| Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) | Release Date: October 9, 1981 | CRITIC SCORE DISTRIBUTION | ||
|
Positive:
5
Mixed:
2
Negative:
3
|
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Critic Reviews
This particular kind of social satire, a quick and deft combination of fashions in clothes, words and romance, can be done better on the screen than in books, where it requires the enumeration of too many details, or on stage, where the details can't be seen. Rich and Famous, directed by George Cukor, does it brilliantly. [9 Oct 1981, p.21]
This swiftly paced comedy is a deliciously impure compound of old-fashioned "women's film" formulas and up-to-the-minute sexual mores. It is, from moment to moment, trashy and touching, literate and ludicrous, bitchily funny and as full of sharp, sophisticated insights as it is of appalling blind spots. Part soap opera, part comedy of manners, it refurbishes shopworn cliches into a gloriously unrespectable entertainment. [12 Oct 1981, p.98]
One of the pleasures of "Old Acquaintance" was watching two fanged pros
chew scenery. One of the pleasures of Rich and Famous is watching two
toothless amateurs gum everything in sight, including each other (the
penultimate confrontation, when the teddy bear, symbol of the friendship,
is ripped into stuffing, is outrageously funny). [10 Oct 1981]
The lead performances, by Jacqueline Bisset and Candice Bergen as two college friends who become competing novelists in later life, have the Cukor audacity without the Cukor grace, and his visual expressiveness is in evidence only sporadically. Yet the film stays in the mind for its dark asides on aging, loneliness, and the troubling survival of sexual needs.
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