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Two People

 
Movies:

Two People

  • Director: Robert Wise
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Romantic Drama
  • Themes: Opposites Attract
  • Main Cast: Peter Fonda, Lindsay Wagner, Estelle Parsons, Alan Fudge, Philippe March
  • Release Year: 1973
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 100 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Evan Bonner (Peter Fonda) is a former solider who deserted the Army due to his growing opposition to the U.S. role in Vietnam. Having spent the intervening years drifting aimlessly, he has ended up in Marrakesh – where he has made the decision to return to the U.S. and turn himself in. Also in Marrakesh are a famous fashion model, Deirdre McCluskey (Lindsay Wagner), her live-in lover (and photographer) Ron, and her editor Barbara. This trip is experiencing considerable tension at the moment. They have finished their photo shoot and are ready to return to New York, but Ron has decided he wants to stay on in Marrakesh for the time being. Deirdre and Barbara board a train to Casablanca the next day, and Deirdre soon finds herself admitting that her relationship with Ron has petered out. She also admits that she would really like a few puffs of the local strain of marijuana; spotting Evan and recognizing him from the café, she decides to see if he has any but changes her mind when she sees that he is emotionally overwrought. Eventually, however, Evan strikes up a conversation with Deirdre, and they begin a halting relationship that grows in intimacy as they journey back to the United States. Deirdre tries to persuade Evan to give up his plans, and even says she will move her young son to Europe so that the three of them can live together. Evan and Deirdre’s son hit it off when they meet in New York, but even that is not enough to dissuade Evan from his plans. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide

Cast

Frances Sternhagen - Mrs. McCluskey; Geoffrey Horne - Ron; Brian Lima - Marcus McCluskey

Credit

Henry Michelson - Art Director, Lucie Lichtig - Continuity, Denis Amar - First Assistant Director, Robert Wise - Director, William H. Reynolds - Editor, David Shire - Composer (Music Score), Monique Archambault - Makeup, Harold Michelson - Production Designer, Henri Decaë - Cinematographer, Gerald Hirschfeld - Cinematographer, Robert Wise - Producer, Eric Simon - Set Designer, Waldon O. Watson - Sound/Sound Designer, Ronald Pierce - Sound/Sound Designer, Richard De Roy - Screenwriter

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Wikipedia: Two People (film)
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Two People

Original poster
Directed by Robert Wise
Produced by Robert Wise
Written by Richard De Roy
Starring Peter Fonda
Lindsay Wagner
Estelle Parsons
Music by David Shire
Cinematography Henri Decaë
Editing by William Reynolds
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) March 18, 1973
Running time 100 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Two People is a 1973 American drama film produced and directed by Robert Wise. The screenplay by Richard De Roy focuses on the brief relationship shared by a Vietnam War deserter and a fashion model.

Contents

Plot

Deirdre McCluskey is a Manhattan-based fashion model who has completed an assignment for Vogue with her lover, photographer Ron Kesselman, and magazine editor Barbara Newman in Marrakech. Ron has announced plans to explore the Sahara Desert in lieu of returning home to his and Deidre's out-of-wedlock son Marcus, leaving her and Barbara to journey to Casablanca by train without him the following morning. Deidre, aware her love for Ron has died, recognizes fellow passenger Evan Bonner from a cafe where she had eaten the previous day, and she approaches his compartment to ask if he has any kief he'd be willing to share with her. Seeing him alone and in tears, she returns to Barbara.

Evan later initiates a conversation with Deidre, and when the train breaks down, they decide to explore a nearby Arab village while waiting for it to be repaired. Deirdre is attracted to Evan and lets her feelings be known, but he withdraws from her advances. On board a flight from Casablanca to Paris, he confesses he fled from combat in Vietnam, was brought to Moscow by a pro-peace group, and lived in Sweden and Morocco until, weary of his nomad existence, he decided to surrender and face court martial and a prison term.

Despite her apprehension about his turning himself in, Deirdre agrees to spend the day and evening with Evan in Paris before they return to the United States. The following morning, she proposes they remain in Europe, supported by her salary, but he declines, and they fly to New York City, where the two are welcomed at Deirdre's townhouse by her mother and Marcus, who is taken to the park by the pair. There, Deirdre repeats her offer, but Evan is determined to put his past behind him, and later that day he surrenders to the authorities.

Cast

Critical reception

Roger Greenspun of the New York Times called the film "a very silly movie" and added, "I am tempted to hang the movie with quotations from its dialogue — which would be unfair. It is really equally bad in all departments . . . Two People is remarkably of a piece — not with the consistency of a movie director like Robert Wise, but rather with the consistency of something cooked up from the same package of synthetic soup." [1]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times observed, "It must have sounded like such a good story idea, all those months or years ago when they were writing the film . . . What we have here, potentially, is a sort of bittersweet, radicalized Love Story, and that must have been what sold the director, Robert Wise, on the project. The movie sounds superficially as if it might have a comment to make on the effect of the war on its warriors. Well, that may be true, but true of a movie they didn't make. What we're left with is an awfully awkward journey into banality." [2]

TV Guide rated the film one out of four stars and commented, "Fonda and Wagner (in her film debut) just aren't able to pull it off." [3]

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Two People (film)" Read more