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TIME: Almanac 1993
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TIME Almanac 1993.iso
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083192
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08319931.000
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1993-04-08
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COVER STORIES, Page 56WOODY ALLENAnd Now the Movie . . .
Part of the great black swirl of gossip now encircling Woody
Allen is the confident assertion that in his new movie,
Husbands and Wives, Allen plays a college professor who makes
love with a young woman student a third his age. And, oh, in
Manhattan didn't he and Mariel Hemingway play a similarly
mismatched couple? In Hannah and Her Sisters didn't he imagine
an affair between a sister and one of her brothers-in-law? No
one recalls that Manhattan's middle-aged male ended up miserably
alone, and that the scandalous tryst in Hannah was not joyous
or lasting. So the inference holds: that Allen's bad life is
imitating his good art.
But what Husbands and Wives really imitates is some of
Allen's best work. A professor (Allen) is indeed attracted to
one of his students (Juliette Lewis). But she is seen as a girl
with a dangerous itch for older men, and though the teacher
knows temptation, he faces it down.
Anyway, this is not the film's central concern. Allen, his
wife (Mia Farrow) and another couple are trying to live with
the dulling compromises of long liaisons, yet also searching
for sustaining warmth as the chill of the years settles on
them. Trial separations, silly affairs, are the results, not the
causes of their anguish.
Perhaps by Sept. 23, the occasional uncomfortable
parallels will have faded. And audiences will see that the
film's deepest resonances are with Allen's most popular previous
works: comedies of urban manners shadowed by his rueful
recognition of those abiding sexual confusions that he has
always observed with a unique blend of irony and compassion.
By Richard Schickel