Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool

2017 "Love, just like in the movies."
6.7| 1h45m| en| More Info
Released: 17 November 2017 Released
Producted By: Lionsgate
Country: United Kingdom
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Liverpool, 1978: What starts as a vibrant affair between a legendary femme-fatale, the eccentric Academy Award-winning actress Gloria Grahame, and her young lover, British actor Peter Turner, quickly grows into a deeper relationship, with Turner being the person Gloria turns to for comfort.

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Reviews

Maidgethma Wonderfully offbeat film!
Cortechba Overrated
Fatma Suarez The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
Zlatica One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
SnoopyStyle In 1979 London, Peter Turner (Jamie Bell) is entranced by visiting American actress Gloria Grahame (Annette Bening). They begin a romantic affair. In 1981 Liverpool, Peter is living at home with his parents. Gloria arrives to reignite the relationship but she's suffering from a devastating illness.Bening delivers another great performance. She has a real transformation. Her charisma and screen presence is undeniable. However, the movie doesn't allow the relationship to develop. It's a melodrama thrown at the wall as it watches whether anything actually sticks. The only thing that truly sticks is Bening. The chemistry is on and off. The structure assumes the chemistry rather than nurtures it. This has its moments and Bening almost carries it by her sheer acting power.
tm-sheehan I finally caught up with this Movie yesterday at our favourite Mount Vic Flix after hearing a lot of good reports about it. Some friends said it should have been nominated for Oscars ,and I agree the two stars Annette Bening (a favourite of mine) and Jamie Bell ( remember Billy Elliott) are superb together. I found it a sad and frankly depressing story , based on famous 1953 Oscar winning supporting actress Gloria Graham , known for sultry roles and famous as Ado Annie ( the girl who couldn't say no) the film version of Oklahoma , perhaps that philosophy played true in Gloria's real life? Tell all tales of Hollywood Stars , especially stars that have long passed for me are of course interesting but can tarnish their reputation and I often think how would they react to this last invasion of their intimate life. Bette Davis and Joan Crawford were alive when their daughters published their versions of growing up with starlet mothers and were horrified of course . The very sad part of this movie I found was Gloria Graham's fall from grace after her career dwindled down to a trickle of roles to odd stage roles. She seemed plagued by child like immature insecurities and even thought she could still play the role of Juliet in her late fifties and this is reflected beautifully in the last part of the film. We witness her last days of terminal illness and flashbacks as she rekindles her relationship with a young man Peter Turner, who is old enough to be her grandson and Gloria moves in with his Liverpudlian family to let his mum Bella (played beautifully by Julie Walters )care for her, which of course has ramifications for all involved. I won't spoil the plot but it's certainly a film worth seeing , however I personally felt perhaps I'd rather not have known the reason and circumstances why Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool.
CineMuseFilms Love stories have always framed the narrative of humanity and our hunger for more is never sated. That's why we are fascinated by variations such as gender and age inversions which challenge conventional romantic expectations. They also frame the dramatic bio-pic Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool (2017), a love story of an ageing femme fatale with a film title that evokes the vanity of stardom. Based on the real-life romance between Gloria Grahame (Annette Bening) and Peter Turner (Jamie Bell), the story unfolds through a series of artfully constructed flashbacks over a decade. We meet them in a 1970s London boarding house, when Turner was at the start of a hopeful career in acting and the 1947 Oscar winning Grahame was barely surviving in theatre and television. The over-awed young actor immediately succumbs to Grahame's star aura and they become lovers. Turner's working-class Liverpool family are astonished when the revered Hollywood star visits their modest home and their shock at the age difference soon dissipates. When Grahame is diagnosed with a terminal illness, the family provides emotional support until her American family intervene.While this dialogue-rich character study is not for everyone, Annette Bening's tour-de-force performance is extraordinary for its portrayal of the darkest and lightest side of the same person. Two details mentioned early linger throughout the film to complicate our view of this relationship between an older woman and someone young enough to be her son. We learn that Grahame once had an affair with a 13-year old stepson whom she later married, and both Grahame and Turner confide to having had gay relationships. Through the prism of today's sexual codes, the film could easily be judgemental but is not.Moral and emotional ambiguity casts a soft light over Grahame. It is impossible to tell when she is emoting genuinely or when she is in character, acting the hopeless romantic or ageing cougar. It is only when her health declines and she must confront mortality that we can sense the human being behind the mask. It takes a special actress to hold together this kaleidoscope of emotions and Bening does it brilliantly. Jamie Bell excels as her leading man, beguiled by the charms of an older woman.There is a self-reflexive side to depicting an icon of classic Hollywood who plays a fading star in the modern era. Bening channels several greats like Katherine Hepburn and even Humphrey Bogart to produce a brooding, mercurial woman struggling to accept that she was "once the great Gloria Grahame". In this way, the story dwells on the backstage world where the distance between actors and their roles can become blurred and chaotic. The result is an engrossing study of the demons that lay in waiting, somewhere in the space beyond stardom.
Red_Identity This film is definitely watchable, but it also feels like a missed opportunity considering the talent onscreen. Jamie Bell is really strong in here and it's a shame he didn't get much hype. Annette Bening is also really good. I wouldn't say this is her best performance (that would be 20th Century Women) and at times she's a bit forced, but for the most part it's a tricky character she gets right. I just wish the screenplay around them was great.