Mia Farrow's personal life takes a turn for the worse when she engages in a long relationship with Woody Allen.Mia Farrow's personal life takes a turn for the worse when she engages in a long relationship with Woody Allen.Mia Farrow's personal life takes a turn for the worse when she engages in a long relationship with Woody Allen.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaPatsy Kensit previously played Mia Farrow's daughter in The Great Gatsby (1974), the filming of which is partially recreated in this film.
- GoofsAlthough Maureen O'Sullivan retained her Irish accent for her entire life, she is not depicted as having one in the film.
- Quotes
Woody Allen: The heart wants what it wants.
Mia Farrow: The heart? You-you don't have one! I'd look a little lower.
- ConnectionsFeatured in By the Way, Woody Allen Is Innocent (2020)
- SoundtracksThe More I See You
Music by Harry Warren
Featured review
It was a tremendous boon to TV and tabloids when celebrity Woody Allen was revealed to be having sex with his adult adopted daughter. Because it was a case of perversion and child-molestation, except that Allen apparently waited until the girl was over age 18 to make his move. And because the victim was legally an adult, media were under no obligation to protect the privacy of the victim. The whole sick spectacle could be exploited guilt-free.
There is a curious fascination to this film, it appears to be completely saturated with unintentional comedy. The guy who plays Woody Allen absolutely nailed the part, and he is made up so realistically, it creates the perfect illusion of what Woody Allen would say and do in his private life, if his lines were written by a 17 year old. The actress who played aging screen goddess Maureen O'Sullivan is also a singular performance of sophomoric material. All in all, this telefilm is an excellently staged and acted rendition of a surreal imagining of a disgusting, real-life tragedy.
Now of course, things are better: we have reality TV, so we can watch this kind of twisted garbage unfold in real time.
There is a curious fascination to this film, it appears to be completely saturated with unintentional comedy. The guy who plays Woody Allen absolutely nailed the part, and he is made up so realistically, it creates the perfect illusion of what Woody Allen would say and do in his private life, if his lines were written by a 17 year old. The actress who played aging screen goddess Maureen O'Sullivan is also a singular performance of sophomoric material. All in all, this telefilm is an excellently staged and acted rendition of a surreal imagining of a disgusting, real-life tragedy.
Now of course, things are better: we have reality TV, so we can watch this kind of twisted garbage unfold in real time.
- flapdoodle64
- Mar 20, 2014
- Permalink
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- Mia: Child of Hollywood
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Top Gap
By what name was Love and Betrayal: The Mia Farrow Story (1995) officially released in Canada in French?
Answer