Joe Pesci Movie:

Im Dancing As Fast As I Can



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Joe Pesci Movie:
Im Dancing As Fast As I Can



Movie
I'm Dancing As Fast As I Can
I
List Price: $14.98Label: Paramount

Salesrank: 74361

Released: June 21, 2005
Our Price: $17.79
Used Price: $9.99
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Color
  • Dolby
  • DVD
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Jill Clayburgh
  • Nicol Williamson
  • Dianne Wiest
  • Joe Pesci
  • Geraldine Page
  • Editorial Review:
    One of today's most gifted and brilliant actresses, Jill Clayburgh, brings her special sensitivity to the role of Barbara Gordon, a successful television documentary producer who became hopelessly dependent on tranquilizers. But this is much more than a story of addiction and withdrawal; it is an examination of the success syndrome that affects the lives of people whose career triumphs are achieved at great personal sacrifice. It is the dramatic and suspenseful story of one woman's survival in a battle for her sanity- and her life. In this urgent quest, she must discover her inner strength, independence, and ability to be truly happy.

    I'm Dancing As Fast As I Can Reviews:
    The Dance of Despair 5 Star Review
    2006-11-20 - The subject matter is obviously heavy and weighs the audience down as much as the protagonist, but this is a mostly successful (if highly earnest) adaptation of the famed memoir by prize-winning documentarian Barbara Gordon. With such a lukewarm endorsement, my five-star rating may seem unwarranted, but this movie deserves a wide audience for one reason, as far as I'm concerned, and that's Geraldine Page's stunning supporting turn as the cancer-ravaged poet about whom Gordon is producing her latest work. The scene in the hospital, when Page explodes at Clayburgh, for the sentimentality of the documentary, will raise all the hair on your body and is further proof of Page's greatness. That she was not nominated for an Academy Award for this lacerating performance is an irrevocable blight on the movie industry.

    One day Page will get her due. Watch I'M DANCING AS FAST AS I CAN, with all its flaws, to see this acting genius at full throttle.

    A struggle with early childhood pain and the stress of modern living. 5 Star Review
    2005-09-09 - This movie requires insight and empathy for the lead character, otherwise it does appear the director did not adequately present what is the groundfloor to such addictions. However, there is alot of character development here for those who listen carefully. Barbara is tortured due to being unwanted and unloved and has used her career to cover it up along with Valium use. She finally hits rock bottom and gets treatment via examining the sources of her rage filled inner-self. This movie really stands out in memory from the 80's as a frank presentation of addiction, multiple competing roles, and the culture-of-Narcissm we live in and the sickness it can really create. It shows that "success" is merely another cover up, another addiction with some people. Lovinging oneself is unconditional if it is real and yes you "don't have to cripple yourself to be loved."

    I'm Swallowing Valium As Fast As I Can!!!! 5 Star Review
    2005-05-29 - This is a very sorry excuse for a movie about the consequences of abusing tranqulizers if your life isn't going too well. In this movie Jill Clayburgh plays a filmaker who is involoved in a pathetic relationship with a drunk, oh excuse me, I mean an alcoholic. Jill pops Valium like candy and it is no surprise that she ends up in the 1982 equivalent of Rehab for her drug dependancy. At the Rehab Clinic her psychiatrist makes the not too profound statement that 'You don't have to cripple yourself to be loved"Gee. I thought you didn't have to take 90 milligrams of Valium per day to be loved either. I give this movie 5 stars because Ms. Clayburgh did show some wonderful promise as an actress early in her career .

    I Am Dancing As Fast As I am 5 Star Review
    2001-12-16 - I lived her life and it is almost 20 years since I read the book and saw the movie and it still haunts me. Today I am fine, and I can say nothing more than that book really helped me to believe in myself.

    not easy going but rewarding 4 Star Review
    2000-08-21 - Although her screen persona in such films as Starting Over and It's My Turn was being the nice girl next door, Jill Clayburgh
    also took some chances. Just think of her vomiting in An Unmarried
    Woman and her incestuous opera singer in Bernardo Bertolucci's
    Luna. This film is based on Barbara Gordon's book and what probably
    helped Clayburgh to deliver her searing performance is that her
    husband playwright David Rabe both produced and did the screenplay,
    and the director was Jack Hofsiss who did The Elephant Man on stage to
    such acclaim. Her Barbara is barely likeable - obsessive-compulsive,
    hostile, chain-smoking and valium addicted. It's fascinating to see
    how she conceals her pills, and clear that she lacks the support to
    accomodate her impulsive decision to withdraw. She is told that valium
    withdrawal is as traumatic as opiate withdrawal, and having an
    alcoholic abusive lover doesn't help. As Barbara withdraws, Clayburgh
    goes all out - convulsing, drooling, shrieking, maniacal, with wild
    mad eyes and Frances Farmer hair. When she is eventually
    institutionalised we see the anger that the valium had suppressed as
    she rages at her therapist played by Dianne Wiest, who matches
    Clayburgh. Wiest's first film had been Clayburgh's It's My Turn and
    it's generous to think that Clayburgh helped her along with this role,
    before she found greater success with Woody Allen. The film is
    actually full of interesting actors in small roles - John Lithgow,
    David Margulies, Kathleen Widdoes, Daniel Stern, Joe Pesci, Anne de
    Salvo, Ellen Greene, Richard Masur, Jeffrey de Munn, and Geraldine
    Page as a poet with cancer who Barbara is making a doco on. The poetry
    we hear her recite is by Marsha Rabe. Occasionally Page slips into
    Method-overdrive, with her hands and her little girl voice, and she
    kills the meaning of the title, but mostly she is believable. The
    casting of Nicol Williamson as Clayburgh's lover however doesn't quite
    work. He is certainly creepy but we never understand his reluctance to
    get Barbara medical help during her withdrawal. Hofsiss gives us two
    great images - Clayburgh walking down a long corridor after having
    been insulted by Page, aggresively wiping away her tears, and her
    running on the beach in a white gown. The music of Stanley Silverman
    and the Primavera String Quartet is particularly beautiful and
    moving. Also Clayburgh is dressed very stylishly here, that is when
    not draped in her crazy lady pyjamas.











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