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Hannah and Her Sisters is a 1986 romantic comedy film which tells the intertwined stories of an extended family, told mostly during a year that begins and ends with a family Thanksgiving dinner. The movie was written and directed by Woody Allen and stars Mia Farrow as Hannah, with Barbara Hershey and Dianne Wiest as her sisters. It is an adaptation of Visconti's 1960 Rocco and His Brothers.[1] The film's ensemble cast also includes Allen, Michael Caine, Carrie Fisher, Maureen O'Sullivan, Lloyd Nolan, Max von Sydow, and Julie Kavner. Daniel Stern, Lewis Black, Joanna Gleason, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus all have minor roles, as do Tony Roberts and Sam Waterston, whose are uncredited cameo appearances. Several of Farrow's children, including a pre-adolescent Soon-Yi Previn, have credited and uncredited roles, mostly as Thanksgiving extras.
Critical recognitionHannah and Her Sisters received seven Academy Award nominations, including one for Best Picture. Allen's writing was recognized with an Oscar for Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen and he earned a nomination for Best Director. His work on the film was also recognized with two BAFTA Awards. Caine and Wiest each won Oscars, for Best Actor in a Supporting Role and Best Actress in a Supporting Role. The film was also Oscar-nominated for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, and Best Film Editing. In France, the film was nominated for a César Award for Best Foreign Film.
PlotSpoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
The story is told in three main arcs, with almost all of it occurring during a twelve-month period beginning and ending at a Thanksgiving party hosted by Hannah (Farrow) and her husband Elliot (Caine). Hannah serves as the stalwart hub of the story; her own story as a successful actress is somewhat secondary but most of the events of the film connect to her. An adulterous romance between Elliot and one of Hannah's sisters, Lee (Hershey), provides the main romantic entanglement of the film. Elliot's discontent with his wife's self-sufficiency and resentment of her emotional strength causes him to look elsewhere. Lee has lived for several years with a reclusive artist, Frederick (von Sydow). She finds herself in a relationship with Frederick that is no longer romantic or intellectually stimulating, the latter in spite of Frederick's professed interest in continuing to teach her about life. She leaves Frederick, much to his sorrow (for he has grown dependent upon her), and has a secret affair with Elliot lasting for several months. Mickey (played by Allen in the neurotic persona common to many of his films) provides the comic relief. Part of his story are scenes from his previous marriage to Hannah and his horrible date with the cocaine-addicted Holly (Hannah's other sister, played by Wiest), shown in flashbacks. Mickey's main story is one of a hypochondriac confronting the possibility of an actual serious disease. It turns into a career-pausing existential crisis, and leads to unsatisfying experiments with religious conversion, before a long walk and the fortuitous opportunity to view Duck Soup helps remind him why life is worth living. The revelation helps prepare him for a second date with Holly, which this time blossoms quickly (and mostly off-screen) into a relationship and marriage. Holly's story is the film's third main arc. She's an unsuccessful actress, who dabbles in a catering business, competing with April (Fisher), a fellow actress and her business partner, for acting parts and a man. Holly loses both, and decides to try her hand at writing. The career change forces her to once again borrow money from Hannah, a dependency that Hannah welcomes and Holly resents. After writing a script inspired by Hannah and Elliot (a story that Holly sets aside after Hannah objects to just how much of the couple's private life Holly had incorporated in it), she writes a story inspired by April, which Mickey reads and admires greatly, vowing to help her get it produced. A minor arc in the film tells part of the story of Norma and Evan (played by O'Sullivan and Nolan, who were both in Never Too Late twenty years earlier). They are Hannah's parents, who still have acting careers of their own, careers disrupted at times by Norma's alcoholism. Evan's piano playing provides part of the entertainment during the Thanksgiving get-togethers. By the time of the film's second Thanksgiving Lee has ended her affair with Elliot. In a final coda-like act, another year has lapsed, and the film ends happily for the three sisters, now all married. Spoilers end here.
Box OfficeHannah and Her Sisters opened on February 7, 1986 in 54 theatres, where it made a stellar $1,265,826 ($23,441 per screen) in its opening weekend. When it expanded to 696 theatres on March 14, it made a less spectacular $2,707,966 ($3,809 per screen). Still, it went on to gross $40,084,041, and to this day holds the distinction of highest-grossing Woody Allen movie.[3]
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