Everybody's
All-American
Released
November 1988
Starring
Jessica Lange (as Babs Rogers Grey), Dennis Quaid, Timothy
Hutton, John Goodman, Carl Lumbly
Directed by Taylor Hackford
122 min.
Box
Office gross - $12.6 million
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complete credits at Internet
Movie Database
This
film was a big disappointment to Jessica - she said "It
was one of the best scripts I've ever read. I went into it
thinking it could be one of the greatest love stories ever
put on film. Then to see the whole thing unravel...The rehearsals
start and you think, 'No, they're not getting it.' Then the
shooting , and you're thinking 'Uh-oh, it's off track. Then
I see the final cut and I'm crushed. I felt like I'd been
duped." Most critics agreed. Despite a very good cast
and a talented director on board, the film turned out to be
a rambling affair which tries to focus on too many characters.
However, it is one of Jessica's greatest performances. There
are many facets to Babs' character (she ages 25 years during
the film) and she handles each nuance as only an accomplished
actress can.
Critical
Sampling:
"as
she matures in this role, Lange comes close to embodying everything
a modern woman hopes to see in the mirror her hard-earned
self esteem". - Richard Corliss, Time
"Her
range is enormous - from belle like sweetness, submissiveness
as a player's wife, obsession with maternity as compensation,
anger over Quaid's irresponsibility, growing assertiveness,
and throughout, an alluring eros. She even manages to make
a scene with Hutton sexy! With Quaid, she creates a sulky,
sultry chemistry, a bittersweet symbiosis of love/hate. Because
she is so radiant, what many miss in her acting is the craft."
- Tom O'Brien, Commonweal
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