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Chantilly Lace (film)

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Chantilly Lace
Promotional Poster
Directed byLinda Yellen
Written byGisela Bernice
Produced byKathy Zotnowski
StarringJoBeth Williams
Helen Slater
Martha Plimpton
Ally Sheedy
Jill Eikenberry
Talia Shire
Lindsay Crouse
CinematographyPaul Cameron
Edited byChristopher Cooke
Music byPatrick Seymour
Production
company
Showtime Network
Distributed byColumbia TriStar Home Video
Release date
July 25, 1993 (1993-07-25)
Running time
101 minutes
CountryUnited States

Chantilly Lace is a 1993 "improvised dramatic film" shot in Sundance, Utah for the Showtime Network and eventually released on video via Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment.[1] The film was directed by Linda Yellen and features dialogue that was largely improvised by its ensemble cast.

Plot

Over three seasons, seven friends gets together at a cabin in the Colorado Rockies to connect, grow and cope with life.

Cast

Production

Inspired by Christa Wolf's, Cassandra, Yellen said she originally conceived of “Chantilly Lace” because of the preponderance of “incomplete roles for women, who are sketched instead of developed” in the movie business. She further developed it at the Sundance Film Institute, while Showtime provided production financing.[2]

Yellen worked from a 40-page outline — instead of a screenplay — to extract improvisation from her performers.[3]

The film, often compared to The Big Chill was shot over eight days.

Themes

The Sundance director of feature film, Michelle Satter, said the film explores the landscape of contemporary women’s issues with humor and honesty 'unlike any American film' that she had seen.[3]

Response

Ken Tucker wrote, for Entertainment Weekly, that the film was "the only kind of feminist slant that gets much exposure on television: well-to-do white women grousing about horrible men and about their mostly unfulfilled needs to be creative."

However, the film was well received by audiences. On the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a rating of 93% audience score, based on 74 reviews.[4] On IMDB, the film has a 6.2 audience rating out of 10.[5]


References

  1. ^ Tucker (1993). "Chantilly Lace".
  2. ^ Leonard (1993). "One Hundred Years of Altitude".
  3. ^ a b Frook (1993). "Yellen's 'Lace' gets blue ribbon".
  4. ^ "Chantilly Lace". 1993.
  5. ^ "Chantilly Lace". 1993.