Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her
![]() | This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2020) |
Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her | |
---|---|
![]() Film poster | |
Directed by | Rodrigo García |
Written by | Rodrigo García |
Produced by | Jon Avnet Lisa Lindstrom Marsha Oglesby |
Starring | Glenn Close Cameron Diaz Calista Flockhart Kathy Baker Amy Brenneman Holly Hunter |
Cinematography | Emmanuel Lubezki |
Edited by | Amy E. Duddleston |
Music by | Edward Shearmur |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | MGM Distribution Co. |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 109 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her is a 2000 American romantic drama film written and directed by Rodrigo García and starring an ensemble cast. The film (García's directing debut) was shown at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival and won the Un Certain Regard Award.[1] Holly Hunter was nominated for the Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress for her performance.
Plot[]
Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her consists of five stories or vignettes, tied together loosely to envision the complexity of incomplete communications about life, family, and love. We glimpse the lives of five women, each facing problems such as loneliness, dissatisfaction, longing, and or desire.
In the film's prologue, Kathy (Amy Brenneman) - a police detective - and her partner are investigating the apparent suicide of an unknown woman. Dr. Keener (Glenn Close), a middle-aged doctor, attempts to care for her aging mother while coping with her own loneliness. She avoids intimacy, but also longs for it; we see both frustration and anticipation as she waits for phone calls from male colleagues. Dr. Keener decides to seek comfort or escape in Christine (Calista Flockhart) who reads tarot cards. Christine's partner Lilly (Valeria Golino) is critically ill with an unnamed disease, possibly cancer.
Rebecca (Holly Hunter) is a successful bank manager who's "not big on regrets". After a three-year involvement with married Robert (Gregory Hines), she becomes pregnant. Before Rebecca visits Dr. Keener to get an abortion, she has a fling with Walter, (Matt Craven), a subordinate.
Rose (Kathy Baker) is a single mother who is writing children's books. She develops a sweet crush on a new little-person neighbor (Danny Woodburn), who catches Rose spying on him. Rose later experiences the shock of learning about her son's extensive sexual activity.
Kathy's sister, Carol Faber (Cameron Diaz), is a lovely blind woman who has an active social life. Kathy is attracted to the medical examiner in the suicide case, and her story ends with him taking her out on a date. In an epilogue, Dr. Keener drops into a bar, where she meets the male character, Walter, from previous stories (possibly the younger male alluded to in Christine's tarot card reading).
Carmen, a woman who appears in five scenes in the five different stories, the first is walking past Dr. Keener's house, another is walking beside Rebecca, a third time is in the grocery store while Rose is shopping, the fourth time is walking past Christine's apartment building at night as Christine looks down from her balcony, and the final time is the post mortem examination by detective Kathy alongside Dr. Sam (Miguel Sandoval). Carol's imaginative story towards the end of the film helps explain the instances throughout the movie where she appears. According to Carol, she was back in town to reconnect with her ex, whom she had been talking to for months until her move back to Los Angeles. In each scene, she is, as Carol deduces, preparing for the big date with her ex. In the first scene she is in, she is probably looking for a place to rent; the second, she is seen carrying her ill-fated red dress; the third she is shopping for toiletries; the fourth she is seen walking back to her place, in which she looks visibly heartbroken, and final scene, in the coroners lab, echoes the beginning of the film, where she is found dead. Carol's story ends with what Kathy already concluded, she resorted to suicide because of her grief over a love she, as Carol claims, could not revive, like the baby she had lost many years before.
Cast[]
- Glenn Close as Dr. Elaine Keener
- Cameron Diaz as Carol Faber
- Calista Flockhart as Christine Taylor
- Kathy Baker as Rose
- Amy Brenneman as Detective Kathy Faber
- Valeria Golino as Lilly
- Holly Hunter as Rebecca Waynon
- Matt Craven as Walter
- Gregory Hines as Robert
- Miguel Sandoval as Sam
- Noah Fleiss as Jay
- Danny Woodburn as Albert
- Penelope Allen as Nancy
- Roma Maffia as Debbie
- Mika Boorem as June
Production[]
Line producer for this film was Effie T. Brown.[2]
Joel A. Miller worked as a set dresser on this film.
Awards[]
- Won The Gan Foundation Prize – 2000 Cannes Film Festival
- Holly Hunter was nominated for the Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress at the 53rd Primetime Emmy Awards.
Box office[]
- On May 26, 2002, the film opened on 52 screens in Spain. In its opening weekend, the film made €201,200.
- In Spain, the film grossed over €1,595,755.
References[]
- ^ "Festival de Cannes: Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
- ^ McCarthy, Todd (2000-01-24). "Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her". Variety. Retrieved 2018-01-19.
External links[]
- 2000 films
- English-language films
- American films
- American LGBT-related films
- 2000 drama films
- United Artists films
- Films directed by Rodrigo García
- American anthology films
- Franchise Pictures films
- Films scored by Edward Shearmur
- 2000 directorial debut films