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The Women
15 The Women (1939)

updated 01 November 2004
reviewer's rating
3 out of 5
Reviewed by Stella Papamichael
average user rating
2 Star


Director
George Cukor
Writer
Jane Murfin
Anita Loos
Stars
Norma Shearer
Joan Crawford
Rosalind Russell
Mary Boland
Paulette Goddard
Length
133 minutes
Distributor
NFT
Original
1939
Cinema
05 November 2004
Country
USA
Genre
Comedy
Drama

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Star Rating: 1  1
Star Rating: 2  2
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Star Rating: 5  5
Average star rating: 2 from 624 votes

Sex And The City with sharper nails - although nary a mention of the dreaded 's-word' - George Cukor's 1939 satire The Women offers a scathing portrait of backbiting and betrayal among Manhattan socialites. Joan Crawford and Rosalind Russell are among the screen legends lined up for this adaptation of Clare Boothe Luce's play, which is ahead of its time in many ways, but eventually trips on its skirt and falls headfirst into old-fashioned, chocolate box sentiment.

Mary Haines (Norma Shearer) is the last to discover that her husband (unseen) has been playing away with perfume salesgirl Crystal Allen (Joan Crawford). The subsequent outpouring of sympathy from her so-called friends is laced with venom: assuring Mary she has her best interests at heart, Sylvia (Rosalind Russell) forces her into a confrontation with the home-wrecking riff-raff, but the incident ignites public scandal. With her reputation in tatters and Crystal digging her stilettos in, Mary must decide whether to bow out gracefully or bare her claws.

"A WONDERFULLY ELABORATE WEB OF DECEPTION AND DUPLICITY"

Employing her gift for understatement, Joan Crawford rises head and shoulders above a cast of 135 women: "There's a word for you ladies, but it's seldom used in high society outside of a kennel," she hisses. Also served by some brilliantly double-edged dialogue, Russell employs a more obvious tack - doing Lucille Ball with a chip on her shoulder. By contrast Shearer has little to play with, weighed down by too much sugar and not enough spice.

Cukor meanwhile, weaves a wonderfully elaborate web of deception and duplicity, but the film risks outstaying its welcome at over two hours long. When the resolution finally unspools, all notions of sexual liberation and female emancipation are thrown away like last year's Gucci handbag in favour of a ridiculously contrived fairytale ending. The Women is fun for a while, but beware that parting slap in the face.

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