
Annie Hall - 35mm Print!
93 min - 1977| Comedy Drama Romance
Woody Allen's
romantic comedy of the Me Decade follows the up and down relationship
of two mismatched New York neurotics. Jewish comedy writer Alvy Singer
(Allen) ponders the modern quest for love and his past romance with
tightly-wound WASP singer Annie Hall (Diane Keaton,
née Diane Hall). The twice-divorced Alvy knows that it's not easy to
find a mate when the options include pretentious New York intellectuals
and lifestyle-obsessed Rolling Stone writers, but la-di-dah-ing
Annie seems different. Along the rocky road of their coupling,
Allen/Alvy weigh in on such topics as endless therapy, movies vs. TV,
the absurdity of dating rituals, anti-Semitism, drugs, and, in one of
the best set pieces, repressed Midwestern WASP insanity vs. crazy
Brooklyn Jewish boisterousness. Annie wants to move to Los Angeles to
find that fame that finally does in the relationship -- but not before
Alvy gets in a few digs at vacuous, mantra-fixated California.
Originally entitled Anhedonia (the inability to enjoy oneself), Annie Hall blended the slapstick and fantasy from such earlier Allen films as Sleeper (1973) and Bananas
(1971) with the more autobiographical musings of his stand-up and
written comedy, using an array of such movie techniques as talking
heads, splitscreens, and subtitles. Within these gleeful formal
experiments and sight gags, Allen and co-writer Marshall Brickman
skewered 1970s solipsism, reversing the happy marriage of opposites
found in classic screwball comedies. Hailed as Allen's most mature and
personal film, Annie Hall beat out Star Wars
for Best Picture and also won Oscars for Allen as director and writer
and for Keaton as Best Actress; audiences enthusiastically responded to
Allen's take on contemporary love and turned Keaton's rumpled menswear
into a fashion trend. ~ Lucia Bozzola, Rovi
Thursday 9/6/2012
7:30pm
Friday 9/7/2012
9:00p
Saturday 9/8/2012
9:00p
Sunday 9/9/2012
5:00p
