Long Day's Journey Into Night

1973
8.1| 2h41m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 10 March 1973 Released
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On a day in the summer of 1912, the family of retired matinee idol James Tyrone grapples with the morphine addiction of Tyrone's wife Mary, the illness of their youngest son Edmund, and the alcoholism and debauchery of the older son Jamie. As day turns into night, guilt, anger, despair, and regret threaten to destroy the family.

Genre

Drama, TV Movie

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Director

Peter Wood

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Long Day's Journey Into Night Audience Reviews

Ehirerapp Waste of time
UnowPriceless hyped garbage
Acensbart Excellent but underrated film
Hayden Kane There is, somehow, an interesting story here, as well as some good acting. There are also some good scenes
bbmtwist It is very difficult to sit through this last of O'Neill's works. It is nearly three hours in length and is repetitious at times. What one really views it for on repeated viewings are the performances. In this version Olivier earns his Emmy Award with the best performance I have seen of the elder James Tyrone. In the other two I've seen, Ralph Richardson was too dry and Jack Lemmon too mannered.Cummings does well as Mary Tyrone, but both Bethel Leslie and Katharine Hepburn were better. The sons fare well. Dennis Quilley is quite good as Jamie, my only problem being his facial resemblance to Robert Preston - I kept expecting him to break into patter song to warn the family of trouble brewing in River City. He is topped however by Kevin Spacey's Jamie. For me the revelations was Ronald Pickup as Edmund. I'd only seen Pickup in self-contained, proper British roles and this is the first time I've seen him let go emotionally. He was one of the two best Edmunds I've seen, the other being Peter Gallagher, who takes the lead for me.The production runs two hours and 41 minutes.
MickAstonDavies Eugene O'Neill was one of America's greatest writers and this play comes at the end of his long career. LDJIN is the most autobiographical of his plays, and it is significant that he didn't write from his own experience until the end of his life, when he could understand it.But a play isn't necessarily good just because it is written from the author's experience, it takes imagination too, and O'Neill has it, and it is imagination that helps O'Neill forgive his stingy and tyrannical old father. Olivier is great as the father, at once authoritative and poignant, regretting the waste of his talent, and Chapman, Pickup and Quilley are all fine as his enslaved family.I first saw this production when I was 16 and I have never forgotten it. It's slow and wordy, but if you stick with it it has a humanity and compassion that set it far above most plays of the twentieth century.
mickramsaymd A very difficult work to produce in the theatre and no filmed version can match a stage production, however, in my opinion, the best filmed production is the one featuring William Hutt as Tyrone.This filmed version is from the production that was staged at the Stratford Festival in Canada a few years ago. On stage it was so successful it was brought back the following year. I am reluctant to use the term "definitive", however, it may be applicable to William Hutt's interpretation of Tyrone. But what works best on this filmed version is the true ensemble nature of the cast which Stratford is famous for. At the 17th Genie Awards Hutt won best actor, Martha Henry {Mary} best actress, and Peter Donaldson {Jamie} best supporting actor. No discussion of filmed versions of "Long Day's Journey into Night" is complete without considering this 1996 Canadian production. I'm excluding the 1982 television version, laudable though it is, as featuring an all African American cast, the Irish references were dropped.
Apulieus This version of O'Neil's play, the supreme tragedy in American drama, is hard to find and not readily available on video. That's a shame, and the film deserves better. It's basically a stage-bound version of the National Theatre production starring Lord Laurence Olivier. It's somewhat hard to get into--the set is ugly and cheap, the mise-en-scene is at first uninspired, and most of the cast can't truly capture American accents. (Only Constance Cummings, who plays the mother, is American.) But the movie improves. The actors improve gradually on their accents, the sets are swathed more in darkness, and the direction betrays traces of sensitivity, and an increasing mobility (not enough) and knowledge of what should and shouldn't be shown to the viewer. (Though the actors seem basically left to fend for themselves, and are awkwardly blocked.) The problem with O'Neil's play is that it demands actors who can stand up to it. The downward spiral of the Tyrones, with its desperate guilt transferrals and the complicated, realistic web of mistakes, regrets and anguish requires skilled actors who can avoid emotional monotony. It can't simply be one accusation and outburst after another. The actors must be able to modulate their reactions and gauge the proper times for added emphasis. Monotony is what resulted in the 1987 version of the play, with Jack Lemmon miscast as the father and Kevin Spacey employing his very limited (and overrated) talents as Jamie. To a lesser extent the actor's playing the sons in this version aren't up to the play either--Ronald Pickup's Edmund can barely master a convincing accent and has a limited supply of tricks, while Dennis Quilley's Jamie holds his head with a very un-american reserve, and never really lets loose. He stands in contrast with the late Jason Robards, who played the definitive Jamie in the 1962 film, which he burnt a hole through. It was large, virile performance, and one sorely needed here. The parents are better-cast. Constance Cummings, who played the vivacious, maddening and ultimately vulnerable efficiency expert in "Battle of the Sexes" to perfection, doesn't quite erase the memory of Katherine Hepburn's spacey, strangely sexy portrayal of Mary Tyrone, but she comes close. She has the right mixture of brittleness and fear. The only real flaw is a certain lack of genuine highs and lows to the performance. Laurence Olivier makes sure to supply quite a large number of these. He begins dodgily, but eventually turns in the best performance of James Tyrone on film. Whereas his old friend Ralph Richardson had given an effectively icy edge to the part, Olivier brings to it his usual bloody-mindedness. (His Hamlet was simultaneously colder and angrier than any other actor's--compare it to Branagh's fey, weak-kneed version. Olivier is forever his superior) His American/Irish accent is too strong on the corny brogue, and along with his usual bodily mannerisms threatens to turn the performance into a caricature. But his face never betrays him--every close-up we get is worthy of treasuring, because few other actors can give so many shades of desolation, depression and hurt pride. He knows how to structure the performance in order to wring out every drop of drama. Sometimes his effects are coarse or misjudged but they point to his greatest strength--the fearlessness, the willingness to cahnce making a fool out of himself. Despite all the flaws in the conception and exceution of the part, he and Cummings are ultimately the greatest reasons to see this movie. Lumet's film has better actors in the other roles, along with finer overall sense of mood and mise en scene, but this production deserves an equal chance from the viewer. Flawed, but essential for anyone who loves the play.