The Bell Jar (film)
The Bell Jar | |
---|---|
Directed by | Larry Peerce |
Produced by |
Jarrold T. Brandt Jr. Mike Todd, Jr. |
Written by |
Marjorie Kellogg from novel by Sylvia Plath |
Starring |
Marilyn Hassett Julie Harris |
Music by | Gerald Fried |
Cinematography | Gerald Hirschfeld |
Edited by | Marvin Walowitz |
Distributed by | AVCO Embassy Pictures |
Release dates | March 21, 1979 |
Running time | 107 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Bell Jar is a 1979 film based on Sylvia Plath's 1963 roman à clef; it was directed by Larry Peerce, and stars Marilyn Hassett and Julie Harris.[1] The story follows a young woman's summer in New York City working for a women's magazine, her return home to New England, and her subsequent psychological breakdown within the context of the difficulties of the 1950s—ranging from the Rosenbergs' execution, to the disturbing aspects of pop culture, to the distraction of predatory college boys.[2]
Cast
- Marilyn Hassett as Esther Greenwood
- Julie Harris as Mrs. Greenwood
- Jameson Parker as Buddy Willard
- Anne Jackson as Dr. Nolan
- Barbara Barrie as Jay Cee
Reception
Janet Maslin of The New York Times was not impressed: "...the character's imaginative life that leads (Esther) to a collapse, and the movie barely even goes skin-deep. The audience isn't given the slightest clue about Esther's quirks, her fears, her peculiarly distorted notion of herself. ...Much of the story is concerned with Esther's experiences in New York, in the 50's, as a guest editor at a women's magazine. Larry Peerce, who directed Goodbye, Columbus, would seem well equipped to send up the fashion world in these sequences, but there's no satirical edge to any of this, and no dramatic edge either. It all simply plods along, en route to a nervous collapse that manages to seem perfectly unwarranted by the time it finally occurs."[3]
Lawsuit
After the movie's release, Dr. Jane V. Anderson, a Boston psychiatrist, claimed she was portrayed as the character "Joan" and filed a lawsuit. In the film, Joan attempts to get Esther to agree to a suicide pact, an incident which is not in the book. Joan is implied to be a lesbian in Plath's novel, although this is never explicitly stated. Dr. Anderson's lawyer said the film portrayal "has grossly damaged her reputation as a practising psychiatrist and a member of the Harvard Medical School faculty."[4]
References
- ↑ "The Bell Jar - Cast, Reviews, Summary, and Awards - AllRovi". Allmovie.com. 2011-10-24. Retrieved 2011-12-28.
- ↑ Holzer, Remy Holzer. "Bell Jar Summary". IMDb.
- ↑ Maslin, Janet (March 21, 1979). "Bell Jar: A Would-be Poet". The New York Times.
- ↑ Wald, Matthew (January 14, 1987). "Psychiatrist Files A Libel Suit Over Film Of Plath's Bell Jar". New York Times.
External links
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