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McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:34
Fresh:30
Rotten:4
Average Rating:8.3/10
Synopsis: A haunting, poetic anti-Western based on the 1959 novel by Edmund Naughton, Robert Altman's MCCABE AND MRS. MILLER is a deeply moving motion picture about love and the pursuit of wealth in... A haunting, poetic anti-Western based on the 1959 novel by Edmund Naughton, Robert Altman's MCCABE AND MRS. MILLER is a deeply moving motion picture about love and the pursuit of wealth in 19th-century America. John McCabe (Warren Beatty), a determined businessman with a mysterious past, settles in the small Northwestern town of Presbyterian Church and opens up a saloon and brothel. Soon after, the brothel's madam, an Englishwoman named Constance Miller (Julie Christie), arrives and forms a partnership with McCabe in order to manage the brothel's business affairs. McCabe has trouble expressing his true feelings to Mrs. Miller, with whom he has fallen in love; she, in turn, relies on opium to distract her from her personal sorrows. After a powerful company arrives and offers to buy out McCabe's property, his stubborn refusal ends up jeopardizing his life, resulting in a showdown with three hired killers in the middle of a freak blizzard. Cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond's faded imagery-purposely manipulated by "flashing" the film stock before shooting--along with production designer Leon Ericksen's authentically created town, brings to life a past world that is tinged with an underlying sadness, a feeling that is heightened by Leonard Cohen's melancholy soundtrack. Beatty, as the lovesick McCabe, and Christie, who was nominated for an Oscar as the hard-nosed Mrs. Miller, deliver heartfelt and convincing performances. [More]
Starring: Warren Beatty, Julie Christie, Rene Auberjonois, Keith Carradine
Starring: Warren Beatty, Julie Christie, Rene Auberjonois, Keith Carradine, John Schuck, Bert Remsen, William Devane, Corey Fischer
Director: Robert Altman
Director: Robert Altman
Screenwriter: Robert Altman, Brian McKay
Producer: David Foster, Mitchell Brower
Reviews for McCabe & Mrs. Miller
A period story about a small northwest mountain village where stars Warren Beatty and Julie Christie run the bordello, the production suffers from overlength; also a serious effort at moody photography which backfires into pretentiousness.
Still Robert Altman's best moment, this 1971 antiwestern murmurs softly of love, death, and capitalism.
Altman's capacity for fashioning an oddball romance without defeating the tough political implications of the story make this one of the greatest of all westerns and a key work in American cinema.
If anything, Robert Altman's self-styled "anti-western" looks even richer, stranger and more daring than it did when it first appeared back in 1971.
A poetic, slow-burning tale of America’s pioneering past, it’s an off-beat western and one of Altman’s finest films.
Cast and director come together a treat in a fascinating attempt to revise the western that satisfies visually, emotionally and intellectually.
They say that great actors are never knowingly caught acting; Altman's best movies are similarly effortless - experiences to be lived in, rather than simply watched.
Diferente em ambientação, tom, textura e ritmo, é um western que só Altman poderia realizar, concentrando-se na humanidade de seus personagens e suas ambigüidades de maneira tocante, profunda e poética sem jamais nos deixar perder o interesse.
A pioneering film, in both senses of the word, and one of the key works in the American cinema of the 1970s.
Altman and cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond present the film in grainy browns, as if the film were painted on a fence, and the endless white snow has never felt more textile, or more appropriate.
A grim and dirty slice of bleak frontier life rendered with extraordinary beauty.
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