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posts about #greygardensmovie more → More On HBO's Grey Gardens: "The Hallmark Of Aristocracy Is Responsibility"
Grey Gardens: The Movie Promo Is Here!
| posts about #greygardensmovie more → |
More On HBO's Grey Gardens: "The Hallmark Of Aristocracy Is Responsibility" |
Grey Gardens: The Movie Promo Is Here! |
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She also seems throughout the film to be rationalizing this, blaming others, somewhat in denial. Which is quite sad, but compelling.
As for selling the house, it's important to remember, there was a time when a "house in the Hamptons" didn't mean they were sitting on a gold mine. In fact the phrase "the Hamptons" was never even used when I was growing up there. Its mass celebrity and stratospheric real-estate values are relatively recent.
GG was filmed through 1973, and it's clear by then that the women were permanently settled there, psychically. Their staunch refusal must have set in some time earlier, let's say a decade. East Hampton was still remote, the LIE did not have a mass extension until 1970, just the "Old" Montauk highway. It wasn't considered a year round place by "city' folk. I'm sure the Beales knew there was already a certain ignominy in living in their summer place all year, in the eyes of "society".
Selling their home would not be some astronomical payday, then. Compared to today, they'd make a little to live on, not much, and they'd be homeless too. They wouldn't get then what we think the place would be worth now.
(Sorry for going on!)
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By then, perhaps by the rigid format of that society, it was "too late" for her- that upper class spectrum was merciless about who was marriageable, and Edie's rebellion might have been held against her quite palpably. She was probably not yet 30. A playwright couldn't make it up.
An imaginative girl rebels, wants to be an artist and a star instead of a wife, but is beset by her fears and anxieties, and brought low. She won't "show them all" after all, comes home to mother. and her class turns their back. They consider her crazy, outcast. No wonder they preferred the wilds of East Hampton. "Polite society" was a cruel joke to them.
Wow, hurry up HBO! Looking forward to this.
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So, I haven't seen the documentary, but it is at the top of my Netflix queue. I want to watch this movie, but is it OK to watch it first? Or should I TiVO this movie and save it till after I've seen the documentary?
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