Opening Night

1977

Action / Drama

12
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 96% · 27 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 90% · 2.5K ratings
IMDb Rating 7.9/10 10 12749 12.7K

Plot summary

Actress Myrtle Gordon is a functioning alcoholic who is a few days from the opening night of her latest play, concerning a woman distraught about aging. One night a car kills one of Myrtle's fans who is chasing her limousine in an attempt to get the star's attention. Myrtle internalizes the accident and goes on a spiritual quest, but fails to finds the answers she is after. As opening night inches closer and closer, fragile Myrtle must find a way to make the show go on.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
August 02, 2020 at 02:23 PM

Top cast

Peter Falk as Peter Falk
John Cassavetes as Maurice Aarons
Seymour Cassel as Seymour Cassel
Gena Rowlands as Myrtle Gordon
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
1.29 GB
1280*682
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
2 hr 24 min
Seeds 5
2.66 GB
1920*1024
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
2 hr 24 min
Seeds 22

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by sdave7596 7 / 10

A flawed film, but Rowlands is the reason to watch

"Opening Night" released in 1977, tries to be an ambitious production. It succeeds only in the truly stunning performance of Gena Rowlands. Her character of theatre actress Myrtle is not necessarily someone we would love in real life. She is self-absorbed, often obnoxious, and makes life miserable for those around her - in other words, not unlike some actresses! Myrtle is also a woman on the edge of collapse - we are not quite sure if the demons she is fighting are real or imagined, although we are let in on the secret early. Rowlands is obviously well directed with love by her gifted husband, actor/director John Cassavettes, who has a role in the film as well. This film is not without flaws - it is overly long, and the last part of the film where Myrtle goes on stage while very drunk seems almost cruel. The "improvising" in some of the dialogue - at least while on stage - goes on way too long. Some of the supporting characters give good performances, especially from Ben Gazarra, playing Myrtle's sleazy producer. Joan Blondell's character is never fully developed, and I never could figure out why she was in the film, except to placate Myrtle. See this film for Rowlands alone - she is fascinating throughout - and it is tough to take your eyes off her, although you will want to at times.

Reviewed by sol- 8 / 10

My brief review of the film

Full of interesting ideas and really rather chilling at times, this account of a mental breakdown is fascinating to watch, with Gena Rowlands a glorious choice for the lead. It is in the way that Rowlands is able to carry emotion on her face that makes her performance so stunning, and along with some well used music and effective close-up photography, it is an intriguing piece of cinema, even if awkwardly very melodramatic at times and a tad hard to digest. The on and off-stage action in the protagonist's life is mixed together, and it is sort of muddled in this sense, though perhaps only as muddled as her mind is. The film poses such interesting questions about how much one should or does care, it portrays mental illness, and, it also has some insight into theatre production. It is very good stuff and only really brought down by being fatally overlong, with the content stretched to its limits.

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