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Frances (film)

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Director
  
Graeme Clifford

Music director
  
J.J. Barry

Duration
  

Language
  
English

7.4/10
IMDb


Genre
  
Biography, Drama, Romance

Screenplay
  
Nicholas Kazan

Country
  
United States

Frances (film) movie poster

Release date
  
December 3, 1982 (1982-12-03)

Writer
  
Eric Bergren, Christopher De Vore, Nicholas Kazan

Cast
  
Jessica Lange
(Frances Farmer),
Kim Stanley
(Lillian Farmer),
Sam Shepard
(Harry York),
Bart Burns
(Ernest Farmer),
Jonathan Banks
(Hitchhiker),
Bonnie Bartlett
(Studio Stylist)

Similar movies
  
Entourage
,
Dallas Buyers Club
,
The Wolf of Wall Street
,
The Theory of Everything
,
The Walk
,
Goodfellas

Tagline
  
Her story is shocking, disturbing, compelling... and true.

John barry frances end titles original film version 1982


Frances is a 1982 American biographical film starring Jessica Lange as actress Frances Farmer. Kim Stanley and Sam Shepard appeared in supporting roles.

Contents

Frances (film) movie scenes

The film chronicles Farmer's life from 1930s high school student, her short lived film career in the 1930s, her 1940s institutionalization for alleged mental illness and her 1950s deinstitutionalization and appearance on This Is Your Life. Upon its release, the film was advertised as a purportedly true account of Farmer's life but the script was largely fictional and sensationalized. In particular, the film depicts Farmer as having been lobotomized; this is reputed to have never happened.

Frances (film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters6636p6636p

Plot

Frances (film) Frances Movie Review Film Summary 1983 Roger Ebert

Born in Seattle, Washington, Frances Elena Farmer is a rebel from a young age, winning $100.00 in 1931 from The Scholastic Art and Writing Awards for a high school essay called God Dies. In 1935, she becomes controversial again when she wins (and accepts) an all-expenses-paid trip to the USSR to visit its Moscow Art Theatre. Determined to become an actress, Frances is equally determined not to play the Hollywood game: she refuses to acquiesce to publicity stunts, and insists upon appearing on screen without makeup. She marries her first husband, Dwanye Steele, despite being advised not to, but cheats on him with alleged Communist Harry York on the night of her hometown's premiere of Come and Get It. Her defiance attracts the attention of Broadway playwright Clifford Odets, who convinces Frances that her future rests with the Group Theatre.

Frances (film) Frances Wikipedia

But after leaving Hollywood for New York City and appearing in the Group Theatre play, Golden Boy, Frances learns, much to her chagrin, that the Group Theatre exploited her fame only to draw in more customers, replacing her with a wealthy actress for her family's needed financial backing for the play's London tour, and Odets ends their affair upon his wife's (Luise Rainer) upcoming return from Europe. Her desperate attempts to restart her film career upon returning to Hollywood results in being cast in unchallenging roles in forgettable B-films. Her increased dependence on alcohol and amphetamines in the 1940s and the pressures brought on her by her wannabe mother, who becomes her legal guardian after her multiple legal problems, result in a complete nervous breakdown. After her first hospitalization at Kimball Sanitarium in La Crescenta, she tells her mother that she doesn't want to return to Hollywood but instead wants to live alone in the countryside, assaulting and threatening her in the resulting argument. While institutionalized at Western State Hospital, Frances is abused by the powers-that-be: she is forced to undergo insulin and electroconvulsive shock therapy, is cruelly beaten, periodically raped by the male orderlies and visiting soldiers from a nearby military base and involuntarily lobotomized before her release in 1950.

Frances (film) Frances

In 1958, Frances is paid honor on Ralph Edwards' This Is Your Life television program, which Harry York watches from his home. When asked about alcoholism, illegal drugs and mental illness, Farmer denied them all and said, "If a person is treated like a patient, they are apt to act like one". The film ends just after a party honoring her at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel with Farmer walking down a street with Harry York, talking about her parents' deaths, how she sold their house and that she's a "faceless sinner" with a slower paced lifestyle ahead of her in the future. The end credits state that she moved to Indianapolis shortly afterwards, hosting a local daytime TV program (Frances Farmer Presents) from 1958-1964 before dying alone of esophageal cancer on August 1, 1970 at age 56.

Cast

Frances (film) Amazoncom Frances Jessica Lange Kim Stanley Sam Shepard Bart

  • Jessica Lange as Frances Farmer
  • Kim Stanley as Lillian Van Ornum Farmer
  • Sam Shepard as Harry York
  • Bart Burns as Ernest Farmer
  • Jonathan Banks as Hitchhiker
  • Jeffrey DeMunn as Clifford Odets
  • Kevin Costner as Luther (uncredited)
  • Zelda Rubinstein as Mental patient
  • Anjelica Huston as Mental patient
  • Pamela Gordon as Mental patient
  • Reception

    Frances (film) Frances

    Frances holds a 68% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 25 reviews.

    Frances (film) Frances Movie Forums

    Anthony Hopkins, after working with Jessica Lange on Titus has proclaimed that Lange's performance as Frances Farmer is the best performance by any actress. Lange has ranked her performance as Frances Farmer as the greatest part she has ever played onscreen.

    Awards and nominations

    Frances (film) Frances Movie Review Film Summary 1983 Roger Ebert

    Frances was nominated for Academy Awards for Best Actress in a Leading Role (Jessica Lange) and Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Kim Stanley). The film was also entered into the 13th Moscow International Film Festival where Lange won the award for Best Actress.

    References

    Frances (film) Wikipedia
    Frances (film) IMDbFrances (film) Rotten TomatoesFrances (film) Roger EbertFrances (film) themoviedb.org


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