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58 out of 86 people found the following review useful:
Cassavettes The Anti-Hollywood, 24 May 2003
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Author:
votarus4 from New York
A man goes into a big, strange house with his family and friends. He is armed with script and camera, and proceeds to create a milestone work of American cinema the key film of the 1970s. Above all else, `A Woman Under the Influence' is Anti-Hollywood, Anti-Establishment, Anti-Film. 1970's Hollywood may have defined itself with films like Godfather, Rocky, Annie Hall, and Deer Hunter but real, unpredictable, chaotic life was Cassavettes' territory. Fact is, Hollywood will never be ready for uninhibited Mabel and her much crazier husband Nick. Nutty as she is, Mabel/Cassavettes does nothing but tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but. Hollywood at best, tells persuasive lies. So , to get Hollywood ready for the Gospel of Cassavettes, the first thing that must happen is to banish the entire FX community; ship em to Alcatraz where they can make blockbuster cartoons for each other. Second the writers, directors and producers of said cartoons can go Vegas and try to `leave.' Those who remain will be entrusted with putting complex human beings who inhabit interesting lives and situations on the screen not `role models' who traipse through neatly-plotted, highly-improbable, beautifully photographed, committee-designed plots. Get my point? By the way, Gena Rowlands in "Influence" gives one of the finest performances of the sound era. See this film. See it now. Right now.
36 out of 48 people found the following review useful:
9/10, 24 April 2005
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Author:
desperateliving from Canada
This is just another confirmation that Cassavetes, along with Dreyer
and Tarkovsky, is one of the very small number of geniuses in film,
whose every film is an extension of their genius -- some more mature
than others, but impossible to be "bad"; they are beyond terms like
"good" or "bad" -- they are the great art works of the century.
This film isn't about a "crazy" lady; it's not about putting a woman in
an institution; and it's not about people talking about your crazy
wife, though all of this happens in the film. Those are merely the
events that take place over the course of the film; what it's really
about is our misunderstanding, our experience as an audience. Just like
the characters, we misunderstand Mable's childlike actions. What
Cassavetes does is turn *us* into children -- it's as if we're
experiencing things for the first time all over again, because it's a
totally new experience, the same with watching a movie like "Andrei
Rublev." That is an amazing thing to pass onto an audience. That's why
I've never been bored watching a Cassavetes film -- something is always
happening, things are always changing. The reality of what we're seeing
is always undergoing augmentation, so we can never get fully situated.
It's never unrelenting gloom the way many so-called realistic films are
(and this film goes far beyond mere "realism"); it's devastating
watching it, watching Mable ask people if they want spaghetti one by
one. But it's loving when Nick jokes about someone hugging her too
long. It's communal during a scene at a dinnertable where Mable takes a
pride in feeding "her boys." But each scene goes through a
transformation as it happens. When Mable goes home with another man, he
makes it clear that he's not to be used, but also that she shouldn't
punish herself. It's not a screamy moment with a woman hiding in the
bathroom; his avuncular twang is disarming.
There's a complete lack of self-consciousness in the film, and I mean
that in terms of the characters (during Mable's key freak out scene,
Rowlands does, I think, go too far) -- that's why the kids are s
terrific in the film. When a boy says, "It's the best I can do, mom,"
it's an incredible moment because it's managed to be included without
being offensive, mugging for the camera with cuteness. The film has
such a strange relationship with kids -- they're like little people.
And if that sounds odd, you'll understand when you see the film. The
characters are constantly changing their minds; they're so aware of
themselves that they're unaware -- Mable doesn't realize she's giving
off a sexual aura (despite the fact that Rowlands can at times look
like a blond beach babe). As with Julianne Moore in "Safe," we don't
know what's wrong with her. She's a frenetic, guideless woman trying to
do the guiding.
The way Cassavetes sets up the film, with ominous piano music that
comes in when Falk is trying to speak, blinded by frustration; or
setting the film inside this house with gigantic rooms, makes
everything feel larger and emptier at the same time. It's like the
scariness of the echo of something you'd rather not hear. Someone said
that they wouldn't want a single frame of "2001" to be cut, lest the
experience be changed. I think that applies more aptly to Cassavetes'
films, because he never treads over the same thing twice, even when
he's doing exactly the same thing he's just done. It's always something
new. 9/10
35 out of 54 people found the following review useful:
Brava, Mabel!, 19 September 2004
Author:
Watt from Portland, OR
Everyone views movies differently. I for one didn't think we were meant
to wonder who was crazier Mabel or her husband. Cassavetes makes a
strong, bold (and rarely voiced) point...it is the husband! Mabel loved
her children, loved to dance and sing and for that she was committed.
