Stanley & Iris

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Stanley & Iris
Stan iris moviep.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMartin Ritt
Screenplay by
  • Harriet Frank, Jr.
  • Irving Ravetch
Based onUnion Street
by Pat Barker
Produced byArlene Sellers
Starring
CinematographyDonald McAlpine
Edited by
Music byJohn Williams
Production
companies
Lantana Productions
Star Partners II Ltd.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Distributed byMGM/UA Communications Co.
Release date
  • February 9, 1990 (1990-02-09)
Running time
104 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$23 million[1]
Box office$5.8 million[2]

Stanley & Iris is a 1990 American romantic drama film directed by Martin Ritt and starring Jane Fonda and Robert De Niro. The screenplay by Harriet Frank, Jr. and Irving Ravetch is loosely based on the 1982 novel Union Street by Pat Barker.

The original music score is composed by John Williams and the cinematography is by Donald McAlpine. The film was marketed with the tagline "Some people need love spelled out for them." It was the final film for Ritt, Frank and Ravetch, as Ritt died ten months after the film's release, while Ravetch and Frank died respectively in 2010 and 2020. It was also the last film Fonda would appear in until 2005's Monster-in-Law.

Plot[]

Iris King, a widow still grieving 8 months after the loss of her husband, works in a baking factory in Connecticut and lives in a high-crime area. She lives from paycheck to paycheck as she raises her two children, Kelly and Richard. Also staying with her are her sister Sharon and Sharon's abusive husband Joe, both unemployed. With money already tight for the family, Kelly discovers she is pregnant, which makes matters worse.

Iris makes the acquaintance of Stanley Cox, a cook in the bakery's lunchroom cafeteria, when he comes to her aid after her purse is snatched on a bus. But as their friendship develops, she begins noticing peculiarities about Stanley − he doesn't own a car (he instead uses bicycles wherever he needs to go), he lives with and supports his elderly father, becomes frustrated when asked to sign his name, doesn't believe in opening Chinese fortune cookies, and cannot pick out a specific item from a shelf. Iris soon realizes that Stanley is illiterate, and when she innocently mentions this to Stanley's boss, Stanley is fired the next day over food safety and legal concerns, despite being a good cook and model employee. Afterwards, Stanley is unable to obtain any steady work, forcing him to move into a garage and put his father in a shabby retirement home. His father dies in the home only a few weeks later, upsetting Stanley over the fact that his illiteracy prevented him from caring for his father properly. Stanley seeks Iris out and asks her to teach him to read, explaining that his traveling-salesman father moved him all over the country when Stanley was a boy, bouncing him to nearly 50 different schools in total, resulting in Stanley developing no reading or writing skills from this lack of educational stability. Iris begins giving Stanley basic reading lessons and he gradually grows close to her and her family. It is during one of these reading exercises that he tells her that he has wanted to be intimate with her since they first met, but Iris is hesitant.

Iris tests Stanley's developing reading skills by making him a map and having him meet her at a certain street corner in 15 minutes, but Stanley gets hopelessly lost. Hours later, he reaches the corner where a frantic Iris is still waiting. Frustrated, Stanley marches off alone without saying a word, his interest in learning to read gone. Iris visits him at his garage home to try to persuade him to continue learning to read. Looking around, she sees a large mechanical project that Stanley is working on, as he invents things as a hobby. He has designed a cake-cooling machine that can outperform anything in the commercial marketplace. Iris is immensely impressed and Stanley reveals that a local company has shown interest in his invention and even offered him a job. Stanley agrees to start reading again with Iris, and in time learns to write short sentences. Stanley surprises Iris by cooking a big dinner for her and her family, and the two of them begin to grow close again.

After Kelly has her baby, Iris is displeased when she drops out of school to work at the bakery, as she doesn't want her daughter wasting her life in the kind of dead-end job she herself is in. Stanley and Iris finally decide to make love, but Iris is still clinging to her late husband's memory. This threatens their budding relationship further and they don't see each other for some time. Not prepared to give up on Iris the way she didn't give up on him, Stanley finally goes to see her. Iris hands him an unmailed letter she wrote to him, and Stanley surprises her by reading it aloud nearly perfectly. Iris, now ready to start letting go of the past, accompanies Stanley to a fancy hotel where they order room service and spend the night together.

