A black and white movie of black and white quality
Manhattan (1979)
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Reviews Counted:42
Fresh:41
Rotten:1
Average Rating:8.6/10
Consensus: One of Woody Allen's early classics, Manhattan combines modern, bittersweet humor and timeless romanticism with unerring grace.
Runtime: 1 hr 36 mins
Genre: Comedies
Synopsis: Woody Allen finished his first decade of filmmaking, the 1970s, with one of his greatest and most deliberately artistic films, the love song to his home city MANHATTAN. Allen plays Isaac Davis,... Woody Allen finished his first decade of filmmaking, the 1970s, with one of his greatest and most deliberately artistic films, the love song to his home city MANHATTAN. Allen plays Isaac Davis, another one of his thinly veiled self-portraits, who finds himself suffering from a mid-life crisis. Unhappy in his career as a variety show comedy writer and newly divorced from a woman who has since come out as a lesbian, Isaac waffles between two relationships: that with emotionally honest and open, but far too young, Tracy (Mariel Hemingway in an Academy Award nominated performance) and with pseudo-intellectual, neurotic Mary (Diane Keaton). Allen uses these two women to contrast the naiveté and lack of pretension of youth with the growing cynicism of middle age. Although the acting and writing is some of the sharpest of Allen's filmmaking career, what is truly memorable and endearing about MANHATTAN is its romantic view of New York. Whereas the character relationships in the film are largely dysfunctional and fueled by a vision of perfection, by contrast the city itself is envisioned by Allen as an object of perfection. In order to create aesthetically pleasing images of the city, Allen and his longtime cinematographer Gordon Willis decided to shoot the film in black and white and in the 2.35:1 widescreen ratio, the first time that Allen had used either format. The images are backed by the songs of quintessential New York composer George Gershwin, setting a tone of romanticism and grandeur that underlies Isaac's (and Allen's) inherent dissatisfaction with the mundane aspects of his life. The magnificence of the city of New York is the backdrop to the search for a similar splendor in human relationships in MANHATTAN. [More]
Starring: Woody Allen, Diane Keaton, Mariel Hemingway, Meryl Streep
Starring: Woody Allen, Diane Keaton, Mariel Hemingway, Meryl Streep, Michael Murphy, Anne Byrne, Karen Ludwig, Michael O'Donoghue
Director: Woody Allen
Director: Woody Allen
Producer: Charles H. Joffe
Screenwriter: Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman
Composer: George Gershwin
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Release:
Jul 5, 2000
Reviews for Manhattan
Allen had forsworn the glib one-liner and spent more time developing well-rounded characters.
Allen's greatest film? Spend time in its company and you'll find it hard to argue otherwise.
The layers of self-awareness and self-referentiality at the heart of this film are dizzying.
After taking a fresh look at the DVD of Manhattan, it's apparent that this isn't Woody Allen's greatest film. However, it is easily his most beautiful, with breathtaking black & white vistas of the titular city set to Gershwin's 'Rhapsody in Blue.'
Its emotional honesty and depth, tender and humane humour and remarkable sensual splendour place Manhattan among Allen’s best.
Woody Allen's great leap forward into character development and dramatic integrity.
One of Woody's most aesthetically gorgeous films as well as his classic love-hate letter to the city of his soul.
Manhattan depicts urban trippers whose appetite for variety propels them from one person or job or dream to another.
This is Allen’s most mellifluous, fervent dialogue with each line pierced and tinged with biting hilarity.
Manhattan is not just Woody Allen's dream movie. Wistful as it is witty, it's his dream of the movies.
If Manhattan was only a romantic comedy, it would be a very good one, but the fact that the movie has so much more ambition than the 'average' entry into the genre makes it an extraordinary example of the fusion of entertainment and art.
Latest News for Manhattan
August 14, 2008:
Woody Allen Looks Back With EW ![]()
As he prepares to launch his latest feature, Vicky Cristina Barcelona, Woody Allen has taken a few minutes to revisit a dozen of his career highlights with Entertainment Weekly. More...
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