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A Perfect Couple

United States

1979

110 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 3.0/5 Stars.
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DIR Robert Altman

EXEC Tommy Thompson

PROD Robert Altman

SCR Robert Altman, Allan F. Nicholls

DP Edmond L. Koons

CAST Paul Dooley, Marta Heflin, Titos Vandis, Belita Moreno, Henry Gibson

ED Tony Lombardo

MUSIC Allan F. Nicholls

SOUND Robert Gravenor, Don Merritt

Synopsis

An older man, played by Paul Dooley, tries romancing a younger woman, played by Marta Heflin. She is part of a travelling band of bohemian musicians who perform gigs in outdoor arenas around the country. He joins them on the road and tries to fit into their communal lifestyle. The film features multiple musical numbers.—wikipedia

Director

Original

Robert Altman

An iconoclast whose work acutely attacked the conventions of genre filmmaking, Altman both satirized and revitalized such warhorses as the Western, the musical, and the crime drama, waging war on the sterile artifice of mainstream storytelling by creating a singularly sprawling and deliberately messy cinematic world bursting at the seams with sounds, images, characters, and plot lines. Famed for his inventive brand of overlapping (and often improvisational) dialogue and an acknowledged master of modern camera technique, Altman’s quixotic career has been uneven at best, yet he remains a pivotal figure of contemporary cinema, a true maverick responsible for many of the defining motion pictures of his times. Born February 20, 1925, in Kansas City, MO, Altman was educated in Jesuit schools prior to joining the Army at the age of 18; over the course of WWII, he flew over 50 bombing missions in Borneo and the Dutch East Indies. Upon his discharge in 1947, Altman studied engineering at the… read more

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Jake Mulligan

26Sep10

Actually quite good in its subversion of romantic Hollywood cliches. Kind of like a romantic film made by no one who had ever seen a romantic film before. Not to say its perfect, the musical aspect obviously comes off far more strangely than in "Nashville", but worth of Altman's later 70's work.

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