Winslow Leach
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2007
- Messages
- 3,620
- Reaction score
- 13
Thanks, Sesameguy! Purple Rose is one of my favorite Woody Allen films, although if I had to choose an all-time fave, I'd pick Bananas. I would *pick* Bananas, hahahahaha!
Seriously.
Purple Rose is a sweet little film. Although it has a nice dose of comedy (when the Jeff Daniels character leaves the screen and enters the real world, the other characters in the film within the film are lost, and have no idea what to do), to me, the movie is ultimately sad. The Mia Farrow character is trapped in a loveless, abusive marriage and when the unthinkable happens--her favorite screen personality literally walks out of the movie she has memorized, and into her life--she experiences some happiness, showing her wide-eyed new friend when the "real world" (the film is set during the Great Depression) is really like, while her companion can't understand why the world isn't like his movie world--packed with adventure and high-society parties.
Woody allows the film to get more complicated when he introduces the actor (also played by Jeff Daniels, but of course not at all like his screen persona) into the storyline. Now poor Mia Farrow has three men in her life: her sleazy husband, a totally sincere (but fictional) movie character, and the Hollywood actor who plays him, who isn't too happy his "creation" is on the loose.
Purple Rose is a wonderful film, sandwiched between the wacky Broadway Danny Rose (1984) and the award-winning Hannah and Her Sisters (1986).
Seriously.
Purple Rose is a sweet little film. Although it has a nice dose of comedy (when the Jeff Daniels character leaves the screen and enters the real world, the other characters in the film within the film are lost, and have no idea what to do), to me, the movie is ultimately sad. The Mia Farrow character is trapped in a loveless, abusive marriage and when the unthinkable happens--her favorite screen personality literally walks out of the movie she has memorized, and into her life--she experiences some happiness, showing her wide-eyed new friend when the "real world" (the film is set during the Great Depression) is really like, while her companion can't understand why the world isn't like his movie world--packed with adventure and high-society parties.
Woody allows the film to get more complicated when he introduces the actor (also played by Jeff Daniels, but of course not at all like his screen persona) into the storyline. Now poor Mia Farrow has three men in her life: her sleazy husband, a totally sincere (but fictional) movie character, and the Hollywood actor who plays him, who isn't too happy his "creation" is on the loose.
Purple Rose is a wonderful film, sandwiched between the wacky Broadway Danny Rose (1984) and the award-winning Hannah and Her Sisters (1986).