Postcards from the Edge

1990 "Having a wonderful time, wish I were here."
6.7| 1h41m| R| en| More Info
Released: 14 September 1990 Released
Producted By: Columbia Pictures
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Substance-addicted Hollywood actress, Suzanne Vale is on the skids. After a spell at a detox centre her film company insists as a condition of continuing to employ her that she live with her mother, herself once a star and now a champion drinker. Such a set-up is bad news for Suzanne who has struggled for years to get out of her mother's shadow, and who still treats her like a child. Despite these and other problems, Suzanne begins to see the funny side of her situation, and also realises that not only do daughters have mothers—mothers do too.

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Reviews

Lollivan It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.
Kaelan Mccaffrey Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.
Matylda Swan It is a whirlwind of delight --- attractive actors, stunning couture, spectacular sets and outrageous parties.
Mathilde the Guild Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.
Syl Academy Award winners, Meryl Streep and Shirley MacLaine play a mother and daughter actress and singers in Hollywood, California. They are loosely based on Carrie Fisher's memoir about her life as the daughter of Debbie Reynolds. The film has great moments with Streep and Maclaine and mother and daughter. The cast is first rate. Mary Wickes who played Grandma was one of Hollywood's greatest character actresses. Conrad Bain played Grandpa. The film is about how Suzanne Vale must live with her mother, Doris Mann, while she is shooting with a film with an all-star cast and directed by Mike Nichols. Gene Hackman played the director. Richard Dreyfuss played the doctor. Carrie Fisher even has a cameo. Annette Bening made her film debut. Dennis Quaid displayed his ability to act with Streep. The film is fine and great to see Meryl Streep sing too. A must for Meryl Streep fans to see and wonder why she's marvelous Meryl Streep.
Davis P Postcards from the edge really was destined for greatness just by hearing who heads up the cast. I mean come on, Shirley MacLaine and Meryl Streep! Two of my favorite actress starring in a powerful well written film. The two legendary artists turn in fine performances. They have great chemistry and deliver the dialogue very well. The two have very strong words for one another throughout the entire movie, the script is full of heated exchanges between the mother and daughter. They have an extremely fractured/strained relationship and that relationship is what the movie focuses on. There are some comedic moments and pieces of dialogue, so it's not all heavy and dramatic, but much of it is pretty heavy because there is a lot of junk in the past between the two that they try to work through and deal with. Honestly this movie relies on two things to make it work, without these things the film would fail miserably. The script and the actors performances. And since those aspects of the movie are spot on, this one is a big win. If you're looking for a family drama with some heavy issues and also some well done comedic material, then I'd definitely suggest postcards from the edge! 9/10.
mark.waltz A quarter of a century has passed since the teaming of two major divas of the past fifty years of cinema: Meryl Streep and Shirley MacLaine, playing fictional characters loosely based on Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds. Streep is a "B" movie actress struggling with various emotional issues which has lead her to become addicted to not only prescription medication, but illegal drugs such as cocaine as well. She's rushed to emergency after a bad day on the set where somehow she ended up in the bed of a stranger, took an overdose of pills, and he literally carries her out, straps her into his jeep and gets her to the emergency room, dropping her off as if he was returning a library book. She must then deal with getting her stomach pumped, going through withdrawal, and then finally going to rehab. And guess what, ladies and gentlemen. This is a comedy, all told through allegedly real life incidents by author Carrie Fisher, once Princess Leia, now a sardonic commentator on her own life and not even quite the "B" actress that Streep plays here.Just as Streep deals with being introduced to her rehab group, she gets a visit from her overly made-up but still glamorous movie star mother (Shirley MacLaine), a legend of the golden age who is indeed still here. "My mother drew up the contracts, so I'm here!", she sings in an altered version of Stephen Sondheim's brilliant "I'm Still