Her "unidentified mental illness" seems to intensify when her husband
mistreated her and was physically or verbally violent...in my opinion
going a bit crazy after someone slaps you is probably healthier and
saner than being polite, demure, and rational.
Mabel loves life, shows her love without apology, and is severely
punished for it. Everyone else in the movie struggles to calm everyone
down and avoid showing too much emotion. While this may be more
socially acceptable it isn't sane or even healthy. Humans are emotional
beings...I for one say Brava! Mabel.
I think the director tips his hand and proves his point when Mabel's
character comes home from the institution. She hasn't seen her
children, husband, and family for 6 months and people assault her, some
she has never even met, before she even leaves the car. When she does
get inside the safety of her own home the people who put her away and
told to forget the past greet her with small talk and politeness! Then
when she finally sees her children after being told to "wait a minute"
she says to herself that she wants to remain calm and show "no
emotions." It seems obvious that this is a perfectly acceptable time to
be emotional but fresh from the institution she know being normal
doesn't allow you to be emotional. Emotions are scary, messy, and
inconvenient and I for one am thrilled that John Cassavetes didn't shy
away from them.
This movie is a true original.
24 out of 35 people found the following review useful:
Cassavetes's absorbing look at the nature of marriage; Falk and Rowlands are spellbinding, 24 December 2004
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Author:
MisterWhiplash from United States
While John Cassavetes is (rightly) revered for this film and other
under his belt, wife/key-star Gena Rowlands is the most fascinating and
emotionally gripping part to this work, Woman Under the Influence. Her
role as Mabel was perfect in a film that sometimes was not even as it
just tried for suburban truth. I was constantly curious about where her
character was headed, and even more so by how I did not feel any desire
at all to pass judgment on her. The moment I would have thought to
myself "well, she's too nuts to like" the film would be ruined for me.
And that is one of the more intelligent points to the film that
Cassavetes gets at.
This is, after all, a character-based film, with story merely in the
background. And with his two main characters we get a look at what has
been a stereotype for centuries- men are often brutal and stupid, women
are crazy. In this filmmakers world, it's just not that black and
white, however, but with the grays as pronounced as the highs and lows
in a melodrama; it's just the way he sees things, and it's a unique way
as well, where the soul and choice are the precedents over comfy
dramatic circumstance.
I loved the use of the camera in many scenes, how it felt like they
just shot and shot and went from one spot in the house to the next,
uncertain but knowing how to observe and look. In fact, the whole film
has the feel of a documentary, with the occasional dramatic touch such
as a close-up. But what turns it into being something special is that
Cassavetes understands that Falk, Rowlands and the others can take his
script and make it their own, very personally so. And as it happens,
Falk finds some of his most daring work here as Nick, a character who
in his own way has become as nuts as Mabel with the everyday grind of
living (which for both of them is filled with people, talk, pure
humanity).
For those who don't like the easy solutions in dramas, or want to know
the basics of the post-modern independent film movement, this is for
you. It might seem to drag in spots, but it seems to be even more
enveloping if one gives it the time to contemplate over those 'drag'
moments.
16 out of 22 people found the following review useful:
Courageous and Uncompromising Film, 12 June 2006
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Author:
Galina from Virginia, USA
This movie is a breakthrough - courageous and uncompromising view at
the family and at the marriage where both spouses love each other
deeply but they are both not well, they don't know how communicate when
somebody else present, even their own children. They could be happy on
the deserted island but not surrounded by friends and families. I was
fascinated by both, Peter Falk's and Gena Rowlands' performances. She
looked like a little girl, trapped in a woman's body - confused,
insecure, listening to what is inside of her. When she said to her
children, "I hope that you will never grow up", she meant it because
she never felt comfortable as a grown up. I could not take my yes off
Rowlands. Her performance is on par with the best study of nervous
breakdown I've seen, and this is Liv Ullmann in Bergman's "Face to
Face".
Peter Falks was also a revelation - I love him as Lt. Columbo in the TV
series but he is a completely different character here; in a way, he is
as mentally unbalanced as his wife is. The fact that he loves her but
never hesitates to abuse her makes him terrifying - you never know how
he will act in the next moment, and he does not know himself. Directing
and writing are absolutely first class, and I am very exited to see
more films by John Cassavetes, the Godfather of American Independent
film-making and a father of American "New Wave" 9.5/10
10 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
A Bruising Portrait of Mental Illness, 10 July 2007
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Author:
brocksilvey from United States
Eeesh, what a tough movie to sit through.
