Sneha Girap (Editor)

Stardust Memories

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
7.6
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron7.6
7.6
1 Ratings
100
90
80
71
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Woody Allen

Screenplay
  
Woody Allen

Duration
  

Language
  
English

7.6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy, Drama

Initial DVD release
  
July 5, 2000

Writer
  
Woody Allen

Stardust Memories movie poster

Release date
  
September 26, 1980 (1980-09-26)

Cast
  
Woody Allen
(Sandy Bates), (Dorrie),
Jessica Harper
(Daisy),
Marie-Christine Barrault
(Isobel),
Tony Roberts
(Tony),
Daniel Stern
(Actor)

Similar movies
  
,
Back in Time
,
Hugo
,
Saving Mr. Banks
,
Capturing Avatar
,
Strength and Honor: Creating the World of Gladiator

Stardust memories 1980 trailer


Stardust Memories is a 1980 American comedy-drama film written and directed by Woody Allen and starring himself, Charlotte Rampling, Jessica Harper, Marie-Christine Barrault and Sharon Stone in her film debut. The film is about a filmmaker who recalls his life and his loves - the inspirations for his films - while attending a retrospective of his work. The film is shot in black and white and is reminiscent of Federico Fellini's (1963), which it parodies.

Contents

Stardust Memories movie scenes

Stardust Memories was nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award for Best Comedy written directly for screen, but was not warmly received by critics on its original release, and is not among the most renowned works in Allen's filmography. The film has nonetheless been re-evaluated to some extent, with modern reception more often positive than negative. Allen, who denies that the work is autobiographical and has expressed regret that audiences interpreted it as such, even considers it to be one of his finest, alongside The Purple Rose of Cairo and Match Point.

Stardust Memories movie scenes

Plot

Stardust Memories movie scenes

The film follows famous filmmaker Sandy Bates, who is plagued by fans who prefer his "earlier, funnier movies" to his more recent artistic efforts, while he tries to reconcile his conflicting attraction to two very different women: the earnest intellectual Daisy and the more maternal Isobel. Meanwhile, he is also haunted by memories of his ex-girlfriend, the unstable Dorrie.

Cast

Stardust Memories movie scenes

  • Woody Allen as Sandy Bates
  • Charlotte Rampling as Dorrie
  • Jessica Harper as Daisy
  • Marie-Christine Barrault as Isobel
  • Tony Roberts as Tony
  • Daniel Stern as Actor
  • Amy Wright as Shelley
  • Helen Hanft as Vivian Orkin
  • John Rothman as Jack Abel
  • Anne De Salvo as Sandy's Sister
  • Leonardo Cimino as Sandy's Analyst
  • Sharon Stone as Pretty Girl on Train (Of the train window through which she blows a kiss during the opening sequence, Stone remarked, "I gave it my best shot to melt that sucker".)
  • Allen's long-time manager and producer Jack Rollins as a Studio Executive (Rollins and his partner Charles H. Joffe produced all of Allen's films from 1969 to 1993, including Stardust Memories.)
  • Judith Roberts as Singer-"Three Little Words"
  • Candy Loving, Playboy magazine's 25th Anniversary Playmate, as Tony's Girlfriend
  • Brent Spiner as a Fan in Lobby
  • film critic Judith Crist as a Cabaret Patron
  • Irwin Keyes as a Fan Outside Hotel
  • Bonnie Hellman as a Fan Outside Hotel
  • Cynthia Gibb as a Young Girl Fan (credited as "Cindy Gibb")
  • Annie Korzen as Woman in Ice Cream Parlor (credited as "Anne Korzen")
  • James Otis as a UFO Follower
  • Alice Spivak as Nurse at Hospital
  • Armin Shimerman as a member of the Eulogy Audience
  • Laraine Newman as Film Executive (uncredited)
  • Louise Lasser as Sandy's Secretary (uncredited)
  • The Jazz Heaven Orchestra, which includes Joe Wilder, Hank Jones, Richie Pratt, Arvell Shaw, Earl Shendell.
  • William Zinsser in small role as a Catholic priest (Zinsser interviewed Woody Allen in 1963 for the Saturday Evening Post. After a chance encounter in 1980, Allen cast Zinsser, a Protestant, as a Catholic priest in Stardust Memories.)
  • Themes

    Stardust Memories movie scenes

    Allen has asserted that Stardust Memories is not an autobiographical work. "[Critics] thought that the lead character was me," the director is quoted as saying in Woody Allen on Woody Allen. "Not a fictional character but me, and that I was expressing hostility towards my audience. That was in no way the point of the film. It was about a character who is obviously having a sort of nervous breakdown and, in spite of success, has come to a point in his life where he is having a bad time."

