Review by Sarah Warn on afterellen.com
"If These Walls Could Talk 2 (2000) focuses on lesbian lives in three different eras/segments over a forty year period, framed within a single house. This is a thoughtful, issue-driven drama about some of the challenges lesbians face, and the change in cultural attitudes over time towards women who love women.
"If These Walls Could Talk 2 (2000) focuses on lesbian lives in three different eras/segments over a forty year period, framed within a single house. This is a thoughtful, issue-driven drama about some of the challenges lesbians face, and the change in cultural attitudes over time towards women who love women.
The first
piece is set in 1961 and it opens at a screening of The
Children’s Hour, a movie that was at that time extremely provocative and
controversial because of the suggestion of lesbianism as the central theme. We
see two older women, watching the movie together with tears streaming down
their faces.
The viewer
has to make the leap that if these women are at least sixty years old, they
were born around the turn of the century and hit adulthood, possibly coming out
to themselves and a select few other women, in the twenties. So they have been
probably been exposed to social scorn and ridicule their entire lives.
This segment
sets up that feeling of contemporary uneasiness between the couple and the society
around them, but doesn’t fill in much of a backstory for the women.
Tragedy
strikes when one of the women, Abby (Marian Seldes) is injured and her long
time partner Edith (Vanessa Redgrave) cannot see her in the hospital. This
piece is really about silence, and how Edith must remain silent about her
relationship to Abigail, and then mourn silently. Much of the subject matter in
1961 is very timely to the recent focus on same sex marriage, since it deals
not just with the emotional loss of a partner, but the rights lost because
these women couldn’t claim each other as legal spouses.
"1972", the second
segment, is a story about Linda (Michelle Williams), an out lesbian in a group
of budding young lesbian feminist college students, including her two best
friends played by Natasha Lyonne and Nia Long.
Linda and
her friends decide to visit the gay bar in town for some consolation and
adventure, but find a surprising clash of cultural values, philosophy, and
wardrobe there. Not fitting into that environment either, the group decides to
leave — but Linda, enchanted and intrigued by the politically incorrect butch
lesbian Amy (Chloe Sevigny), decides to stay. Linda finds herself falling for
Amy, she must deal with the disapproval not only of society as a whole, but her
own friends, who mock Amy for her appearance.
The final
segment, "2000",
introduces us to an affluent, middle aged lesbian couple in the process of
trying to conceive a child. Ellen DeGeneres is hilarious and touching as Kal,
the doting partner of Fran (Sharon Stone). This is a charming story of the
agony, for two women, of not being able to bring about the intentional physical
manifestation of love, a child, without outside intrusion/assistance.
Ellen is
surprisingly good in the role of the supportive, non-child bearing spouse who
would like nothing better than to get her partner pregnant. Stone is a goofy,
screwball femmey lesbian that shines in her moments of grounding the couple and
showing tenderness to her partner.
See original link to this article here.
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