Scenes From a Mall
One of the biggest box office bombs of 1991, Scenes from a Mall, a sophisticated look at a modern marriage, is not as bad as its reputation, thanks to a surprising chemistry between two big stars working together for the first time.

Woody Allen plays Nick Pfeiffer, an attorney who is married to a psychiatrist who has just written a book named Deborah, played by Bette Midler, who live in their spacious Beverly Hills home with their two teenage children. Nick and Deborah have just sent their kids away for the weekend to ski and are getting ready to throw a dinner party to celebrate their 16th anniversary. They have some shopping to do at the mall before the party and after seeing Deborah being interviewed on TV about her book, Nick decides that this is the perfect time to tell Deborah that he has had three affairs since they've been married, one of which he claims to have ended the night before this movie begins.

This is another rare occasion where Woody Allen has agreed to appear in a movie that he did not write or direct. Paul Mazursky and Roger L Simon, who also wrote the screenplay for Enemies: A Love Story, have provided a story that has an intimacy that often crosses the line into voyeurism, crossing into private marriage territory upon which we shouldn't be intruding. The problem is that Nick and Deborah take their private dysfunction to a very public place and act it out in front of anyone who is within listening distance.

Pretty sure this is the first film I've seen where most of the action in the film takes place in a mall, and not just any mall. The exteriors were shot at a mall in Beverly Hills called the Beverly Center which has four floors and hundreds of stores and Mazursky manages to move the stars through most of the stores as they air their dirty laundry. We watch the Pfeiffers fight in front of a yogurt store and have sex in a cineplex. The Pfeiffers are coincidentally followed around the mall by a mime, played Bill Irwin, who does eventually grate on the nerves and we want to cheer when Nick punches him in the mouth. And you know how you're in a restaurant and you have to wait forever sometimes to get service from a waitperson? Not in this mall...every time Nick and Deborah sat down and ordered something to eat or drink and then started an argument, there is a waitperson right there serving or picking up glasses and eavesdropping on their arguments.

Mazursky either sensed or helped create a genuine chemistry between Allen and Midler because they made a very believable long married couple. Though I can't lie, the Woodmeister seems a little uncomfortable spouting dialogue that isn't coming from his own computer. He has a line in this movie where he has to say something about LA being the center of the universe and New York being crap and you can literally see him choking on the words, but this movie isn't nearly as bad as its reputation. This is also the only movie Woody ever made where his leading lady got top billing.
One of the biggest box office bombs of 1991, Scenes from a Mall, a sophisticated look at a modern marriage, is not as bad as its reputation, thanks to a surprising chemistry between two big stars working together for the first time.

Woody Allen plays Nick Pfeiffer, an attorney who is married to a psychiatrist who has just written a book named Deborah, played by Bette Midler, who live in their spacious Beverly Hills home with their two teenage children. Nick and Deborah have just sent their kids away for the weekend to ski and are getting ready to throw a dinner party to celebrate their 16th anniversary. They have some shopping to do at the mall before the party and after seeing Deborah being interviewed on TV about her book, Nick decides that this is the perfect time to tell Deborah that he has had three affairs since they've been married, one of which he claims to have ended the night before this movie begins.

This is another rare occasion where Woody Allen has agreed to appear in a movie that he did not write or direct. Paul Mazursky and Roger L Simon, who also wrote the screenplay for Enemies: A Love Story, have provided a story that has an intimacy that often crosses the line into voyeurism, crossing into private marriage territory upon which we shouldn't be intruding. The problem is that Nick and Deborah take their private dysfunction to a very public place and act it out in front of anyone who is within listening distance.

Pretty sure this is the first film I've seen where most of the action in the film takes place in a mall, and not just any mall. The exteriors were shot at a mall in Beverly Hills called the Beverly Center which has four floors and hundreds of stores and Mazursky manages to move the stars through most of the stores as they air their dirty laundry. We watch the Pfeiffers fight in front of a yogurt store and have sex in a cineplex. The Pfeiffers are coincidentally followed around the mall by a mime, played Bill Irwin, who does eventually grate on the nerves and we want to cheer when Nick punches him in the mouth. And you know how you're in a restaurant and you have to wait forever sometimes to get service from a waitperson? Not in this mall...every time Nick and Deborah sat down and ordered something to eat or drink and then started an argument, there is a waitperson right there serving or picking up glasses and eavesdropping on their arguments.

Mazursky either sensed or helped create a genuine chemistry between Allen and Midler because they made a very believable long married couple. Though I can't lie, the Woodmeister seems a little uncomfortable spouting dialogue that isn't coming from his own computer. He has a line in this movie where he has to say something about LA being the center of the universe and New York being crap and you can literally see him choking on the words, but this movie isn't nearly as bad as its reputation. This is also the only movie Woody ever made where his leading lady got top billing.
Last edited by Gideon58; 05-14-24 at 04:43 PM.