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5.8

The Evening Star (1996)

The Evening Star
Running time: 129 min. | Genre: Comedy, Drama, Sequel
The Evening Star

Synopsis

Picking up the story thread left by 1983's Terms of Endearment, this overwrought sequel is made palatable by Shirley MacLaine's charismatic performance, which in turn is nearly equaled by Marion Ross's role as her housekeeper. An unexpected surprise, Ross obviously was never allowed to display her range as Mrs. Cunningham on Happy Days. Returning as the vibrant Aurora Greenway, MacLaine far outshines the thin material involving the tangled and unhappy lives of her three grandchildren. The plot picks up 13 years after the death of Greenway's daughter (played by Debra Winger in the original). One of the kids is in jail; one is living in poverty. Her granddaughter, played with prickly rebelliousness by Juliette Lewis, is heading for all sorts of trouble. The plot, told in disconnected and maudlin episodic segments, often borders on the absurd. The characters screech and weep, one of them dies, then we watch others screech and weep some more. So why bother? Because it is occasionally quite witty, and MacLaine indeed shines as brightly as the evening star to which she is compared. Both movies were based on novels by Larry McMurtry.

Nominations & Awards

Golden Globes Awards

Details

Original title

The Evening Star

Director

Robert Harling

Producer

Paramount Pictures

Running time

129 min.

Screenwriter

Robert Harling. Novela: Larry McMurtry

Music

William Ross

Cinematography

Don Burgess

Year

1996

Country

United States United States

Ranking

IMDb
5.9
Unopeliculas
5.7

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