BEFORE: Isabella Rossellini carries over from "Vita & Virginia" and to say this has been on my list for a long time is an understatement, I'm sure. I had watched "Made in America" and sort of made this film impossible to link to as part of the romance sub-set. Because of the way the linking works, it was impossible to also watch this film at the same time as that one.
So instead I split this one off from the herd of romance films because of a couple of documentaries, one about David Lynch that still eludes me, and another one called "The Rossellinis" that aired at Doc NYC (or maybe Tribeca) back in 2020. Now, a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, because I know that Isabella was once married to David Lynch, and so there's a fair chance that she might appear in the doc about him, or he might appear in the doc about her family. However, five years have gone by now and the doc about the Rossellinis isn't streaming anywhere, it has not been part of PBS's "American Masters" show or aired on CNN in the midnight hours like that doc about Dionne Warwick did. So "Cousins" was put on hold because I felt it might provide a potential lead-in to the Doc Block one year if some channel should air the doc on the Rossellinis.
It's a strange strategy, sure, let's get our film into some festivals and then not come up with a proper plan for distribution - but I watched this plan not work for an animator who still somehow managed to stay in business while his films weren't streaming anywhere. It's a tougher road, though. But I'm just not willing to wait any more, let's get "Cousins" off the list during February, where it belongs, so we can clear up a spot on the list for something else. And let's do this before I realize that Ted Danson is interviewed in the documentary about Dick Van Dyke, and this film would make a great lead-in to that.
THE PLOT: Two couples go to a family wedding and end up swapping partners.
AFTER: We're going WAY back to 1989 for this one - so I suspect many of this film's stars are. no longer alive, starting with Lloyd Bridges. And this had William Petersen from BEFORE there was a show called "CSI" and Sean Young BEFORE Hollywood realized that she was impossible to work with. That's a long time ago - I was just getting out of college that year, too. I probably have a good contender here for "Oldest Movie Watched This Year" at the end of December.
Let's deal with the "ick" factor right off, because I think going into this, knowing that two people who are cousins decide to have a romance, that might keep some people away. The lead characters are cousins BY MARRIAGE, Larry's uncle Phil marries Maris's mother at the start of the film, so it's not like they are blood relatives, not at all. I'm not even sure if we recognize cousins by marriage as a thing, it's a little misleading here because there's no shared grandparent here, nothing that would make society prevent them from having a relationship. I always get confused about second cousins and that whole "once removed" thing, but legally in the U.S. second cousins can get married, because they don't share much genetic material and thus are less likely to have a kid born with two heads or something. I just Googled the laws on first cousins getting married (I hope that doesn't flag me somewhere) and it turns out that HALF of the states in the U.S. are now OK with first cousins getting married - others have restrictions and about 25 states still are against it. (But if you read between the lines, the laws only apply to marriage - dating your first cousin and NOT getting married, well they can't really legislate that, can they?)
This is based on a French film titled "Cousin Cousine" and I don't know where the French stand on this issue, but I'm guessing their attitude is probably, "Sure, why not?" or "Hell, go for it."
That would be "pourquoi pas" or "allez-y", but maybe "saisir le jour" or "tout ce qui vous permet de passer la nuit" is more appropriate. You get the feeling that maybe this was all written by someone who noticed there were a lot of films about people cheating on their spouses, but not so many about the people who were being cheated on. What would happen if two of them got to talking, and then decided to have a romance themselves? Clearly this was a thought experiment before it was a movie. They also could have called this "Three Weddings and a Funeral", but they didn't, so the door was left open for that other film to use that title, and up the ante from three weddings to four.
The first wedding here is, as stated, Larry's uncle Phil marrying Maria's mother, Edie. This is where the cheating spouses, Larry's wife Tish and Maria's husband, Tom, hook up for the first time (though who knows, maybe it's been going on for a while, it seems like maybe it's a small town) when Tom allegedly takes Tish out for a test-drive in his BMW (he sells cars) and they're gone for a really long time. Well, you reap what you sow, really, because this gives Larry and Maria a chance to meet, as everyone else has left the wedding and they're still there, wondering where their spouses went. This was made before everybody had smart phones and could just text each other, or track somebody's phone if they didn't answer. But we see Tom breaking off all of his OTHER extra-marital relationships, because he thinks he's going to get caught, or perhaps he just wants to focus on Tish - he's found the ONE woman that he wants to cheat on his wife with, exclusively, so, umm, congratulations? You would think, though, that if he was such a great lover and these women were so upset that he won't be seeing them any more that one of them would probably drop a dime on him and reveal his true nature to his wife.
