, very funny. The script is
as sharp as a knife and the performances match. My only grievance is
that the women either work in magazines of fashion, which I find a
little cliché and the birthing scene involved physical comedy that not all the
actors could handle. I pretty much loved everything else about it. The
film is full of great one-on-one scenes that are all outstanding. Meg Ryan's
character confronting her husband’s mistress (played by the brilliant
Eva Mendes) in a changing room - phenomenal, Meg
Ryan's character talking to her mother (played by the brilliant Candice Bergen)
just after she’s had a face-lift - hilarious, Meg Ryan's character sharing
a joint with Bette Midler's Hollywood agent - brilliant, Meg Ryan's
character telling her best friend (played by
the amazing Annette Bening) that the separation between
them was worse than the one with her husband - heart-breaking.....I could
go on and on. There are more funny scenes in this film, per minute than there
is in any film I've seen in the last decade, I'm not kidding. The laughs range
between subtle and belly. Cloris Leachman plays Meg Ryan's house keeper and is
nothing short of hilarious in every second she's on screen. The story isn't
anything special, it is the script and performance that really shines through
and that is why, in my opinion, why it works so well.
I laughed throughout the film, the only times I didn't was because I
was trying not to cry and the genuinely touching scenes. It has been
criminally overlooked, which I think is terribly unfair as I would like to see
much more of this type of thing. People complain that there are no funny women
in film and women aren't getting the same recognition as men. I
agree, but at the same time those same people are overlooking gems like this.
Change the setting and change the characters but with performances and script
like this you can't go wrong, there are loads of female actors of all ages and
great female scriptwriters who could make films as good as this, if only
Hollywood would let them and that can only happen when people support great
films like this before dismissing them as something they're not.
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