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Plenty (film)

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Plenty (film)
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{{Short description|1985 film by Fred Schepisi}}{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2016}}{{Use British English|date=April 2016}}









factoids
name Plenty| image = Plenty (1985 film) poster.jpg| caption = Theatrical release poster| director = Fred Schepisi



David Hare (playwright)>David Hare
    | music = Bruce Smeaton| producer = Joseph Papp Edward R. Pressman| studio = RKO PicturesEdward R. Pressman Productions| distributor= 20th Century Fox
    198520|df=y}}| runtime = 121 minutesBRITISH FILM INSTITUTE>ACCESS-DATE=7 MARCH 2024AFI CATALOG OF FEATURE FILMS>ACCESS-DATE=7 MARCH 2024,weblink | language = English| budget = $10 million4 EUROPE-BASED DIRECTORS COAXED TO HOLLYWOODHARMETZ, ALJEAN. New York Times 21 Feb 1985: C.20.Plenty is a 1985 American drama film directed by Fred Schepisi and starring Meryl Streep. It was adapted from David Hare's play of the same name.Spanning nearly 20 years from the early 1940s to the 1960s, the plot focuses on Susan Traherne, an Englishwoman who is irreparably changed by her experiences as a fighter for the French Resistance during World War II when she has a one-night stand with a British intelligence agent. After the war ends, Susan returns to England and becomes determined to make a life for herself by achieving what she wishes in the post-war world which, after her time away, she finds trivial and inadequate, while acting with complete disregard for everybody around her.

    Plot

    The film centers around the life of Susan Traherne (Meryl Streep), a British woman who becomes a courier for the British during World War II. In 1943, Susan waits in the woods for a message to be dropped by parachute when Lazar (Sam Neill), another British operative, parachutes down after experiencing airplane trouble. They escape German troops and Susan opens up emotionally to Lazar. They make love, but he leaves abruptly the next morning.Two years later, Susan is with a man named Tony Radley when he suddenly dies of a heart attack. Raymond Brock (Charles Dance) from the British Embassy arrives and consoles Susan. She confesses that she and Radley were not truly married and asks Raymond to inform Radley's real wife that he died alone. Susan and Raymond develop a relationship, and she takes a job as a clerk while living with her friend Alice (Tracey Ullman).In 1953, Susan works for Queen Elizabeth's coronation committee. She asks Alice's former boyfriend, Mick (Sting), to father her child, but he is hesitant as she wants to raise the child alone. After her job is finished, Susan works in advertising briefly but finds it unsatisfying. Her attempts to conceive with Mick fail, leading to a confrontation where she fires a gun above his head.Raymond visits Susan in the hospital after her nervous breakdown, and they eventually get married. However, Susan remains unsatisfied with her life despite their comfortable lifestyle. In 1956, she displays erratic behavior during a dinner party, embarrassing Raymond and their guests. Raymond's employer, Sir Leonard Darwin, announces his resignation due to the Suez Crisis.Several years later, Susan and Raymond are living in Jordan, where he has a diplomatic post. Alice visits and notices Susan's subdued demeanor. Susan seizes the opportunity to return to England for Sir Leonard Darwin's (John Gielgud) funeral, which angers Raymond. Susan refuses to return to Jordan, and in 1962, she confronts Sir Andrew Charleson (Ian McKellen) about Raymond's stagnant career. She threatens suicide if Raymond is not promoted, leading to his dismissal and early retirement.Back home, Susan argues with Raymond and leaves after he is knocked unconscious. She rekindles her love affair with Lazar, meeting him at a seaside hotel. After they make love, Susan reveals her mental instability, but when she falls asleep, Lazar leaves.In the final scene, Susan recalls her idealistic youth in the French countryside after the war. She talks with a local farmer and agrees to attend a party with his family to celebrate the end of the conflict. In an ironic ending, Susan proclaims that there will be many more days like this in the years to come.

    Cast

    Reception

    Critical response

    Plenty was met with mixed reviews upon release. It holds a 59% rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 17 critics.WEB, Plenty,weblink Rotten Tomatoes, 11 October 2023, en, Movie critic Roger Ebert gave the film three-and-a-half stars out of four. He said that Streep gave "a performance of great subtlety; it is hard to play an unbalanced, neurotic, self-destructive woman, and do it with such gentleness and charm... Streep creates a whole character around a woman who could have simply been a catalogue of symptoms.".WEB, Ebert, Roger, Plenty movie review & film summary (1985) {{!, Roger Ebert |url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/plenty-1985 |access-date=10 July 2022 |language=en}} Cultural and literary critic Tiffany Gilbert suggests that the "Englishness" that scriptwriter David Hare regarded as an essential theme of the movie was inescapably diminished by the casting of Hollywood star Meryl Streep as Susan: "[…] it inevitably loses some of its political edge[…] in ceding to the Hollywood fame machine." (albeit it had been a Canadian actor, Kate Nelligan, who had originally taken the part on the London and New York stages).BOOK, 9781107001015, 228, Gilbert, Tiffany, Bray, William Robert, Palmer, R. Barton, Modern British Drama on Screen, 2013, Cambridge University Press, The madness of Susan Traherne: adapting David Hare's 'Plenty'., Nelligan had played the part as a strong and capable woman, whereas Streep's depiction of neurosis transformed the play into a typical "Hollywood product".BOOK, Homden, Carol, The plays of David Hare, 1995, Cambridge University Press, 9780521427180, 72,

    Awards

    Ullman and Gielgud were nominated for BAFTA Awards and Gielgud was named Best Supporting Actor by both the Los Angeles Film Critics Association and the National Society of Film Critics.WEB, Film in 1986 {{!, BAFTA Awards |url=http://awards.bafta.org/award/1986/film |website=awards.bafta.org |access-date=11 July 2022|publisher=BAFTA}}WEB, Awards for 1985 - LAFCA, 11 July 2022,weblink www.lafca.net, WEB, Past Awards,weblink National Society of Film Critics, 11 July 2022, en, 19 December 2009,

    Novel

    A tie-in-novel by Andrew Osmond built on the movie's popularity with a pulp account of the post-war life of Lazar, Susan's lover.BOOK, Osmond, Andrew, Plenty, 1985, Futura, London, 9780708829462, 284,

    References

    {{reflist}}

    External links

    • {{IMDb title|id=0089816|title=Plenty}}
    • {{rotten-tomatoes|plenty|Plenty}}
    {{Fred Schepisi}}{{David Hare}}


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