Stanley soon moves to Detroit for a new, well-paying job he has been offered, his inventing ability finally having paid off. Several months later, back in Connecticut, Iris is walking home carrying groceries when an expensive car pulls up next to her and she is surprised to find Stanley behind the wheel. Stanley tells her that he's been given a raise and is looking to buy a large six-bedroom house in Detroit − and that he wants her to move there with him as his wife. Iris accepts.

Main cast[]

Actor Role
Jane Fonda Iris King
Robert De Niro Stanley Cox
Swoosie Kurtz Sharon
Martha Plimpton Kelly King
Harley Cross Richard King
Jamey Sheridan Joe
Feodor Chaliapin, Jr. Leonides Cox
Zohra Lampert Elaine
Loretta Devine Bertha
Kathy Kinney Bernice
Stephen Root Mr. Hershey

Music[]

Stanley & Iris: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Film score by
Released1990 (original); 2017 (expansion)
RecordedLorimar Music Scoring
Length28:56 (original); 59:31 (on the Deluxe Edition)
LabelVarèse Sarabande
ProducerJohn Williams
John Williams chronology
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
(1989)
Stanley & Iris: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
(1990)
Home Alone
(1990)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Filmtracks2/5 stars

Track listing[]

No.TitleLength
1."Stanley and Iris"3:24
2."Reading Lessons"2:26
3."The Bicycle"3:07
4."Factory Work"1:23
5."Finding a Family"1:41
6."Stanley at Work"1:31
7."Looking after Papa"3:10
8."Stanley's Invention"1:17
9."Night Visit"1:58
10."Letters"3:25
11."Putting it all Together"1:46
12."End Credits"3:03

Deluxe Edition track listing[]

In 2017 Varèse Sarabande issued an expanded edition with John Williams' score for Martin Ritt's 1972 film Pete 'n' Tillie (tracks 27-36 - duration 17:51).

No.TitleLength
1."Stanley and Iris"3:26
2."The Bicycle"3:09
3."The Pink Sweater"1:07
4."Iris After Work"0:40
5."Stanley at Work"1:33
6."Looking after Papa"3:05
7."Entering the Library"1:07
8."Night Visit"2:00
9."Factory Work"1:26
10."Naming the Trees"3:37
11."Finding a Family"1:42
12."Lost in the Streets"2:56
13."Stanley's Invention"1:18
14."The Kitchen Table"1:06
15."Seeing the Baby"1:15
16."Reading Lessons"2:28
17."Growing Together"2:09
18."Putting It All Together"1:47
19."Letters"3:28
20."End Title"3:04
21."Stanley and Iris (Film version)"3:24
22."Stanley at Work (Film version)"1:29
23."Looking after Papa (Film version)"3:11
24."Stanley's Invention (Film version)"1:18
25."Putting It All Together (Film version)"1:49
26."Letters (Film version)"4:00
27."Pete 'n' Tillie - Main Title"1:57
28."Afterglow"1:46
29."Marriage Book"1:48
30."Bedroom Scene"0:57
31."Vacation"2:45
32."For Robbie"1:33
33."Funeral"0:52
34."Hospital"0:42
35."End Title and End Cast"3:49
36."Love Theme"2:27

Production[]

The film was shot on location in Toronto, Ontario, and Waterbury, Connecticut. During the filming in Waterbury, local Vietnam War veterans picketed the production protesting Jane Fonda's anti-war activities of a decade and a half earlier.[1] Fonda and De Niro were each paid $3.5 million for their performances. Ritt received $1.65 million and the Ravetches $500,000.[1]

Reception[]

Stanley & Iris received negative reviews from critics, as the film holds a 33% rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 15 reviews. It was also a commercial failure at the box office, grossing less than $6 million against its $23 million budget.

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c Nat Segaloff, Final Cuts: The Last Films of 50 Great Directors, Bear Manor Media 2013 p 253-255
  2. ^ "Stanley & Iris (1990)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved May 20, 2018.

External links[]

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