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Jessica Lange was robbed of an Academy Award for her mesmerizing performance in the 1982 film, Frances, a relatively gripping character study/biography of the late 1930's actress Frances Farmer, who, after being ostracized from Hollywood, ended up being declared insane, institutionalized, and lobotomized, according to this screenplay.



Not knowing a lot about the actress before the release of this film, I have never been sure of how factual it is (I always got the feeling that the Harry York character, played by Sam Shepherd, was fictional), but how many screen biographies are big on the facts? Sometimes facts are glossed over and/or ignored for the sake of preserving or igniting drama.

Whether or not this is true is for those who knew Farmer to say. I did see an interview once with Farmer's nephew (?) who was very pleased with Lange's interpretation of Farmer and that is exactly why this film is worth seeing.



Despite a meandering screenplay, turgid direction, and a feeling the movie is about 30 minutes too long, this movie is worth seeing for one reason and one reason only...the riveting performance by Jessica Lange.

She is in virtually every frame of this movie and makes every single moment vivid, striking, and achingly real. This film should be shown to acting classes on a daily basis...maybe the best performance by an actress in a leading role in the 1980's. Not a great film, but an amazing performance by a consummate actress that must be seen to be believed.