This two and a half hour movie left me sweaty, exhausted and hollowed
out. In its own way it's an extremely well done film, but I don't know
that it's an experience I want to repeat. Director John Cassavetes
follows a few months in the life of a family whose mother and wife
(Gena Rowlands) is suffering from mental illness, and the movie
consists of one long scene after another of her cracking up, or trying
not to crack up, and the various family members' reactions to her
cracking up. Peter Falk plays the husband and father who thinks that
mental illness is just some silly nonsense his wife should be able to
stop if she just tried hard enough. Rowlands has the showier role, but
Falk is the revelation here. His depiction of a husband who blusters
and shouts to hide his overwhelming sense of helplessness and fear is
superb.
Cassavetes's camera is relentless. We watch Rowlands suffer again and
again in long takes and intimate closeups. There are times when you
simply want to look away from the screen to help this poor woman
preserve a shred of dignity. The highlight of the film (or low point,
depending on your point of view) comes when Rowlands's character
returns home from a stay in an institution, and her family works
overtime to convince themselves that everything's fine when the
audience can see clearly that everything is not.
Bruising is the best word I can think of to describe this film.
Grade: A-
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Remarkable realism, 26 June 2009
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Author:
thieverycorp76 from United States
A Woman Under the Influence is an emotionally packed film that is
centered around a capricious yet troubled housewife named Mabel. Mother
to three young children and wife to her loving but volatile husband
Nick, Mabel's mind is consumed with gaining acceptance and being
reassured by those who surround her. Her psychological ability to keep
up with normal everyday situations eventually reaches full capacity and
she struggles to maintain emotional and mental competency.
Director Cassavetes intentionally chooses not to grant clemency to the
viewer. Imagine walking in late to an opera that's in it's third act
that almost seems like what Cassavetes does to the audience
introducing his depiction of a distressed family while they're in mid
flight. Gena Rowlands' portrayal of the likable but frail Mabel is
nothing short of incredible, and Peter Falk gives an equally remarkable
performance as Mabel's husband Nick. This film is not for the
weak-hearted nor for those seeking traditional entertainment. It's
distinctive approach to such an emotional journey will undoubtedly
impede many viewer's enjoyment - but for those who appreciate unique
cinema and realism, it doesn't get much better than this.
20 out of 33 people found the following review useful:
Influence of What?, 26 January 2005
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Author:
Chris Bright from London
Freewheeling Cassavetes study of a marriage.
I think its a misreading to conclude that either one of the main
characters is "crazy". Clearly Mabel has what you could call a
borderline manic personality, but there's little evidence that she is
unable to look after herself or her kids. The fact that she gets
committed says less about her condition than about the position of
women in the society Cassavetes is depicting. There is no sign that the
visiting kids are in any danger - their father freaks out only because
Mabel's behaviour falls outside his view of the conventional housewife.
Nick on the other hand is not considered "crazy" despite physically
attacking several people and getting his kids drunk, because men are
allowed a lot more licence. In the end he is as trapped by the social
pressures on him as Mabel is, except his frustration is turned
outwards, hers inwards.
When the family are alone there is no problem, Nick's difficulties
arise when Mabel is unable to fit the social role assigned to her -
notably it is his mother who drives him to have Mabel committed. The
"influence" Mabel is under turns out not to be alcohol as we first
expect but patriarchy expressed via Nick, and society's limited and
limiting expectations of women and of people in general. Put Mabel in a
San Francisco commune 6 years earlier and she would look normal.
A word on the acting. Having known people with rather more serious
cases of manic depression I can testify that Gena Rowlands' acting is
actually rather understated. Falk meanwhile is a revelation to those
who know him only from Colombo - his portrayal of the inarticulate,
confused, occasionally violent but still very loving Nick is perfect -
he just IS this guy.
Incidentally, you can see where Scorsese took many of the ideas for his
most personal films from (notably "Mean Streets" which apparently he
made after Cassavetes criticised "Boxcar Bertha") although he tidied
them up and made them commercial. He even copied Cassevetes' lead here
by putting his own mother in "Goodfellas".
19 out of 32 people found the following review useful:
Awesomely powerful, 22 December 1999
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Author:
Trawick from New York
This is probably one of the most intense films ever made, but to label it
"intense" is to almost do it injustice. After all, almost all of the
greatest works of art are intense, aren't they?
Although it is quite possible to find certain themes that run through this
work, the movie almost seems to resist themes. Within its two-and-a-half
hour running time, John Cassavetes touches on some of the most indescribable
emotional states that human beings ever experience.
Technically, the film is equally excellent, with a nice minimalist score by
Bill Harwood, softly beautiful cinematography, and fascinating editing. But
all of this is merely in service of the brilliant performances by Rowlands,
Falk, and the rest of the cast.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Real life under the influence of Cassavetes, 14 April 2010
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Author:
revival05 from Sweden
Textbook gender related observation: When Jack Nicholson's character
acts eccentric in One Flew Over the Cuuko's Nest, nobody will believe
he's crazy. When Gena Rowland's character is eccentric in this film,
everyone assumes she is.
