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Faces

 
Movies:

Faces

  • Director: Sidney Morgan
  • AMG Rating: star
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Melodrama
  • Release Year: 1934
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 68 minutes

Plot

No relation to the 1968 John Cassavetes film of the same name, the 1934 Faces is a compact British romantic melodrama. Anna Lee plays a beautician who harbors dreams of wealth and luxury. She becomes the mistress of a millionaire, leaving her poor-but-true boyfriend Harold French in the lurch. Lee quickly changes her ways when she befriends the amiable wife of her wealthy "protector". Faces was adapted from a play by Patrick Ludlow and Walter Soames; the latter appears in the film as the philandering millionaire. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Beryl de Querton - Amy Amor; Anna Lee - Madeleine Pelham; Moore Marriott - Robert Pelham; Kate Saxon - Mrs. Pelham; Madeline Seymour; Olive Sloane - Lady Wallingford; Harold French - Ted; Noel Shannon - Alphonse; Mary Gaskell; Peter Northcote; Walter Sondes - Dick Morris

Credit

Sidney Morgan - Director, Herbert Wilcox - Producer, Joan Wentworth Wood - Screenwriter, Patrick Ludlow - Play Author, Walter Sondes - Play Author
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Wikipedia: Faces (film)
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Faces
Directed by John Cassavetes
Produced by John Cassavetes
Maurice McEndree
Written by John Cassavetes
Starring John Marley
Gena Rowlands
Lynn Carlin
Seymour Cassel
Fred Draper
Val Avery
Dorothy Gulliver
Release date(s) November 24, 1968
Running time 130 min
Language English

Faces was a 1968 movie, directed by John Cassavetes and starring John Marley, Cassavetes' wife Gena Rowlands, Seymour Cassel and Lynn Carlin, who both received Academy Award nominations for this film.

Plot

The movie, shot in cinéma vérité-style, depicts the final stages of the disintegrated marriage of a middle-aged couple. In one night we are introduced to various groups and individuals the couple interacts with after a tense argument and the husband's statement of his desire for a divorce. Afterwards he spends the night in the company of brash businessmen and whores, the wife with her middle aged female friends and a young hippie they've picked up from a bar. The night proceeds as a series of tense conversations and confrontations occur, illustrating where the modern American lifestyle has failed to nourish the interests, love lives, and emotional/spiritual fulfillment of these characters. Nearly everyone we meet expresses deep dissatisfaction with their lives and also a resigned attitude to this malaise. The film offers little hope, only a suggestion that in this world merely understanding that we're unhappy or dissatisfied is a revelation. The film was shot in high contrast 16 mm black and white film stock.

Versions

As is the case with several of Cassavetes' films, two different versions of this film are known to exist (though it was generally assumed that, after creating the general release print, Cassavetes destroyed the alternate versions). It was initially premiered in Toronto with a running time of 183 minutes, before Cassavetes' cut it down to 130 minutes. Though the 130-minute version is the general release version, a print of a longer version with a running time of 147 minutes was accidentally found by Ray Carney, and was deposited at the Library of Congress. 17 minutes of this print was included in the Criterion box set John Cassavetes: Five Films, though Carney has said that there are numerous differences between the two films.

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Faces (film)" Read more