Postcards from the Edge (1990)
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- Short title: Postcards from the Edge
- NetFlix Rating: 3.3/5
- Runtime: 101 minutes.
- MPAA Content Rating: R
- Release Year: 1990
- Production: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
- Genre: Comedy, Dark Humor & Black Comedies, Showbiz Comedies, Biographies
Plot summary
Carrie Fisher's scathing, hilarious and confessional novel -- about a woman (Meryl Streep) who becomes addicted to drugs while pursuing a Hollywood acting career -- makes a successful transition to the big screen. Shirley MacLaine enjoys her best role in years as Streep's self-absorbed mother, a faded movie queen who doesn't believe time has passed her by. Fisher adapted the screenplay from her best-seller.Posters and pictures
Reviews
Hollywood daughter and mother. Sharp, perceptive, funny.
Read the NYTimes review of Postcards from the Edge by Vincent Canby
Actors and Directors
Actors
Directors
Awards and nominations
- Academy Awards (1991): Best Music Song nominee
- Academy Awards (1991): Best Actress nominee
- BAFTA (1991): Best Actress nominee
- Golden Globe Awards (1991): Best Actress in a Motion Picture (Musical or Comedy) nominee
- Golden Globe Awards (1991): Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture nominee
- AFI : Top 100 Laughs nominee
Amazon product info
- ASIN: B000059XTI
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Audience rating: R (Restricted)
- Binding: DVD
- DVD Type: Layers ( sides)
- DVD Region: 99
- Manufacturer: Sony Pictures
- Publisher: Sony Pictures
- Release date: 2001-05-01
Amazon Product Reviews
Editorial review
by Amazon.com essential video
As its title might suggest, this movie based on Carrie Fisher's Hollywood struggle works better as a snapshot than as a complete film. Meryl Streep plays Suzanne Vale, a successful actress who is lost in her addictions. Her episodes are never as bombastic as Clean and Sober or other antidrug movies of the 1990s, however. Vale's a more lovable person, and as with all lovable people in Hollywood, other Hollywood people care for her: an understanding director (Gene Hackman), a philandering boyfriend (Dennis Quaid), and a bemused doctor (Richard Dreyfuss). But if you are going to talk about Fisher, you are going to mention her mom, Debbie Reynolds. And here Vale's mom is the die-hard Doris Mann, played with appropriate virtuosity by Shirley MacLaine. The love-hate mother-daughter relationship takes over the film in an entertaining way, with Fisher's sharp comic writing coming into play. You nearly forgive Vale's troubles for having to live under a hurricane like Mann (who goes into her nightclub act at the drop of a hat). The film's sweetest pleasure is seeing Streep loose and modern, nary a drab outfit or an accent in sight. Streep and director Mike Nichols make a risky--and rewarding--finale (fueled by the Oscar-nominated "I'm Checking Out" by Shel Silverstein) work effortlessly. --Doug Thomas
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