The Country Girl (2002) Synopsis & Summary

Synopsis

Bing Crosby does the Academy Award-bid bit in the atypical role of a self-pitying alcoholic, but it was his co-star, a deglamorized Grace Kelly, who won the Oscar for her performance in The Country Girl. This adaptation of Clifford Odets' play stars Crosby as Frank Elgin, a once-famous Broadway star who's hit the skids. Hotshot young director Bernie Dodd (William Holden), a longtime admirer of Elgin, tries to get the old-timer back on his feet with a starring role in a new play. But Dodd must contend with Elgin's hard, suspicious wife Georgie, who seemingly runs roughshod over her husband. Dodd holds Georgie responsible for Elgin's lack of self-confidence and his reliance upon the bottle--a suspicion fueled by Elgin himself, who insists that Georgie has been suicidal ever since the death of their son. When Elgin goes on a monumental bender during the play's out-of-town tryouts, the truth comes out: it is Elgin who is suicidal, and Georgie has been the glue that has held him together. Adopting a now-or-never stance, Dodd forces Elgin to stay off the sauce long enough for the play to open--and, in spite of himself, falls in love with Georgie. A few Hollywood liberties were taken with the Odets original, including a slightly altered ending. - Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Movie Info

Theatrical Release Date:
08/16/2002
DVD Release Date:
09/21/2004
Rating:
Not Yet Rated
Run Time:
104 min.
Production Co.:
Paramount, William Perlberg Productions
Director(s):
Genre(s):
Themes:
Death of a Child, Alcoholism, Crumbling Marriages
Tone:
Literate, Reflective, Deliberate, Gloomy, Melancholy, Somber
Keywords:
actor, alcoholism, director, grief, has-been, husband-and-wife, suicide-attempt
Language:
English
Status:
DVD