|
Michael Douglas | Oliver Rose | |
Kathleen Turner | Barbara Rose | |
Danny DeVito | Gavin D'Amato | |
Marianne Sägebrecht | Susan | |
Sean Astin | Josh at 17 | |
Heather Fairfield | Carolyn at 17 | |
G.D. Spradlin | Harry Thurmont | |
Peter Donat | Jason Larrabee | |
Dan Castellaneta | Man in chair | |
Gloria Cromwell | Mrs. Marshall | |
Patricia Allison | Maureen | |
Harlan Arnold | Mr. Dell | |
Peter Brocco | ||
G. D. Spradlin | Harry Thurmont | |
Mary Fogarty | Mrs. Dell | |
Rika Hofmann | Elke |
Director |
|
||
Producer | Arnon Milchan
Arnold Milchan James L. Brooks |
||
Writer | Warren Adler
Michael Leeson |
||
Cinematography | Stephen H. Burum
|
||
Musician | David Newman
|
|
Once in a lifetime comes a motion picture that makes you feel like falling in love again. This is not that movie. In this blackest of comedies, a perfect 18-year marriage suddenly becomes unglued and the gleefully evil Barbara (Kathleen Turner) and Oliver (Michael) Rose single-mindedly inflict as much misery as possible on each other. Rather than just get divorced, they declare war, fighting to the bitter end over their huge mansion and every possession in it. Not even the calculating guidance of Oliver's lawyer (Danny DeVito) can stop this uncompromising twosome as their vicious battle sends them on an increasingly dark and dangerous path. |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Features
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||