| |
| | Salesrank:
|
|
|
|
MPAA Rating: Media: DVD |
|
Editorial Review:
Jamie Lee Curtis stars in this adaptation of Wendy Wasserstein's hit play The Heidi Chronicles. A lecture about ignored female painters by art historian Heidi Holland (Curtis) frames the decade-by-decade story of her life, starting with a high school dance in the mid-'60s and working its way through political rallies, feminist consciousness raising, gay rights, AIDS, the excess of the 1980s--it's a bit like Forrest Gump, but with a smart, self-deprecating woman instead of a dumb cheerful guy. Wasserstein traces a well-intentioned (if glib) arc of female experience through this time period, articulating the costs of independence as well as the glories. The important personal realizations come fast and thick, but Curtis, Tom Hulce, Kim Cattrall (in a wealth of era-appropriate wigs), and Peter Friedman do their best to keep The Heidi Chronicles from being a baby-boomer pop-up book. --Bret Fetzer
The Heidi Chronicles Reviews:
"I don't have a life. I'm expendable." 
2004-12-21 - Heidi Holland, with her degrees from Vassar and Yale and a Fulbright in England under her belt, opens this film lecturing on art history, showing fine portraits of women, painted by women artists who are virtually unknown, though their work is as good as that of the male painters who dominated their ages. Using the art history "hook" into the question of women and their roles--as they see their roles, as men see women's roles, and as women search for happiness within these roles--director Paul Bogart gives life to Wendy Wasserstein's teleplay, adapted from her Pulitzer Prize-winning stage play of the same name. Introducing each change of time period through the changing slides of the art history lecture, the film explores women trying to find meaning in their lives from the late 1960s through the 1990s.
Jamie Lee Curtis as Heidi Holland, Tom Hulce as her best friend Peter Patrone, and Peter Friedman as Scoop Rosenbaum, her sometime lover, take us from Heidi's high school and college days, as she grows in her thinking and view of her role in life, to her experiences with women's lib focus groups, the Eugene McCarthy campaign, the death of John Lennon, the campaign of Geraldine Ferraro, the rise of AIDS, the gay movement, and ultimately Heidi's realization of what is important to her, not just professionally and philosophically, but personally and emotionally.
High humor and absurdity are nicely balanced with sentiment and sorrowful revelation. Though the film treats significant social movements in a relatively brief time, it offers much food for thought without hitting the viewer over the head with polemics. Fine acting, much of it low key, note-perfect period details (the hairstyles for both men and women are priceless), and excellent pacing create a film that is simultaneously charming and enlightening. "Meatier" than most films created for the neighborhood theater, this teleplay represents one of the finest moments in television production, bringing to the home screen a production which both engages the mind and amuses the spirit. Mary Whipple
This is Wonderful! 
2001-04-13 - What else i am going to say, i don't want to write a cranky review so please, admit this one, i am just going to say it's wonderful,great acting, story, funny and sad, it's WONDERFUL. Okay?
Awesome 
1999-11-04 - This movie has real and believable characters in Heidi (Curtis) and Peter (Hulce). It chronicles aspects of her life in such a way to really give the viewer a flavor of those 30 years and one woman's experiences that so many movies lack. It is a definate must have.
Wonderfully acted drama. Well worth watching for all. 
1999-06-14 - Jamie Lee Curtis proves her ability to truly carry a major work in "The Heidi Chronicles." Spanning three decades in the life of Curtis' Heidi, this film deals with the kind of real situations that people face with none of the unreal extraordinary circumstances that other films feel a need to drag in. Occasionally overly sappy or maudlin (can't we have at least ONE movie with a gay character who DOESN'T deal with a "close friend" dying of AIDS?
Hulce is terrific in the supporting role, and Nicki Vannice (of television's "Getting By" contributes a scene-stealing cameo as a teenager at a female support group. An overall winner of a film.
Get the kleenex ready.... 
1999-02-01 - A heartfelt movie....chronicling the life a woman who has had her ups and downs, and manages to carry on with life and live it to its fullest. Jaime Lee Curtis ("True Lies") is terrific, as well as Tom Hulce ("Amadeus").