Director: Jonathan Kaufer
Starring: David Strathairn, Bonnie Bedelia, Saul Rubinek, Caroleen Feeney, Julie Harris
Running Time: 88 minutes
Synopsis: Married couple Wes and Nancy (David Strathairn and Bonnie Bedelia) are both Boston-area professors, but the passion has long since seeped out of their relationship. Their staid home is upturned by the visit of Nancy's former lover Matt (Saul Rubinek), a musicology professor in town for a guest lecture, accompanied by his much younger lover and research assistant Kim (Caroleen Feeney). Wes is jealous of Matt, the free-spirited Kim stirs the pot, and accusations of theft and infidelity are soon rocking both couples.
What Works Well: The adaptation of the David Gilman stage play exposes turmoil between two mis-matched couples, and carries obvious echoes from Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf. Strong performances by the four main cast members animate a milieu of crackling discontent hiding beneath a veneer of upper middle class respectability. Selfish motivations, generational gaps, and suppressed frustrations bubble to the surface, driving a steady stream of narrative twists.
What Does Not Work As Well: The stage origins are only partially concealed, and the plot hinges on a couple of logic leaps unworthy of supposedly smart people. A missing $50 bill immediately becomes an accusation of theft, and music notes within a garbled composition are posited as no less than possible proof of God's existence. Elsewhere the incessant lying erodes any sense of belief in what anyone is saying, slowly undermining the investment in already unlikeable characters.
Key Quote:
Kim: You're being a bore.
Wes: I am a bore. I lead a placid life.

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