From Deseret News archives:

Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle

Published: Tuesday, March 28, 1995 12:00 a.m. MST
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"Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle" stars Jennifer Jason Leigh (who is also in "Dolores Claiborne," another film that opened Friday) as Mrs. Parker - Dorothy Parker, that is - the drama and literary critic who was best known for her pithy poetry and acerbic zingers but who longed to be taken more seriously as a writer.

The "Vicious Circle" refers to the "round table" at New York's Algonquin Hotel in the 1920s, where Parker and a bevy of New York heavyweight writers - Robert Benchley, Alexander Woolcott, Edna Ferber, George S. Kaufman and others, along with occasional guests like Will Rogers - gathered for lunch each day, spending most of the time trying to verbally one-up each other. It was a smoke-filled, gin-soaked mutual admiration society, where they praised and insulted themselves and each other, played word games incessantly and poked holes in Manhattan sophistication even as they exploited and embraced it.

Eventually, most of them would head for the New York stage or Hollywood (including Parker), berating themselves (or each other) as compromised artists who had sold out. And their lives were never quite as jolly as they seemed on the surface. It is this darker underbelly of the group - as alcoholic malcontents represented by Parker - that co-writer/director Alan Rudolph has chosen to explore.

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Though there is a great deal of time spent on Parker's efforts to come to terms with her own talent, the central focus is really on her platonic, "best-friend" relationship with Benchley (Campbell Scott). As the film would have it, this is their strongest bond, outlasting marriages and lovers and the general decadence in which they wallow. But their respective spouses misunderstand their feelings for each other, and though they never pursue any sexual urges, it's clear that Parker and Benchley value their feelings for one another more than their own families. And even as Benchley tries to "save" Parker from herself, he finds himself corrupted.

Considering all the subplots revolving around famous literary and show business greats, it will probably help audience members to be familiar - at least in passing - with the characters here. Sometimes, simply dropping a name seems to be enough.

Recent comments

I am still trying to understand my feelings on this film.
It was...

Laura | June 18, 2000 at 7:34 a.m.

I recommended my grandmother Rudolph to see this product of
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Sybille Amber | May 4, 2000 at 11:45 a.m.

Movie Info
Rated R for violence, profanity, vulgarity, nudity, sex, drug use.

Cast: Jennifer Jason Leigh, Matthew Broderick, Campbell Scott, Andrew McCarthy, Peter Gallagher, Jennifer Beals.
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