Just the Way You Are (1984 film)

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Just the Way You Are
Justhewayyouare84.jpg
Home video release cover
Directed byÉdouard Molinaro
Written byAllan Burns
Produced byLéo L. Fuchs
Starring
CinematographyClaude Lecomte
Edited byGeorges Klotz
Claudio Ventura
Music byVladimir Cosma
Production
company
Distributed byMGM/UA Entertainment Company
Release date
  • November 16, 1984 (1984-11-16)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$7,889,694[1]

Just the Way You Are is a 1984 American comedy-drama film starring Kristy McNichol and Michael Ontkean and directed by Édouard Molinaro.

Plot[]

Susan is a professional flautist in Philadelphia who has been handicapped since childhood and is forced to wear a leg brace to get around. She is all set to enter into a lavender marriage with her gay investment banker friend Frank in order to help him hide his sexuality so he can get ahead in business and get a big promotion, but decides not to when she realizes that the marriage won't meet her (or his) sexual needs. Shortly afterwards she accepts the offer to travel to Europe on a concert tour. While in Paris, she comes up with an idea to disguise her leg by putting it in a cast and travel on her own to the French Alps to be treated without pity. Not looking to find romance, Susan however has become the interest of Peter, a news photographer. They soon fall in love and Peter dumps his insufferable and narcissistic girlfriend Bobbie for her. Susan is forced to decide if she should tell Peter the truth about herself.

Main cast[]

Production[]

The movie was filmed in Toronto and in France.[2] In France, Kristy McNichol suffered an emotional breakdown while filming, and the production had to be interrupted for a year while she recovered. She later said that her emotional breakdown had been caused by the pressures of her childhood career.[3]

Reference list[]

  1. ^ "Just the Way You Are". Box Office Mojo.
  2. ^ Lorraine LoBianco (2019). Just the Way You Are, TCM. Retrieved 2019-05-05.
  3. ^ Haller, Scot (1989-04-03). "Cover Story: 'I Was Crying All the Time' – Vol. 31 No. 13". PEOPLE. Retrieved 2019-05-05.

External links[]


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