Friday, 17 July 2026

Movie Review: Stanley & Iris (1990)


Genre: Romance  
Director: Martin Ritt  
Starring: Robert De Niro, Jane Fonda, Swoosie Kurtz, Martha Plimpton, Stephen Root  
Running Time: 104 minutes  

Synopsis: In suburban New England, widow Iris (Jane Fonda) works at a large baking factory. She meets Stanley (Robert De Niro), who works as a cook at the same facility, after he helps her scare off a purse snatcher. They strike up a friendship that evolves into a romance, until Iris discovers that Stanley does not know how to read or write. He is nevertheless helping his father through old age, while Iris is raising her teenaged daughter (Martha Plimpton), and housing her unemployed sister (Swoosie Kurtz).

What Works Well: This low key romance benefits from two reliable stars and a ramshackle small town blue collar milieu. With both Iris and Stanley dealing with economic strains and personal stresses, their romance is tentative, the plot progress taking time to uncover the hidden struggles of broken dreams, less than ideal childhoods, and pay cheque to pay cheque existence.

What Does Not Work As Well: Although Jane Fonda and Robert De Niro are watchable reading the phone book, this is almost what happens here as Iris decides to help Stanley read and write. The pacing is almost painfully slow, the secondary characters fail to register as meaningful, and after all the investment in the granular details of imperfect lives, the final act rushes towards a windfall resolution of all issues. 

Key Quote:
Stanley: I like you, Iris, just about as much as I love you.



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