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Film Description
Perhaps Allen's last great film, this was being made as his life was falling apart and jittery jump cuts and hand-held cinematography brutally dissect a world of relationships turned upside down. Shot in burnished reds and browns, this remains one of Allen's most beautiful works, with Davis superb.
The restless documentary feel of Husbands and Wives, in which Allen's creative writing professor falls for a student a third his age, jarred audiences with its almost ... more >
The restless documentary feel of Husbands and Wives, in which Allen's creative writing professor falls for a student a third his age, jarred audiences with its almost excruciating irony when it was released in Autumn 1992. In real life, Allen had just been all over the headlines as a result of his affair with longtime partner Mia Farrow's adopted daughter. Controversy aside, this was still Allen's best film in years, and it remains one of the high points of his oeuvre.