The Four Seasons
Three middle-aged wealthy couples take vacations together in Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter. Along the way we are treated to mid-life, marital, parental and other crises.
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- Cast:
- Alan Alda , Carol Burnett , Len Cariou , Sandy Dennis , Rita Moreno , Jack Weston , Bess Armstrong
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Reviews
Too much of everything
Really Surprised!
A different way of telling a story
The acting in this movie is really good.
Dear Alan Alda:: ITS FABULOUS! For not knowing what the movie was about, I believe that the music is ahead of its time. They make it sound so delightful, clean, soothing, and relaxing.. I love the camera shots when they begin the new seasons. Each shot it well thought out, the music with the shot equals like a moment at a spa or library when its a lay back moment. The story is a great experience of how couples that are friends for so long go through different crisis and how it effects them as individuals and as a group of friends. Its unearthing that this is how couples endure when they group events this much together. Ann is feel so sorry for but at the same time, what happened is a good experience to have been through. And whatever comes out of it, it'll be a great experience.
Another reviewer mentioned how this movie has changed for them since they first saw it - and not in a good way.For me, "The Four Seasons" has only become more relevant.I'm watching this on Encore as I write this. When I first saw this back in 1981, I was 16 and getting ready to entire my senior year in HS. I absolutely fell in love with this film but my perspective as a teenager had me seeing these people as my parents generation and wondering if when I reached their age I would have this kind of relationship with my adult friends. I also wondered if such people really existed. I laughed at the situations and the lines but without any real world experience.Now 30 years later, I have a very different perspective on things. I not only see myself (or aspects of myself) in each of the various characters, I find that the dialogue and relationships as presented in the film ring very true. When you are friends with other people for a long time, you do know each other well enough to be able to criticize, annoy, care about, and cherish one another the way these people do.I have also run into and had to deal with people that are essentially carbon copies of the people portrayed in the movie. I know Jack and Kate, Danny and Claudia, Nick, Ginny, and especially Anne. These people are real - not just characters written into a screenplay. They live in my town. Their fears, dreams, and neuroses are all familiar.Alan Alda was able to capture authentic portrayals of people by an outstanding cast. And while all movies are a distillation of sorts of character types, the individuals in this film seem particularly authentic to me.30 years later, I find this still to be a terrific movie. It is timeless in its message, and the emotions (humor, sympathy, anger) I experience come from a genuine understanding of and kinship with these people and their situations.
Alan Alda's movie career has been curious. I suspect that only a handful of titles really stand out for his performances, most likely this film, SENATOR JOE TYNAN, PURLIE VICTORIOUS (an early performance), AND THE BAND PLAYED ON (where he was a glory hound of a doctor in the A.I.D.S. epidemic), and CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS (where he was an egotistical television personality, but one capable of being human). But Alda's talents are varied, including hosting a program on Channel 13 about scientific breakthroughs. Yet, most people think of Alda still as Dr. Benjamin Franklin "Hawkeye" Pierce of the 4077 medical unit in the television series M.A.S.H. That show is now over twenty years old (but it's reruns hold up well), and Alda has appeared in good parts since on television - two years ago he and Jimmie Smitz were the Republican and Democratic Presidential candidates seeking to succeed Martin Sheen on THE WEST WING.THE FOUR SEASONS may be his greatest film role - one that included his writing the script and directing the entire film. The story is centered on three middle aged couples, all yuppie types, who are close friends: Jack and Kate Burroughs (Alda and Carol Burnett - this may be her best performance as well in film), Nick and Anne Callan (Len Cariou and Sandy Barron), and Danny and Claudia Zimmer (Jack Weston and Rita Moreno). The three couples spend all their vacations together, and this film is studying the three pairs of friends through one year together, each section being a vacation in each season (the background music being Vivaldi's THE SEASONS). They are appealing couples on the surface, but as the film progresses cracks appear. Alda sees himself as a type of spiritual older brother to the other males, and both Cariou and Weston grow to resent it - Cariou in particular when Alda gives his views regarding the deteriorating marriage of Cariou and Barron. Barron is playing one of her patented neurotic women types - here she is a talented photographer, but in her current therapy all she can photograph is vegetables and fruit in geometric patterns. Cariou is tired, and has met a younger woman who falls in love with him. She (Ginny Newley - Bess Armstrong) replaces Barron in the second vacation, and remains in the group (Barron does show up in the third "Autumn" vacation, visiting the college that her daughter by Cariou is attending when he and the others show up there). Armstrong does awaken jealousy among Burnett and Moreno regarding the apparent efforts of their spouses to impress her with their physical prowess. And the three couples constantly wonder why they have to spend their vacations together.The final section of the film shows the crisis between the set of friends and with Armstrong in particular. Alda's unsolicited comments of advice and disappointment to Cariou leads to everyone turning on him. The jealousy of the ladies (when Armstrong jumps to the defense of Weston after he admits some growing fears about dying) leads to her hitting out regarding how she resents their constant high regard for Barron (although they rarely see her) at Armstrong's expense. At the end of the film, a near tragedy (that is turned into a comedy by Weston's reaction to the loss of his status-symbol Mercedes) brings everyone to their senses, and to a realization that true friends accept each other's limitations or they drift apart.The film is a wise one, and quite amusing. Look at the sequences with Weston where he keeps calculating what each couple owes for a dinner or a rental (of a cabin or a boat) and how Alda and Cariou keep wondering why he is doing this. Also Weston and Marino discovering that there is nothing wrong with skinny dipping in the Caribbean is quite cute, especially with Weston's last plunge into the water. Alda directed other films, but THE FOUR SEASONS remains his best personal work - and the most meaningful film of his career.
I think this movie defines Alda's talent for writing. He uses situations and feelings that people face or have faced in real life. Ever since I first saw Alan's first M*A*S*H episode that he wrote, I made it my job to see every movie that he stared and wrote in. His talent is unsurpassed and cannot be reproduced. I first bought this on Selectavision Videodisc, and now I own it on every format. Every time formats change, I make sure to get the updated copy of it. This is a must see movie for any Alan Alda, or Carol Burnett fan. "It all adds up to warmhearted enjoyment and sidesplitting fun in this fabulous new RCA VideoDisc" (Susan Zucker, quote taken from the RCA VideoDisc "The Four Seasons")