I know -- I'm supposed to like 'Manhattan' more. I know -- this straddles the line between homage and rip-off when it comes to Fellini...
But it's so physically beautiful, and so full of unforgettable moments of humor and heartbreak, that I can watch it over and over and just see more and more in it. It's an odd, wonderful mix of sad, angry, surreal and very funny. It's a chilling, sad, hysterical look at the emptiness of being famous, at what it means to not trust your own worth, what it means to be scared of happiness.
The jump cut sequence with Charlotte Rampling is one of the best, most incisive pieces of film-making I've ever seen. Period.
For me, it's a tragically underrated film. I'm thrilled to see it getting support here. I guess it can be validly criticized, but my emotional reaction to the nit-picking is 'who cares?' This is brave, unique, special film-making in a world with far too little.
Horrifyingly, along with many other great Allen films (including Annie Hall!) , it's currently out-of-print in the US on DVD. I can only hope this means an upgraded re-release of these films is on the way, but there's always a danger they're caught up in some kind of rights battle. So if you want to own these classics, you might want to grab some good used copies while you can.
Stardust Memories
1980
Action / Comedy / Drama
Stardust Memories
1980
Action / Comedy / Drama
Plot summary
Renowned filmmaker Sandy Bates is in a professional transition, directing largely comedies early in his career now wanting to direct more serious movies so that he can explore the meaning of life, most specifically his own. Most are fighting him all along the way, including the movie going public, who continually tell him that they love his movies especially the earlier funny ones, to studio executives who are trying to insert comic elements wherever possible into his current movie in production. He reluctantly agrees to attend a weekend long film festival of his movies. Despite the throng of requests for his time, he is further able to reflect on his life as he addresses the questions at the post screening Q&A sessions. He also reflects specifically on his love life as his current girlfriend, married Isobel, shows up unexpectedly, and as he starts to fall for festival attendee Daisy - at the festival with her Columbia professor boyfriend, Jack Abel - who reminds him of Dorrie, a neurotic former girlfriend who he probably considers the one that unfortunately got away.
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Terribly underrated Allen film - one of his very best
Imperfect, but it's still one of Woody's smartest scripts, with other incentives...
...and, in Sandy Bates, the lead of his satire on celebrity, loves, and his usual themes of turmoil over life and death, is a sense that Woody Allen is doing one of two things (or both perhaps)- taking from his own life and thinly disguising characters and situations, or using his own public image in film's culture to look through the looking glass slightly at some of his popular themes. This is not to say that the film is one of his very best. I could see what Allen was doing, for example, with the scenes and instances of tipping the hat to Fellini and his masterwork 8 1/2- the two films share that common thread of an artist in an overall funk of bittersweet memories and creative confusion. But while Fellini made his film out of a burning need to reveal all of his love for cinema out of his angst(s) after La Dolce Vita, Allen's track record shows that he's near incapable of waiting around too long to make a film (he's averaged nearly a film a year in 37 years up till 2003) so much of what comes forth in Stardust Memories isn't as much autobiographical as it is told through a character filtered with and not with himself. In short, a lot of the 8 1/2 dues were my least favorite parts in the movie (though I did like the quick Superman-type mementos).
But does that make Stardust Memories a failure, pretentious? Not to my point of view- once Allen starts the story rolling, and he gets his characters/actors into the gist of the film, it goes along like most other Allen films involving phobias, fears, loves (women),and sophisticated sense of varied parody. There are moments that Allen's stand-up act is injected into the mix, or a scene that could've been a chapter from one of his books, but mostly the audience gets the sense of his OWN love of cinema via Sandy Bates. Bates is another one of those Woody characters that seems all the more impressively formed and executed since it feels like the Woody we know, but Bates is just a little more on the edge of satire, viewing into his own self-doubts and trying to see if there can be any hope or meaning to it all- or if he can tell funny jokes.
The script contains some of the most memorable moments of Allen's career in one-liners (there are a few from the fans and autograph-hounds that stick out) and in having a natural flow, close to a type of poetry, in the conversations and dialog in the film. Even if one doesn't laugh, it definitely shows the work of a wonderful writer at the peak of his game. His direction is also intrinsically interesting, especially how he uses the unique, dark, and evoking cinematography by the great Gordon Willis, and the unusual editing stylizing by Susan Morse (though, once again, some of these editing tricks are to Fellini's credit). And the performances work well enough for the material, more often than not, with Charlotte Rampling as Dorrie, Bates' wonderfully stressed ex-girlfriend, Marie-Christine Barrault as Isobel, an old friend who left her husband for him, Jessica Harper as Daisy, whom he falls head over heels for while she and her professor-boyfriend are at the Stardust attending Bates' appearance(s),and Tony Roberts, who had a worthy supporting role in Annie Hall, pops up here as well.
I can recommend Stardust Memories for Woody Allen's main fan base, as it gives those who love his early films and his films that have more mature subject matter a bit of a (delightful) challenge. I don't know if I could recommend it however, as the very first film someone could see if the person wants to start of his films. There is an amusing quality to it that could give non-Woody fans a second thought about the filmmaker's work, but it's hard to say. It's not an altogether easy film to watch, or is it a masterwork like Manhattan. By the end of it, never-the-less, my time was not the least wasted, I knew I saw some ingenious scenes and jokes here and there, and there was a subtlety to it that has me liking it and responding more to it on repeat viewings. Is it homage? Sure, but it's a blend of homage (or as Roberts says "ripping it off") and a personal, nearly original style, and it ends up, on a repeat viewing, a major work. 9.5/10
"I would trade that Oscar for one more second of life"
While not for me one of Woody Allen's greatest films, Stardust Memories is along with Interiors one of his most under-estimated as well as one of his cleverest and most personal. It does ramble on a little too much sometimes and it does end on a strange note. But while one can understand why people would not like it- maybe they found the more biting and satirical moments hard to take (I think it was made very clear what Allen was trying to do)- Stardust Memories from a personal point of view was a great film from Allen and film in general and didn't deserve the hate it got at the time. The black and white and the photography do look gorgeous. The script is a great mix of truly biting satire, hilariously acerbic comedy and touching drama structured tightly and well blended, the dialogue being some of Allen's smartest and most thought-provoking. Stardust Memories pays homage to Fellini and 8 1/2, like Allen did in Interiors with Bergman, as can be seen in the more dream-like parts, very wittily done and photographed sumptuously. The story is not that hard to follow and while paced deliberately it still draws you in due to the homages, satire, how character relationships are explored and the situations depicted. The characters are as ever with Woody Allen are neurotic but also very real, Allen's character is not "likeable" but what he thinks of his fans and critics and how they treat him is something that can be related to. Allen directs assuredly and gives a very good performance as well, while Charlotte Rampling is indeed breathtaking and believable with Allen chemistry-wise. Jessica Harper underplays affectingly, in fact all of the acting is great. Look out for the brief appearance of Sharon Stone. Overall, a technically beautiful, smartly written and excellently played film, not a personal favourite from Allen but Stardust Memories is great and deserving of more credit. 9/10 Bethany Cox