Romantic Pairings:
Unusual
pairings between couples (romantically-involved in some way) have included
the following films (mostly in the 60s and 70s):
- the blossoming of love affairs for three American secretaries
(Dorothy McGuire, Jean Peters, and Maggie McNamara) vacationing in Rome,
Italy, in the sentimental, escapist romantic travelogue Three Coins in
the Fountain (1954)
- the sympathetic relationship between exploited elevator
girl Shirley MacLaine and manipulatively-used office clerk Jack Lemmon in
Billy Wilder's The Apartment (1960); he
told her that he had, at long last, found his girl Friday: "I used
to live like Robinson Crusoe - I mean, shipwrecked among 8 million people.
And then one day I saw a footprint in the sand and there you were. It's
a wonderful thing, dinner for two."
- an updating of the tragic Romeo and Juliet tale
to the streets of New York, in the Broadway production and in the award-winning
film West Side Story (1961), with Natalie
Wood as a young Puerto Rican woman, and a score by Leonard Bernstein and
Stephen Sondheim and impressive choreography by Jerome Robbins
- the shaky relationship between an eccentric, urban playgirl
Holly Golightly (Audrey Hepburn) and struggling writer Paul (George Peppard)
in Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961), an adaptation of Truman Capote's
story marred by the presence of the distasteful stereotypical role of Mickey
Rooney as Holly's Japanese landlord Mr. Yunioshi
- three romance-tinged French films: Francois Truffaut's Jules and Jim (1962) about a difficult love triangle starring Jeanne
Moreau; Jacques Demy's musical romantic tragedy The Umbrellas of Cherbourg
(1964) with Catherine Deneuve; and Claude Lelouch's love story A
Man and a Woman (1966) with French stars Jean-Louis Trintignant and
Anouk Aimee in the title roles
- the sexual awakening and anguish of repressed teen romance
between high-schoolers Wilma Dean (Natalie Wood) and Bud (Warren Beatty)
in Elia Kazan's Splendor in the Grass (1961)
- the
obsessional relationship between a professor (James Mason) and a tantalizing
15-year old girl (Sue Lyon) in Stanley Kubrick's controversial black comedy Lolita (1962)
- Rocky Papasano's (Steve McQueen) proposal to Angie Rossini
(Natalie Wood) by holding up a sign: "Better wed than dead!" in
Robert Mulligan's Love With the Proper Stranger (1963)
- David Lean's romantic epic costume drama Doctor
Zhivago (1965) with a love triangle between Moscow
doctor Yuri Zhivago (Omar Sharif), his wife Tonya (Geraldine Chaplin), and
his lover Lara (Julie Christie)
- the star-crossed love of Romeo and Juliet in Franco Zeffirelli's
Shakespearean romantic tragedy Romeo and Juliet (1968),
the first with teen stars Leonard Whiting and Olivia Hussey (including a
brief nude love scene)
- the painfully-doomed relationship between terminally-ill
Ali McGraw and Ryan O'Neal in Love Story (1970),
noted for its oft-quoted line "Love means never having to say you're
sorry"
- David Lean's beautifully-filmed romantic drama Ryan's
Daughter (1970) about a young Irish girl's (Sarah Miles) unhappy marriage
to a middle-aged schoolteacher (Robert Mitchum) and her tragic, indiscreet
love affair with a British officer (Christopher Jones)
- the May-December romance between suicide-obsessed, 20 year-old
Harold (Bud Cort) and 79 year-old eccentric, funeral-obsessed, but life-affirming
Maude (Ruth Gordon) in Harold and Maude (1971)
- the murderous feelings of a scorned, psychotic, hysterical
and suicidal woman/fan toward a California DJ who played her favorite song,
in Clint Eastwood's directorial debut thriller film, Play
Misty for Me (1971)
- the nostalgic, war-time, beachside summer romance between
a teenaged boy (Gary Grimes) and beautiful young war bride (Jennifer O'Neill)
in Summer of '42 (1971)
- the tumultuous, unpredictable, and unglamorous date between
teens Candy Clark and Charles Martin Smith in American
Graffiti (1973); she admits after the night is over: "I had
a pretty good time tonight...You picked me up and we got some hard stuff...and
then we went to the canal, and you got your car stolen, and then I got to
watch you get sick, and then you got in this really bitchin' fight. I really
had a good time."
- the
long-lasting relationship of opposites-who-attract, from the 1930s to the
1950s, in Sydney Pollack's The Way We Were (1973) between a handsome
WASP writer (Robert Redford) and a Jewish political activist (Barbra Streisand);
typically, Redford admits: "Katie, it was never uncomplicated,"
with Streisand responding: "But it was lovely, wasn't it?"
- the seductive, randy proposals of sexy, pampering hair
stylist Warren Beatty toward his clients, "Let me do your hair",
in Shampoo (1975)
- the unlikely pairing of working-class boxer Sylvester Stallone
with shy and repressed girlfriend Talia Shire in Rocky
(1976); often acknowledged with the greeting "Yo, Adrian!"
- the neurotic mismatch between Alvy Singer (Allen) and aspiring
singer Annie Hall (Diane Keaton) within a New York backdrop in Woody Allen's
Best Picture-winning Annie Hall (1977); he admits nervously to
Annie: "Love is, is too weak a word for the way I feel - I lurve you, you know, I loave you, I luff you."