But that is only one of many realisations one makes observing A Woman
Under the Influence. It is an intricate film, as was John Cassavetes a
filmmaker who always filled his films with as many things as possible.
Whatever his films were about, it always had to do with the truth of
human nature and human life in modern society. In one example of great
main leads in his films, Cassavetes' real-wife Rowlands is playing
Mabel, the woman of the title, the house-wife of a Peter Falk's
construction foreman Nick. Everybody knows that Mabel is more or less
"crazy". Why does everybody "know" this? She is eccentric, has got
funny mannerisms, at time she talks and acts randomly about things that
make no sense. She is a human being with a desire to achieve, but
nobody has ever given her attention or respect as an individual. I
think Mabel's crisis is first and foremost that of an identity crisis.
She is empty inside, Nick says. That's because nobody has bothered to
look inside. Upon the demanding adult roles society demands on her, in
particular the task of motherhood, the result is breakdown. She is a
house-wife who spends her days wandering around the house trance-like,
she cooks and cleans and sews and all the time she acts as if that
somehow would be an absurdity. She tries to be nice to the guests but
it all results in awkward silence and embarrassment. What should she be
doing, then? Who is she?
I think any viewer judging that she is in fact "insane" is an enemy to
the film's intent and soul. Rowlands portrait of this woman is a
hauntingly perfect portrayal of mental illness, certainly, but her
state is that of extreme confusion rather than being someone who's
simply "lost it". This is a woman aimlessly struggling to get out of a
sea of under-nourished self-esteem and identity loss. We don't know how
or when it started, but the more into the film we get the more we
understand. Her mind is like a tapestry that Cassavetes gradually
unfolds. In the first scene she is running around trying to place her
children in the car for a trip with their grandmother's. Cassavetes
knows that the clever viewer will relate the title's "influence" to
that of gender related, domestic pressure. But that's only the
beginning, I think, of what this woman is suffering from. It's not
until the end we realise that maybe her family wasn't all that
supportive of her, her father seems genuinely uninterested in whatever
any diagnosis could be and her mother is just Mabel's fourth child. And
if Mabel is crazy, Falk's character of Nick is certainly just as crazy.
We don't realise that until after a while either. But he acts just as
random upon situations he's not familiar with, and he also has bursts
of eccentric (mis)behaviour. You'll have to look more closely to
discover this perhaps, he is after all a friendly looking male
patriarch and your brain is less inclined to view him as crazy.
Mabel, who is still dependent on him and her domestic safety (that's
the crux, I think, of her entire problem), says "I'll be anything you
want" and Nick tells her to be herself. But she hasn't got a
personality of her own, her emotions conflict her roles and duties but
neither become clear to her. What's worse, nobody is interested in her,
or has the slightest notion she might have anything worthwhile. "Be
yourself", Nick says, but in fact he's not interested in who she is,
and he is (without giving too much thought to it) putting demands on
her, expecting her to fulfill her duties which is one of the very
reasons she's all messed up. He's just not that clever. It's not just
that he is a blue collar guy, he seems totally unable to communicate
personally with his wife and, certainly, with his children. Basically,
he hasn't got much of a personality either, but being a man that
reasoning is considered as abstract and not a psychological case. In
any case, Nick and Mabel surely love each other, but none of them have
the capacity to cope with one another, or even comprehend their
surroundings. Towards the end of the film, all Nick can tell Mabel is
"Stop what you're doing". There's a childish desperation in him that is
channeled through his gender but just as "crazy" as Mabel's lack of
self-confidence and self-realising even.
I said that you observe this film, and I mean it. It is more than
realistic, it is profoundly real. Everyone have met couples like Mabel
and Nick, couples who's lack of harmony and functionality is so great,
it can't stay behind the social curtain. I'm saying that as point of
reference. We've all left the dinner table at some point. "Maybe it's
time we'd go home". As much as any documentary, Cassavetes films moved
in real time, here and now, portraying life as it is. He knew that
realism doesn't mean tragedy or brutality. Life is rarely dramatic and
offers no cathartic finales. Life just is what we are living, it's not
easy to comprehend and it doesn't offer security. For the future, we
feel great hope but we also feel great fear. This film has got horrible
moments, but it's horrible moments of truth. It's also got humorous
moments of truth. These judgments are in a sense arbitrary. It's real
life. It's the rarely seen beauty of truth that Cassavetes conjured up
in his films. Rowlands is there to capture the essence of it, the
notion that we are all human beings who need and deserve to be loved,
no matter if we have table manners or not.
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