Frances

Jessica Lange gives a career performance in a role she was born to play: the talented and troubled Frances Farmer. Farmer's awful trajectory travels from bright Seattle girl to 1930s Hollywood starlet to degraded (eventually lobotomized) mental patient. Lange, who has the blond, clean look of Farmer's heyday, goes into these places with the fierce abandon of a true believer. Her performance, the lush John Barry score, and the period re-creation are all worth applauding almost everything else fails. Everyone except Farmer is grotesquely caricatured to fit the movie's thesis, which is that if you are intelligent and nonconformist, the system will resolutely destroy you. (The medical establishment is evil incarnate.) This simple conclusion seems inadequate and disrespectful of Frances Farmer's tragic problems. For a radiant glimpse of what the real Farmer had to offer, see Howard Hawks'sCome and Get It , which bristles with excitement over a new discovery.--Robert Horton

 
Title:Frances
Director:Graeme Clifford
Stars:Jessica Lange
Kim Stanley
Sam Shepard
Bart Burns
Jonathan Banks
Bonnie Bartlett
James Brodhead
Jane Jenkins
Jordan Charney
Rod Colbin
Daniel Chodos
Donald Craig
Sarah Cunningham
Lee de Broux
Jeffrey DeMunn
Jack Fitzgerald
Nancy Foy
Anne Haney
Richard L. Hawkins
James Karen
Publisher:Republic Pictures
Genre:Biography
Mothers & Daughters
4-for-3 Drama
4-for-3 All DVDs
Edition:
Minutes:113
MPAA Rating:R
Net Rating:4.5
Features:Anamorphic
Closed-captioned
Color
NTSC
1.85:1