Postcards from the Edge | |
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Directed by | Mike Nichols |
Screenplay by | Carrie Fisher |
Based on | Postcards from the Edge by Carrie Fisher |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Michael Ballhaus |
Edited by | Sam O'Steen |
Music by | Carly Simon |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 101 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $22 million [1] |
Box office | $63.4 million |
Postcards from the Edge is a 1990 American comedy-drama film directed by Mike Nichols. The screenplay by Carrie Fisher is based on her 1987 autobiographical novel of the same title. The film stars Meryl Streep, Shirley MacLaine, and Dennis Quaid.
After a drug overdose, actress Suzanne Vale is admitted to a rehab center at the behest of her mother, veteran actress Doris Mann. Suzanne must rebuild her acting career and life after overcoming a cocaine and Percodan addiction. When Suzanne is ready to return to work, her agent informs her that the studio's insurance policy will cover her only if she lives with a "responsible" individual--such as her mother Doris. However, Suzanne is hesitant to return to her manipulative, self-absorbed mother, from whom she has struggled to escape since growing up in her shadow.
Producer Jack Faulkner, who drove Suzanne to the hospital during her last overdose, runs into her on set and confesses his love for her. They go on a date, but Suzanne's euphoria is short-lived when she discovers that Jack is also sleeping with another actress. Meanwhile, Suzanne's sleazy business manager, Marty Wiener, has absconded with all her money. Amid these struggles, Suzanne learns that the paternalistic director Lowell Kolchek has more work for her as long as she stays sober.
However, Suzanne's troubles escalate when she discovers that her mother has crashed her car while drunk. Suzanne rushes to her bedside and they have a heart-to-heart conversation while Suzanne fixes her makeup and conceals her nearly bald head with a scarf. Doris musters her courage and faces the waiting media. Meanwhile, Suzanne runs into Dr. Frankenthal, who had helped her after her last overdose, and he invites her to see a film. Suzanne declines, saying she is not ready to date yet, but Dr. Frankenthal tells her he is willing to wait.
The film ends with Suzanne performing a country song during filming of Lowell Kolchek's latest movie.
Fisher said in the DVD commentary that Jerry Orbach filmed a scene as Suzanne's father, which was later cut.
In discussing adapting the book for the screen, director Mike Nichols commented, "For quite a long time we pushed pieces around, but then we went with the central story of a mother passing the baton to her daughter." [2] He added, "Carrie doesn't draw on her life any more than Flaubert did. It's just that his life wasn't so well known." [2]
Nichols began pre-production in New York, where he assembled a group of actors to run lines from the script in order to perfect it. In return, the actors, including Annette Bening, were given small roles in the film when it filmed. [3]
Responding to questions about how closely the film's relationship between Suzanne and Doris parallels her relationship with her mother, Debbie Reynolds, Carrie Fisher stated, "I wrote about a mother actress and a daughter actress. I'm not shocked that people think it's about me and my mother. It's easier for them to think I have no imagination for language, just a tape recorder with endless batteries." [2] In the DVD commentary, she notes that her mother wanted to portray Doris, but Nichols cast Shirley MacLaine instead. In her 2013 autobiography, Unsinkable, Reynolds recounted that Nichols told her, "You're not right for the part." [4]
Blue Rodeo accompanied Meryl Streep on "I'm Checkin' Out", written by Shel Silverstein. Other songs performed in the film include "I'm Still Here" (sung by MacLaine) and "You Don't Know Me" (sung by Streep).
The film opened in 1,013 theaters in the United States and Canada on September 14, 1990, and grossed $7,871,856 during its opening weekend, ranking number one at the US box office. [5] It eventually grossed $39,071,603 in the US and Canada [6] and $24.3 million internationally, [7] for a worldwide total of $63.4 million.
On the website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 83% based on 87 reviews, with an average rating of 7.4/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Uniting a pair of powerhouse talents with a smart, sharply written script, Postcards from the Edge makes compelling drama out of reality-inspired trauma." [8] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 71, based on 18 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews. [9] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale. [10]
Vincent Canby of The New York Times said the film "seems to have been a terrifically genial collaboration between the writer and the director, Miss Fisher's tale of odd-ball woe being the perfect material for Mr. Nichols's particular ability to discover the humane sensibility within the absurd." [11]
Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times observed, "What's disappointing about the movie is that it never really delivers on the subject of recovery from addiction. There are some incomplete, dimly seen, unrealized scenes in the rehab center, and then desultory talk about offscreen AA meetings. But the film is preoccupied with gossip; we're encouraged to wonder how many parallels there are between the Streep and MacLaine characters and their originals, Fisher and Debbie Reynolds... Postcards from the Edge contains too much good writing and too many good performances to be a failure, but its heart is not in the right place." [12]
Hal Hinson of The Washington Post said, "Meryl Streep gives the most fully articulated comic performance of her career, the one she's always hinted at and made us hope for." He felt the film's earlier section was "the movie's best, primarily because Nichols is so focused on Streep. In fact, almost nothing else seems to matter to him... But while Nichols is servicing his star, he lets the other areas of the film go slack... [He] is finely attuned to the natural surreality of a movie set, but when he moves away from the show-biz satire and concentrates on the mother-daughter relationship, the movie falters." [13]
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