California Suite offers audiences a fine blend of laughter and variety which is the spice of good comic cinema.
California Suite (1978)
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Reviews Counted:19
Fresh:11
Rotten:8
Average Rating:5.2/10
Runtime: 1 hr 43 mins
Genre: Comedies
Synopsis: Neil Simon's bittersweet comedy, adapted from the Broadway hit, follows four separate stories of guests who've just checked into the swank Beverly Hills Hotel over the weekend of the Academy Awards... Neil Simon's bittersweet comedy, adapted from the Broadway hit, follows four separate stories of guests who've just checked into the swank Beverly Hills Hotel over the weekend of the Academy Awards gala. The four-part story line runs the gamut from touching introspection to outright slapstick. Bill and Hannah Warren (Alan Alda and Jane Fonda) are an angry divorced duo engaged in a nasty custody battle over their daughter. Marvin Michaels (Walter Matthau) is in town a day before his devoted wife (Elaine May) for his nephew's bar mitzvah when his brother sends him a present that is difficult to hide--a hooker. Diana Barrie (Maggie Smith) is an Oscar-nominated British actress in town for the Academy Awards with her husband, Sydney (Michael Caine), who happens to be gay. Competing doctors Willis Panama (Bill Cosby) and Chauncey Gump (Richard Pryor) have been busy containing calamities befalling them since they arrived and discovered they had to share a hotel room with their crestfallen wives. CALIFORNIA SUITE, in the capable hands of director Herbert Ross, is a simultaneously touching and hilarious vision of everyday people struggling to survive. (Smith, interestingly enough, won an Oscar for her role in the film.) [More]
Starring: Alan Alda, Jane Fonda, Michael Caine, Maggie Smith
Starring: Alan Alda, Jane Fonda, Michael Caine, Maggie Smith, Bill Cosby, Richard Pryor, Walter Matthau, Elaine May, Sheila Frazier
Director: Herbert Ross
Director: Herbert Ross
Screenwriter: Neil Simon
Producer: Ray Stark
Composer: Claude Bolling
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Reviews for California Suite
Means middle-class angst covered with a thin veneer of snappy one-liners and presented in the most anonymous directorial style imaginable.
Maggie Smith won a seond, Supporting Oscar for playing a hard-drinking, hard-talking actress who complains to her bisexual antique-dealer husband (Michael Caine), "Acting doesn't win Oscars. What I need is a dying father."
Less than successful, veering from poignant emotionalism to broad slapstick in sudden shifts.
Quick and varied comedy, highly suited to Neil Simon's machine-gun gag-writing.
Dire: good actors playing the worst versions of one-dimensional Neil Simon joke machines.
Latest News for California Suite
October 03, 2007:
Total Recall: The Heartbreak Kid and the Movies of Neil Simon
After toning down the crude and turning up the cute for the last three years, the Farrelly brothers return to R-rated raunch territory with The Heartbreak Kid, opening this... More...
December 12, 2005:
Richard Pryor Passes Away at 65
Richard Pryor passed away yesterday morning, and while he's probably best remembered for his incendiary stand-up material (as evidenced in 1979's "Live in Concert,"... More...
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