- the unusual relationship between 17 year old high school
student Tracy (Mariel Hemingway) and an older Isaac (director Woody Allen)
in Allen's perceptive musings about friendship and love in Manhattan
(1979)
- the convenient relationship between divorced mother and
labor organizer Sally Field who accepted Beau Bridges' proposal for marriage
in Norma Rae (1979), after his request: "I got me and Alice;
we're alone. You got your two kids; you're alone. If you could help me,
maybe I could help you."
Romantic Pairings in the 80s:
- the
time-travel, fantasy-romance between a modern-day, self-hypnotized playwright
(Christopher Reeve) and a beautiful turn-of-the-century actress (Jane Seymour)
in Somewhere in Time (1980)
- the ruinous, forbidden affair of a 19th century Victorian
Englishwoman (Meryl Streep) with a French Lieutenant and a contemporary
gentleman (Jeremy Irons) in The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981)
- the most unlikely bond between a stranded alien and a young
boy (Henry Thomas) in Spielberg's E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial (1982) - with ET's
heart-warming promise at its finale: "I'll be right here."
- the mysterious romance The Return
of Martin Guerre (1982), with Nathalie Baye and Gerard Depardieu
as a reunited couple who - after a period of war - may/may not be husband
and wife
- Peter Weir's romantic drama The Year of Living Dangerously
(1982), with a hot love affair between Australian radio journalist Guy
Hamilton (Mel Gibson) and British attache Jill Bryant (Sigourney Weaver)
during the mid-60s Indonesian coup against President Sukarno
- the romance between an enrolled naval officer/candidate
in training school (Richard Gere) and a working girl (Debra Winger), in
the 'soap opera' An Officer and a Gentleman (1982), memorable for
its hot love scenes, and its finale in which the protagonist swept his girlfriend
off her feet from her factory job to the tune of "Up Where We Belong"
- the fumbling experiences of Molly Ringwald as an awkward,
traumatized and forgotten sixteen year old who eventually won the attention
of a senior student (Michael Schoeffling) and experienced her first kiss
in John Hughes' best teen comedy Sixteen Candles (1984)
- Tom Hanks' unusual love for a beautiful mermaid (Daryl
Hannah) in director Ron Howard's Splash (1984) - "All my life,
I've been waiting for someone. And when I find her...she's a fish!"
- the enduring relationship that grew between futuristic,
time-traveling revolutionary Kyle Reese (Michael Biehn) and the cold-blooded
Terminator's intended victim Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton) in The
Terminator (1984); their offspring was destined to liberate the
Earth in the sequel
- the
sweeping, epic romance tale between Danish authoress Isak Dinesen (Meryl
Streep) and a dashing hunter not-her-husband (Robert Redford), told against
the gorgeous cinematographic backdrop of Kenya in Africa in Out of Africa
(1985), a Best Picture winner
- the typically-Edwardian English repressed romance
of Helena Bonham Carter as a feisty, ravishing British girl who
must choose between sensuous passion with admirer George Emerson
(Julian Sands) and prissy fiancee
Cecil Vyse (Daniel Day-Lewis) in the Merchant-Ivory-produced A
Room with a View (1985, UK)
- the tragic romance between Sex Pistol Sid Vicious (Gary
Oldman) and his punk-rock junkie girlfriend (Chloe Webb) in Sid &
Nancy (1986)
- the 'dirty dancing,' first love between the sweet Jennifer
Grey as Baby with her dance instructor Patrick Swayze in Dirty Dancing
(1987), a 60s period film; she admits: "Me? I'm scared of everything!
I'm scared of what I saw, I'm scared of what I did, of who I am, and most
of all I'm scared of walking out of this room and never feeling the rest
of my whole life the way I feel when I'm with you!"
- the disturbing after-effects of a passionate weekend for
a married New York lawyer (Michael Douglas) with a sexy but wrathful blonde
associate (Glenn Close) in Adrian Lyne's glossy, nail-biting Fatal Attraction
(1987)
- in
the late 80s popular and quirky romantic comedy Moonstruck (1987) about Italian-Americans featuring an ensemble cast, Cher took the role of
Loretta Castorini - a 38 year-old widow in a Brooklyn family who was engaged
to marry her longtime boyfriend while falling passionately in love with
the man's younger brother Ronny Cammareri (Nicolas Cage); when Cage admitted:
"I'm in love with you," Cher unromantically responded: "Snap
out of it!"
- the updated Cyrano de Bergerac-style romancing by the witty,
huge-nosed fire chief (Steve Martin) through his shy tutor - toward the
beautiful Roxanne (Daryl Hannah) in Roxanne (1987)
- the challenging bet given John Malkovich by Glenn Close
that he can't seduce virginal Michelle Pfeiffer in the screen version of
the 18th century novel Dangerous Liaisons (1988)
- the love triangle between Daniel Day-Lewis, his wife Juliette
Binoche, and provocative artist Lena Olin during the 1968 Russian invasion
of Czechoslovakia in The Unbearable Lightness of Being (1988)
- the investigation (and disruption) of the sex lives of
a childless married couple (Peter Gallagher and Andie MacDowell) and the
wife's adulterous sister (Laura San Giacomo) by a voyeuristic, impotent
video filmmaker (James Spader) in Steven Soderbergh's debut film sex,
lies, and videotape (1989)
- the old-fashioned, on-again, off-again twelve-year relationship
between the cute Meg Ryan and jokester Billy Crystal in the witty When
Harry Met Sally...(1989); with the infamous faked Big O scene in a deli
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