Autumn in New York
What can you say about a beautiful young girl who dies? Not much -- the premise
was trite 60 years ago when they made Dark Victory, and it didn't get
any fresher 30 years ago with Love Story. Autumn in New York
tries to juice up the cliches by making the conflict here age rather
than class (as it was in Love Story) and by bringing on Joan Chen, whose
first film was the haunting Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl, to direct.
Which means the film is not poignant and elegant but creepy and slow. And, of
course, corny.
Will (Richard Gere) is a pushing-50 Manhattan restaurateur notorious for his
womanizing. Charlotte (Winona Ryder) is a 22-year-old gamine who designs hats.
They fall in love, but the catch isn't so much that she's the daughter of one
of Will's former, conveniently deceased flames as that she's got a movie
disease and has only a year to live. As Will's best friend (played by a crusty
Anthony LaPaglia) points out, the relationship is a microcosm of all love,
because "somebody always gets left behind." It could also be seen as the last
gasp of patriarchal pitifulness. Once again, love in Hollywood means sorry-ass
platitudes and cheapened sentiment. At Clarks Pond, Falmouth, Auburn,
Biddeford, the Eveningstar, Lewiston, Saco, Windham, Barrington, Newington,
Somersworth, and Salisbury.
-- Peter Keough
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