Ironweed
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Hector Babenco
Meryl Streep
Jack Nicholson
Diane Venora
Fred Gwynne
Carroll Baker
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Francis Phelan and Helen Archer are has-beens on the outside of society, homeless, hungry and surrounded by dreams of what could have been. Now the drifter plans to confront his family.
Director
Hector Babenco
Cast
Meryl Streep
Jack Nicholson
Diane Venora
Fred Gwynne
Carroll Baker
Michael O'keefe
Tom Waits
James Gammon
Margaret Whitton
Jake Dengel
Nathan Lane
Will Zahrn
Laura Esterman
Joe Grifasi
Hy Anzell
Bethel Leslie
Richard Hamilton
Black-eyed Susan
Louise Phillips
Marjorie Slocum
Lena Spencer
Lola Pashalinski
Paul A Dicocco
Priscilla Smith
James Dukas
Jared Swartout
Ted Levine
Martin Patterson
Terry O'reilly
Michael O'gorman
Frank Whaley
Jordan Valdina
Louis St. Louis
John Wright
Robin Wood-chappelle
Nicole Weden
Peter Pryor
Duane Scholz
Matt Mcgrath
Lois Barden Stilley
Cori Irwin
Pamela Payton-wright
Boris Mcgiver
Phyllis Gottung
James Yoham
Ean Egas
Nebraska Brace
Jeff Morris
William Duell
George Rafferty
Robert Manion
Pat Devane
Crew
Myron Adams
Stanley Adams
Tom Allen
Nick Anderson
Vibeke Arntzen
Joseph Aulisi
Laurie A Bailey
Jenny Bancroft
Keith Barish
Barbara Barnaby
Ludwig Van Beethoven
Elin Bjorkman
Denis Blouin
Arthur Blum
Mark Boisseau
Sarah M Brim
Joan Brockschmidt
Vincent Bryan
Milton Buras
Dawn Leduke Calcaterra
Hoagy Carmichael
Donald Carpentier
Teresa Carriker-thayer
Christina Cassidy
Alba Censoplano
Aleta Chappelle
Albert Cho
Rob Cohen
Con Conrad
Craig Conwell
Virginia A Cook-mcgowan
Benny Davis
Robert Dawson
Robert Dawson
Victor Denicola
Tommy Dorsett
Anthony Dunne
Claudio Edinger
Gus Edwards
Juno J. Ellis
C. O. Erickson
C. O. Erickson
Lauro Escorel
Lauro Escorel
Julia Evershade
John Paul Fasal
Toby Fitch
Toby Fitch
Linda Folk
Sukey Fontelieu
David Craig Forrest
Richard Galante
Alan Gibbs
B A Gill
Nancy Gilmore
Karen Gordon
Susan M Goulder
Anne Goursaud
Raymond K Greene
Bruce Lee Gross
Robert Guerra
Sandy Hamilton
Kimberly Harris
William Harrison
Barbara J Hause
Jack Hayes
J. Roy Helland
J. Roy Helland
Ellen Heuer
Dwight D Hill
John K Hill
Janice Irwin
Joseph H Kanter
Pam Katz
Pamela Katz
Katherine A Kennedy
William J Kennedy
William J Kennedy
William J Kennedy
Richard Kerekes
Gene Kirkwood
Steve Kirshoff
Michael Klastorin
Betsy Klompus
George Kouzoujian
Beth Kuhn
Leigh Kyle
Gary Leib
Gary Leib
Mitch Lillian
Andrew Lipson
Robert J Litt
Kenneth Lubin
Constantine Makris
Maria A Marini
Eugene Marks
Annie Marshall
David Martino
Ben Massi
Larry Mcconkey
Stan Mendoza
Danny Michael
Brad Miller
Octavio Molina
Sue Bea Montgomery
Sue Bea Montgomery
John Morris
Karen Morris
Marcia Nasatir
Kenneth D Nelson
Bob Noland
Paul Andrew O'bryan
Jon O'connell
Elaine O'donnell
Jeannine Oppewall
Greg Orloff
S Bernard Pare
Jayme S Parker
Lisa Parks
Tony Payne
Dorothy Pearl
Carl Peterson
Joseph Petruccio
Toby F Phillips
Enno Poersch
Kevin L Poor
Leslie Pope
Stephen Purvis
Dana Rafferty
Rick Raphael
Brenda Ray
Danis Regal-o'connell
Marie-ange Ripka
Colleen Kahl Robilotto
J. Russel Robinson
Robert Roda
Pattee Roedig
John Roesch
Cornelia Rogan
Cornelia Rogan
Victoria Rose Sampson
Eric H Sandberg
Jimmy Sandoval
Clare Scarpulla
Solange Schwalbe
B Tennyson Sebastian Ii
Berta Segall
Albert Shapiro
Heidi Shulman
Michael Slovis
Louis St. Louis
Miki Stedile
Armin Steiner
John Thomas
James Thornton
Bonnie Timmermann
Lisa Trachtenberg
Toni Trimble
Elliot Tyson
Lisa M Varney
Tom Waits
Lloyd K Waiwaiole
Joel Warren
Tamara Weiss
Paul Weller
Carol White
Zachary Winestine
Denis A Zack
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Actor
Best Actress
Articles
Ironweed - Jack Nicholson and Meryl Streep in IRONWEED, One of 1987's Most Overlooked Films
Ironweed may not hold together like clockwork, but the raw stuff of it is often beautiful and terrifying. Start with the absolute defiance inherent in the subject matter: Kennedy's novel is set in 1938 Albany, amid the demimonde of deep-Depression vagrancy, where the bums and skidrow losers have only wild-animal decisions to make, about where to find food and hootch, what backbreaking dayjob they can scrounge, what alley to sleep in, how to stay warm in the winter nights so they don't simply freeze to death, at which point "the dogs will come along..." Imagine if you can an American movie now being made in this territory, even from a prize-winning novel it's remarkable not only for the daring of its gloom, but for its fidelity to its unusual period and place, which is not anywhere we'd hanker to visit in our lust for escapism. (Depression-era movies, since the '60s, have tended toward the warm and dusty South.) Babenco and his DP Lauro Escorel capture the inhospitable small city in unforgettable grainy tones, and the sense of being lost in a quiet, dark town at night, with its storefronts lit up and distant sounds portending possible hazards, is indelible and unique.
