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| GREY
GARDENS (directors: Albert
Maysles/David Maysles/Ellen Hovde/Muffie
Meyer; cinematographers: Albert
Maysles/David Maysles; editors: Susan
Fromke/Ellen Hovde/Muffie Meyer; cast: Edith
Bouvier Beale (Herself), Edie Beale (Herself), Jack
Helmuth (Birthday Guest), Brooks Hires (Gardener);
Runtime: 94; MPAA Rating: NR; producers: Albert
Maysles/David Maysles; Janus Films; 1975) "Depressing cinéma vérité film." Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz The noted
pioneering documentarian brothers, Albert and
David Maysles ("Gimme Shelter"/"Salesman"/"The
Gates"), direct this depressing cinéma
vérité film about the separated
79-year-old Edith Bouvier Beale (aka: Big Edie) and
her 56-year-old daughter Edie (aka: Little
Edie), social register elites who have been ostracized
by their former high-society crowd and have fallen on
bad times to live in squalor in their 28-room mansion
on East Hampton, NY, called the Grey Gardens. The
shallow biopic overstays its welcome, coldly
exploiting these talkative eccentrics who seem not to
be all there living as near recluses in a dilapidated
mansion with too many cats, racoons and fleas.
Some may find this invasive film interesting only
because the subjects are the aunt and cousin of Jacqueline
Kennedy Onassis, otherwise this is an unwatchable and
cruelly exploitative film. The camera freely shoots as
the attention-deprived ladies gab away non-stop at
whatever strikes their fancy: they openly chat about
what petty things bothers them, have a few verbal
spats and make up, sing a few tunes badly, relate a
few incidents from their past and make comments about
Edie's former suitors. Nothing much happens, a few
visitors show up for dull brief visits, Edie goes
through various costume changes (seemingly into
scarves) and several rambling rants that include
the threat of leaving mom to live in Manhattan.
The gals are shut-ins bewildered that life has passed
them by and have nothing worth saying about their
travails, except they are sympathetic characters and I
thought were treated coldly by the filmmakers. Though
the subjects saw things differently, evidently
enjoying all the attention and inviting the brothers
to film them again. What can I tell you! REVIEWED ON 8/13/2012 GRADE: C+ Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |