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| director = [[Tom Noonan]]
| director = [[Tom Noonan]]
| producer = Michael D. Aglion<br>Scott Macaulay<br>Robin O'Hara
| producer = {{ubl|Michael D. Aglion|Scott Macaulay|Robin O'Hara}}
| writer = Tom Noonan
| writer = Tom Noonan
| narrator =
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| starring = Tom Noonan<br>[[Wallace Shawn]]<br>[[Karen Young (actress)|Karen Young]]<br>[[Julie Hagerty]]
| starring = {{ubl|Tom Noonan|[[Wallace Shawn]]|[[Karen Young (actress)|Karen Young]]|[[Julie Hagerty]]}}
| music = Tom Noonan (as Ludovico Sorret)
| music = Tom Noonan (as Ludovico Sorret)
| cinematography = Joe DeSalvo
| cinematography = Joe DeSalvo
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Revision as of 20:46, 9 September 2021

The Wife
Movie Poster
Directed byTom Noonan
Written byTom Noonan
Produced by
  • Michael D. Aglion
  • Scott Macaulay
  • Robin O'Hara
Starring
CinematographyJoe DeSalvo
Edited byTom Noonan (as Richmond Arrley)
Music byTom Noonan (as Ludovico Sorret)
Distributed byArtistic License
Release date
August 16, 1995
Running time
119 min.
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Wife is a 1995 film written and directed by Tom Noonan, based on his play Wifey. The film was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at the 1995 Sundance Film Festival, after Noonan had won the Grand Prize the previous year with What Happened Was.[1]

Plot

Jack and his wife Rita, both professional therapists, live and work in virtual isolation in a remote Vermont cottage. One night, one of Jack's patients, Cosmo, unexpectedly turns up with young wife Arlie in tow. And the more the couples talk and drink, the more tension builds over what personal issues are being shared in analysis, as well as the private troubles of the therapists themselves.

Cast

Critical reception

Stephen Holden of The New York Times gave the film a mixed review:

The Wife begins promisingly, but once Mr. Noonan's screenplay lurches into comic caricature, the movie loses its psychological authority... You are more inclined to laugh derisively at the characters than to sympathize with them... The detailed ensemble acting goes a long way toward covering up some of the screenplay's holes.[2]

References

  1. ^ New York Magazine What Happened Next Was June 19, 1995 p88
  2. ^ NYTimes.com review
  • The Wife at IMDb
  • ‹The template AllMovie title is being considered for deletion.› The Wife at AllMovie


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