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Garbo Talks

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Director
  
Sidney Lumet

Music director
  
Cy Coleman

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

6.4/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy, Drama

Screenplay
  
Larry Grusin

Writer
  
Larry Grusin

Language
  
English

Garbo Talks movie poster

Release date
  
October 12, 1984 (1984-10-12)

Cast
  
Anne Bancroft
(Estelle Rolfe),
Ron Silver
(Gilbert Rolfe),
Carrie Fisher
(Lisa Rolfe),
Catherine Hicks
(Jane Mortimer),
Steven Hill
(Walter Rolfe),
Howard Da Silva
(Angelo Dakakis)

Similar movies
  
Related Sidney Lumet movies

Garbo talks trailer 1984


Garbo Talks is a 1984 American comedy-drama film directed by Sidney Lumet and starring Anne Bancroft, Ron Silver and Carrie Fisher, with a cameo appearance by Betty Comden as Greta Garbo.

Contents

Garbo Talks wwwgstaticcomtvthumbdvdboxart8549p8549dv8

The movie was written by Larry Grusin and also stars Catherine Hicks and Steven Hill. It also featured the final screen appearance of veteran actors Howard Da Silva and Hermione Gingold. Bancroft was nominated for a Golden Globe.

Greta Garbo's low, husky voice and Swedish accent was first heard on screen in Eugene O'Neill's Anna Christie (1930), which was publicized with the slogan "Garbo Talks."

Despite many favorable reviews from critics, the film failed at the box office.

Plot

Estelle Rolfe's (Anne Bancroft) social activism and quick temper cause a lot of inconvenience for her grown son Gilbert, who often must go to a New York City jail precinct to pay her bail.

Gilbert is willing to go to great lengths for his mother, though, after a doctor's examination diagnoses a terminal brain tumor. Estelle's last wish is to meet the movie star she has idolized all her life, the reclusive Greta Garbo.

Lisa Rolfe (Carrie Fisher) sympathizes, but when husband Gilbert abandons his job to devote his days to the search for Garbo, she can't take it anymore and abandons him. An aspiring actress in Gilbert's office, Jane Mortimer (Catherine Hicks), takes a liking to Gilbert and a romantic interest seems entirely possible, but first comes Gilbert's increasingly futile search for a famous woman who does not care to be found.

Leads eventually take Gilbert to an elderly actress, Elizabeth, who once knew Garbo, and to an aging paparazzo, Angelo, who is somewhat acquainted with Garbo's habits and whereabouts, but neither is able to get Gilbert to her. Estelle's estranged husband, Walter, visits the hospital to say an emotional goodbye.

With little time to spare, Gilbert is finally able to meet Garbo face-to-face and explain his mother's situation. Without a word, Garbo goes straight to Estelle's hospital room for a bedside chat, where Estelle herself ends up doing all of the talking.

Gilbert is at peace with how his mother's life came to an end. As he strolls with Jane in the park, she and others are startled by the sight of Garbo walking by. Even more startling to Jane is when Garbo catches a glimpse of Gilbert and says hello.

Cast

  • Anne Bancroft as Estelle Rolfe
  • Ron Silver as Gilbert Rolfe
  • Carrie Fisher as Lisa Rolfe
  • Betty Comden (uncredited) as Greta Garbo
  • Catherine Hicks as Jane Mortimer
  • Steven Hill as Walter Rolfe
  • Howard Da Silva as Angelo Dokakis
  • Dorothy Loudon as Sonya Apollinar
  • Harvey Fierstein as Bernie Whitlock
  • Hermione Gingold as Elizabeth Rennick
  • Alice Spivak as Claire Rolfe
  • Mary McDonnell as Lady Capulet
  • Adolph Green as Himself
  • Andrzej Bartkowiak (uncredited)
  • Cy Coleman (uncredited) as Himself
  • Greta Garbo (uncredited archive footage) as Herself
  • Charles Pendleton (uncredited) as Construction worker
  • George Plimpton (uncredited) as Himself
  • Reception

    Vincent Canby of the New York Times in his October 12, 1984 review wrote of the film having "a number of comic scenes and lines that are played with great verve by Miss Bancroft and Mr. Silver."

    Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times on the same day panned the film, awarding it one star of a possible four. Ebert wrote: "Garbo Talks starts out as a great idea for a movie, and when it's over, it's still a great idea for a movie, but the problem is, there are no great ideas in between."

    Garbo talks 1984


    References

    Garbo Talks Wikipedia
    Garbo Talks IMDb Garbo Talks themoviedb.org