Portrait of a White Marriage (TV Movie 1988) Poster

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4/10
Starts off funny, but becomes a bore
CommieTT1 August 2002
Maybe I expected too much? I thought that direction by Harry Shearer, writing by Martin Mull and acting by those two plus Fred Willard would add up to something pretty good. I was wrong.

The premise is ok, and the beginning of the movie is pretty strong and well paced. Eventually, it collapses under its own weight.

The story, in a nutshell, is a daytime talk show is moved from a large city to the small town where Fred Willard and Mary Kay Place's characters live. At the same time, the town-folk try to take advantage of having a "celebrity" in their midst. That's the backdrop. The major plot points are the falling out of the marriage between Willard and Place's characters. Willard gets "help" from the clergyman's therapist wife; Place finds solace in the arms of Mull. Smalltown rumors abound.

Not something I'd recommend, unless you'll sit through anything with Mull, Willard or Place in it.

My rating: 4
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4/10
Sadly they painted by number.
mark.waltz20 February 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Martin Mull is playing a character with the same name as his who hosts a local talk show out of Pittsburgh (Well, when you're from Pittsburgh you have to do something, to quote Auntie Mame), and is enticed by small town housewife Mary Kay Place to come to her hometown (Hawkins falls, ironically the setting up one of TV's first soap operas), and feeling neglected by busy husband Fred Willard, begins to spend a lot of time with the rather ruthless Mull. He wants her on the show and utilizes the idea of having the couple reaffirm their vows to get closer to her, fully aware that Willard probably won't make it in time. It's all about saving a marriage and small town versus big city (not that I'd consider Pittsburgh a metropolis of sophistication), and other than that, not much happens.

The amoral character played by Mull is too shallow to like, and the couple played by Place and Willard don't really seem at all realistic. In fact, their performances annoyed me with the way they build their lines in unrealistic ways, which made me not root for them either. The character performers are pretty interesting, particularly Conchata Farrell as the mayor's wife, making the most of a poorly written scene involving accidents in the home that resulted in the loss of a body part. The other woman, having been guilty of licking a knife covered in frosting, seems like something out of a "Lucy Show" episode rather than a late 1980's TV movie. The result is a premise that attempted to deal with modern issues but presented them in a very dated way.
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