The sojourn into the lower depths is handled with a gentle simplicity no howling pedagogy or menacing drama cues and Babenco fuses for the first time squalid American poverty with magical realist poignancy, beginning his film with a dream-image of a locomotive billowing steam and then transitioning upwards through cotton clouds to blue sky, and then back down, finally, to the windy, trash-strewn lot where Francis Phelan (Jack Nicholson) awakens under cardboard after a particularly bad night. Taste this bit of dialogue, between Phelan and fellow loser Rudy (Tom Waits), as they chase hungry dogs away from the prone figure of a passed-out Indian woman, and try to get her to shelter as night descends again:
"She's been a bum all her life."
"...She had to do something before she was a bum."
"Well, she was a whore, in Alaska."
"What about before that?"
"I don't know... I guess before that she was just a little kid..."
"Well, that's something. Being a little kid is something..."
Kennedy's book is rich in this kind of titanic melancholy, and the film channels it with textures: darkling set design, John Morris's bruisingly sad lullaby score, and acting. Nicholson, already in the lazy, showboating, I'm-just-Jack phase of his career, clearly relished the role's grim implications: Phelan left his family 15 years earlier after accidentally dropping and killing his newborn son. Nicholson doesn't overplay the grief and guilt; Phelan is a man used to the streets and tired of life, but Nicholson gives him a restless edge, as if he's always looking just beyond every scene, toward another, truer way to escape, or keeping an eye out for the ghosts for whom he's responsible. The action of the film is in some ways kickstarted by a day spent digging graves for pocket money; Phelan ends up in his dead boy's cemetery, and the scene where the slow, stooped man confronts the grave might be among the top five swatches of Nicholson's redoubtable career.
But of course he's overshadowed by Meryl Streep, as a sickly, ex-radio chanteuse who drifts in Phelan's shadow (when she isn't letting other bums fondle her for a night's sleep in an abandoned car), and half-lives in a fantasy world of affluence and lingering fame. Muttering her lines in a deep, confused voice, her bloodshot eyes unsteady in their tiny sockets, Streep makes it perfectly clear without saying so that her Helen is both chronically ill and borderline psychotic. One of the film's pivotal scenes cements the deal: when in a grungy gin mill Helen is cajoled into singing "He's My Pal" for the paltry crowd, her performance subtly rips with rousing confidence, and the light grows more golden, and the bar patrons respond with happy applause, and then Babenco cuts to the reality: Streep's withered old girl rasping out the song's last bars obliviously (the sunny version was not her hallucination, but her dream), to no applause at all. There's the lie of the American Dream, distilled in a single cut to a middle-aged woman's delirious and hapless open mouth.
The tragedy of Ironweed is not an easy morality tale, but an explanation of America (in poet Robert Pinsky's words) in its saddest, least humane moment. Babenco, a Brazilian who came to Hollywood on the strength of Pixote (1981) and got himself Oscar-nominated for Kiss of the Spider Woman (1985), deserves more credit for the resonant details of the movie (for instance, the closeup of the unexplained family photo on Helen's flophouse nightstand the day she dies), and for the sugar-coated Hollywoodization that he didn't allow to take hold, than for the clumsy spiritual manifestations, or the occasional over-punctuated supporting bit (Michael O'Keefe and Diane Venora spitting bitterness at each other as Phelan's grown children, upon his return home). It's not a perfect film, but what's perfect? Under the cosmetic arguments there is a plaintively beating heart.
For more information about Ironweed, visit Lionsgate. To order Ironweed, go to TCM Shopping.
by Michael Atkinson
Ironweed - Jack Nicholson and Meryl Streep in IRONWEED, One of 1987's Most Overlooked Films
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States July 13, 1989
Released in United States on Video June 22, 1988
Released in United States September 1988
Released in United States Winter December 18, 1987
Re-released in United States on Video May 9, 1995
Wide Release in United States February 12, 1988
Shown at Deauville Film Festival September 1988.
Shown at Moscow International Film Festival (in competition) July 13, 1989.
Formerly distributed by Vestron Video.
Began shooting February 23, 1987
Completed shooting June 1987.
Wide Release in United States February 12, 1988
Re-released in United States on Video May 9, 1995
Released in United States on Video June 22, 1988
Released in United States July 13, 1989 (Shown at Moscow International Film Festival (in competition) July 13, 1989.)
Released in United States September 1988 (Shown at Deauville Film Festival September 1988.)
Released in United States Winter December 18, 1987