Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 55000000
Revenue
$ 149000000

Madeline Ashton Menville

Helen Sharp

Dr. Ernest Menville

Lisle von Rhuman

Chagall

Dakota

Psychologist

Rose

Anna

Vivian Adams

Mr. Franklin

Eulogist

Opening Man

Opening Woman

Second Man

Second Woman

Landlord

Eviction Cop

Eviction Cop

Police Officer

Psychiatric Patient

Psychiatric Patient

Psychiatric Patient

Psychiatric Patient

Psychiatric Patient

Psychiatric Patient

Messenger Girl

Chagall Receptionist

Chagall Security

Starlet

Jay Norman

Woman at Book Party

Girl at Dakota's

Lisle's Body Guard

Lisle's Body Guard

Lisle's Body Guard

Lisle's Body Guard

Lisle's Body Guard

Elvis

Greta Garbo

Marilyn Monroe

Andy Warhol

James Dean

Jim Morrison

Blonde with Jim Morrison

Coroner

Coroner

Second Doctor

Medical Technician

Medical Technician

Sobbing Nun

Sobbing Nun

Sobbing Nun

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Dancer

Singer

Singer

Singer

Police Supervisor (uncredited)

Man (uncredited)

Hospital Doctor (uncredited)

Maid in Ancient Greece (uncredited)

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-06-29
"Helen" (Goldie Hawn) has always lived in the shadow of her friend, the successful actress "Madeline" (Meryl Streep), but when she loses her fiancée - renowned, if rather dowdy, plastic surgeon "Dr. Menville" (Bruce Willis) to her, she loses the plot. Eventually twice the size and evicted from her apartment with her hands still glued to the ice cream pot, she is sent to a mental institution were she finally concocts a plan for revenge. Meantime, the marriage has rather gone to seed. "Madeline" seeks comfort in the arms of younger men, but when her latest beau rejects her, she finds herself - via the kindly intervention of an almost unrecognisable Ian Ogilvy ("Chagall") - in the lair of the seductive "Lisle von Rhuman" (Isabella Rossellini) who offers her eternal youth. Of course there is a price - but will she pay it? What ensues for the last forty five minutes is really quite entertaining. Streep and Hawn look like they are enjoying themselves as their antics become comically macabre. Willis, the now bottle-hitting doctor - who has been largely reduced to manicuring corpses - is also clearly having some fun and Rossellini hams up wonderfully. The ending isn't my favourite, but I suppose it was "fair" and desserts were just. This is an amiable, feel-good, comedy with everyone on good form, some lovely snide dialogue and I liked it.