Here" from "Follies". Mom Shirley gave daughter Meryl sleeping pills as a kid, which Streep blames MacLaine for causing her drug addiction. Is it wishful thinking or wishful drinking on Streep's part, "Wishful Drinking" being the name of the very funny book which Carrie Fisher later did on Broadway and had filmed for cable T.V. as more comical observations about her life. Toss into the mix grandma Mary Wickes as MacLaine's own "monster" of a mother, lovable maybe to those who know her socially, but definitely somebody you'd think twice about as wanting for your mama. Conrad Bain ("Maude", "Different Strokes") simply retorts to Wickes' constant chattering with "Yap Yap Yap, That's all you do all the live long day". Their delightful two scene cameo is an enjoyable commentary on the issues of different generations. Just like Jennifer Lopez had to tolerate a nasty mother-in-law to be (Jane Fonda) in "Monster in Law", Fonda had to tolerate a former nasty mother-in-law (Elaine Stritch) who got revenge on her daughter in law by simply adoring Lopez from the moment she met her. Unlike "Monster in Law", however, "Postcards From the Edge" utilizes the issues of two daughters dealing with mother issues in a realistic and understanding way, rather than adding hate into the plot line simply for uncomfortable laughs.While some of the script seems to focus on "the blame game", it is more about two women who are trying the best they can to understand the other, move on from bitter memories, and get past issues that have taken their life out of control. MacLaine's character has a bit of a drinking problem, gets into a car accident and like Streep, ends up in the hospital, minus wig and make-up, and looking like Elsa Lanchaster in "The Bride of Frankenstein" after being caught in a thunderstorm. The two actresses let it all bare out here, unafraid to go into places most actresses might be scared to go, especially of MacLaine's era. Streep's attempts to even get through the simplest of movie shoots proves futile, with director Gene Hackman laying into her with all the crassness that Hollywood has to offer. Cameos by Rob Reiner, Richard Dreyfeuss and Annette Benning add to the realistic issues of Streep's tumbling life, with Dennis Quaid giving a very good performance as the actor who seduces the unknowing Streep, pretends to be an old high school friend when she doesn't recognize him, and ultimately a heel after Streep finds out that he had also been sleeping with Benning. Streep deservedly got an Oscar Nomination, but in one of the worst examples of Academy Award criminology, MacLaine was overlooked, that being the biggest shocker of the year. Fisher, too, should have been honored for her screenplay, as should have been Mike Nichols for one of the best directing jobs he had done since "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?". Streep gets to show off her excellent singing voice here, performing two songs (including one triumphant declaration of independence in the finale) while MacLaine bangs the heck out of "I'm Still Here" (in D-Flat) as she explores her own regrets. It's ironic that a decade later, MacLaine would work again with Carrie Fisher and the real deal of who she plays here (Debbie Reynolds) in the amusing but mediocre T.V. movie "These Old Broads". In both films, Fisher explores the adoration that "these old broads" receive from the gay community, as evidenced by an encounter that MacLaine has with a rehab patient who happens to do one of MacLaine's old movie characters (obviously based upon Reynolds' Oscar nominated "Molly Brown") in drag. In typical comically bitter fashion, MacLaine gets in a bitchy line ("You know how the queens love me", she tells Streep") while the gay man tells his lover how obvious MacLaine's plastic surgery is, although in a very affectionate but knowing manner. This film isn't perfect, and might strike some as a bitter attack on Hollywood's treatment to aging divas or has-beens, but if we got that with "Sunset Bouevard", why couldn't it be done 40 years after Norma Desmond got ready for her close-up?
evanston_dad Carrie Fisher adapted her own book about the contentious relationship between a Hollywood mother and daughter -- hmmmm, wonder who this film is about? "Postcards from the Edge" isn't going to be remembered as a significant contribution to film history, but I do remember enjoying it well enough. It would have to be a terrible movie for Meryl Streep and Shirley MacLaine not to be able to do SOMETHING with it, and both actresses are in fine form. Mike Nichols directs with his customary light touch. He's never been one to force his hand as a director, but rather lets his actors do the jobs they were hired to do.Grade: B