Up Close And Personal Movie Review
Up Close And Personal Review
"Up Close And Personal" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Jon AvnetProducer : Jon Avnet,David Nicksay,Jordan Kerner
Screenwiter : Joan Didion,John Gregory Dunne
Starring : Robert Redford,Michelle Pfeiffer,Stockard Channing,Joe Mantegna,Kate Nelligan
If nothing else, Up Close And Personal will remind you just how hideous the
hairstyles of the 1980s were, especially among media personalities.
Fortunately, the film accomplishes a lot more than that, giving us a nice
romance that isn't harmed too much by its attempts at melodrama.
Up Close And Personal tells the loosely-based-on-reality story of Sally (who
becomes Tally) Atwater (Michelle Pfeiffer), a vain upstart girl from Reno who
wants to make it big in television. Robert Redford costars as Warren Justice,
a Miami news director who gives her her big break and takes her under his
wing. Under his influence, Tally is transformed from brash loudmouth to The
Next Big Thing, and of course, the two fall madly in love along the way.
With a smart script enhanced by some excellent comic relief, Pfeiffer and
Redford work together with a good chemistry. And while there are a few
substantial plot gaps as the film tries to do too much in too little time, the
exciting climax set in the midst a prison riot makes up for any holes in the
movie's continuity.
Still, this isn't Network, and at times Up Close And Personal really can't
decide between being a romantic comedy or a tough drama. This unfortunately
creates some unevenness and a couple of false endings with a tacked-on
tearjerker finale. The supporting cast is also uniformly bland, with Joe
Mantegna's talents totally wasted and both Kate Nelligan and Stockard Channing
looking very scary and beyond over-the-top as cutthroat "I'm so tough I eat men
for breakfast" newswomen.
But there I go, nitpicking again. Altogether, Up Close And Personal mostly
works and only occasionally doesn't. It will certainly be successful as a
pleasant spring romance flick with broad appeal, but most importantly, it's a
whole lot of fun.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