    The conflict between the maternal, nurturing woman and the earnest, usually younger one, is a recurring theme in Allen's films. Like many of Allen's films, Stardust Memories incorporates several jazz recordings including those by such notables as Louis Armstrong, Django Reinhardt, and Chick Webb. The film's title alludes to the famous take of "Stardust" recorded in 1931 by Armstrong, wherein the trumpeter sings "oh, memory" three times in succession. However, it is the master take that plays in the movie during the sequence where Sandy is remembering the best moment of his life: looking at Dorrie while listening to Armstrong's recording of the song.

    The film deals with issues regarding religion, God, and philosophy; especially existentialism, psychology, symbolism, wars and politics. It is also about realism, relationships, and death. It refers to many questions about the meaning of life. It also ruminates on the role that luck plays in life, a theme Allen would revisit in Match Point.

    Production

    Filming locations include:

  • Asbury Park, New Jersey, USA
  • Belmar, New Jersey, USA
  • Deal, New Jersey, USA
  • Hoboken, New Jersey, USA
  • Neptune City, New Jersey, USA
  • Ocean Grove, New Jersey, USA
  • From the sleevenotes of MGM's 2000 DVD release: "Shot on location in the fall of 1979, Stardust Memories may look as though it takes place in a Victorian-style seaside hotel, but it was actually shot at the Ocean Grove Great Auditorium and the Methodist Episcopal Conference Center and Concert Hall in New Jersey. Most of the interiors, including the bedroom scenes, were shot in a vacant Sears Roebuck building, but the crew also recreated a vintage train at Filmways Studio in Harlem. To reproduce the movement of a rail car, the whole train was mounted on jacks and gently jostled back and forth."

    Reception

    Janet Maslin wrote the work "is [Allen's] most provocative film thus far and perhaps his most revealing", and certainly "the one that will inspire the most heated debate".

    In Diane Jacobs' But We Need the Eggs: The Magic of Woody Allen, the director is quoted as saying: "shortly after Stardust Memories opened, John Lennon was shot by the very guy who had asked him for his autograph earlier in the day... This is what happens with celebrities: one day people love you; the next day they want to kill you."

    Aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports 72% approval of Stardust Memories, with an average rating of 6.6/10. In a joint article, The Daily Telegraph film critics Robbie Collin and Tim Robey listed it as Allen's 10th greatest film and wrote; "slammed at the time, it's a retrospective knock-out, thanks to its ambitious structure, vinegary gags and the searing monochrome photography, courtesy of Gordon Willis". Sam Fragoso of IndieWire also ranked it among Allen's best works, lauding it as "an extraordinarily realized portrait of artistic stagnation". The film was listed 16th among Allen's efforts in a poll of Time Out contributors, with editor Joshua Rothkopf praising it as "a piece of self-referential hilarity in its own right."

    In October 2013, Stardust Memories was voted by the Guardian readers as the eighth best film directed by Woody Allen.

    Box office

    Stardust Memories opened in North America on September 26, 1980 to an onslaught of bad reviews. At 29 theatres, it grossed $326,779 ($11,268 per screen) in its opening weekend. The film failed to attract more than Allen's loyal fanbase in the long run, and it grossed $10,389,003 by the end of its run. The film's budget was $10 million.

    Soundtrack

  • "Hebrew School Rag" (Dick Hyman) by Dick Hyman
  • "Just One of Those Things" (Cole Porter) by Dick Hyman
  • "You'd Be So Easy to Love" (Cole Porter) by Dick Hyman
  • "Tropical Mood Meringue" (Sidney Bechet) by Sidney Bechet
  • "I'll See You in My Dreams" (Isham Jones and Gus Kahn) by Django Reinhardt
  • "Tickletoe" (Lester Young) by Lester Young with Count Basie and His Orchestra
  • "Three Little Words" (Harry Ruby, Bert Kalmar) by The Jazz Heaven Orchestra
  • "Brazil" (Ary Barroso, S.K. Russell) by Marie Lane
  • "Palesteena" (J. Russel Robinson and Con Conrad) by The Original Dixieland Jazz Band
  • "Body and Soul" (Edward Heyman, Robert Sour, Johnny Green, and Frank Eyton) by Django Reinhardt
  • "Night on Bald Mountain" (Modest Mussorgsky) by Vienna State Opera Orchestra
  • "If Dreams Come True" (Irving Mills, Edgar M. Sampson, and Benny Goodman) by Chick Webb
  • "Just One of Those Things" (Cole Porter) by Dick Hyman
  • "You'd Be So Easy to Love" (Cole Porter) by Dick Hyman
  • "One O'Clock Jump" (Count Basie) by The Jazz Heaven Orchestra
  • "Sugar" (Maceo Pinkard and Sidney D. Mitchell)
  • "Sweet Georgia Brown" (Ben Bernie, Kenneth Casey and Maceo Pinkard)
  • "Moonlight Serenade" (Glenn Miller) by Glenn Miller
  • "Stardust" (Hoagy Carmichael, Mitchell Parish) by Louis Armstrong
  • References

    Stardust Memories Wikipedia
    Stardust Memories IMDb Stardust Memories themoviedb.org


    Similar Topics