But Maria's not stupid, nor is Larry - they get together for lunch to discuss whether they think their spouses are sleeping together, and if so, what they should do about it. They determine that if they confront them, they'll only deny it, and if they issue some kind of ultimatum, they'll just find themselves both single again - so they decide to wait it out, maybe it's a temporary thing. Then there's another family gathering, and it's so much fun that uncle Phil dies, which means that everyone gets together again for his funeral, including Larry's father from out of town. It's fairly obvious that they're going to hook him up with Phil's widow, because that keeps the story going and also keeps generating more reasons for the two cross-coupling couples to be in the same place, creating maximum drama.
There's another wedding, but it's a lesser character and I couldn't figure out exactly who they were or how they were connected to the family. Really it's just another excuse to check in with everybody again and see how the affairs are going. By this point Larry and Maria are spending more time together, talking about their kids and making some vague plans for the future, but they both agree that their relationship needs to stay platonic, because if not then in the third act of the film the writers would have no place to go.
Finally, you guessed it, Larry's father gets together with Edie - I mean, she's a widow and he's a widower and they're also family sort of, so that makes it just salacious enough to be interesting - I mean, there's no law against marrying your brother's widow, it's not like they're cousins or something. By this time the illicit relationship between Tish and Tom has heated up AND cooled down, so they're on the outs, so Tom's probably wishing he hadn't ended all of his other affairs. But he's back with Maria, for the sake of their daughter, probably, but anything romantic between them is kind of long gone now. Tish, meanwhile, has moved out so that Larry can decide what he really wants, she's giving him space because she knows she can't just go back into that relationship after what happened, it's just never going to be the same. It could be something else, but Larry has to want that to happen - I have to say, mostly everybody here is really acting mature about the whole thing, why it's almost like this sort of thing happens all the time and you just don't hear about it. It's almost Bergman-like in its complexity, only without all the moping and Swedish seasonal depression.
At the final wedding, Larry's got nothing to lose, so he takes one more shot at romance with Maria - he asks her to dance, knowing that this will piss off Tom to no end. Maria had broken things off with Larry for the sake of her daughter, who was acting out at school. But Larry ups the ante and says forget the dance, will you run away with me and spend the rest of your life being happy? Oh, sure, "pourquoi pas"? We don't really need to see what happens after that, but we can assume they relocated to someplace tropical and found a restaurant to run together, because that's what you do - and they never had any problems ever again. Really, it's all about karma in the end, and what goes around tends to come around. If only...
This probably works best as a cautionary tale - human nature dictates that you'll always want what you have, but also want what you don't have. If you're not satisfied and you want what you don't have, you could lose what you have, and then when you lose what you have, you want it back even though you didn't want it before. But it's too late now, you lost what you had because you wanted what you didn't have. So maybe it's better to have what you want and want what you have and not want what you don't have. We've all been there, right?
Directed by Joel Schumacher (director of "The Lost Boys" and "St. Elmo's Fire")
Also starring Ted Danson (last seen in "Made in America"), Sean Young (last seen in "Once Upon a Crime..."), William Petersen (last seen in "Fear"), Lloyd Bridges (last seen in "David Crosby: Remember My Name"), Norma Aleandro, Keith Coogan (last seen in "Jay and Silent Bob Reboot"), Gina DeAngeles (last seen in "Broadway Danny Rose"), George Coe (last seen in "The Automat"), Katherine Isabelle (last seen in "Frankie & Alice"), Alex Bruhanski (last seen in "The Fog" (2005)), Stephen E. Miller (last seen in "Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed"), Gerry Bean (also last seen in "Fear"), Gordon Currie (last seen in "The Sentinel"), Saffron Henderson (last seen in "The Fly II"), Michele Goodger (last seen in "Little Women" (1994)), Andrea Mann (last seen in "Omen IV: The Awakening"), Sheila Paterson (ditto), Mark Frank (last seen in "Falling Down"), LeRoy Schulz, Gloria Harris, John Civitarese, Kate Danson, David Robert Moore, John Hurwitz, Babs Chula (last seen in "Connie and Carla"), Bernadette Leonard, Denalda Williams (last seen in "The Professor"), Margot Pinvidic, Tom McBeath (last seen in "Nick Fury: Agent of Shield"), Dolores Drake (last seen in "Say It Isn't So"), Michael Naxos, Lorraine Butler, Ann Leong, Harold McDonald, Lorena Gale (last seen in "Things We Lost in the Fire"), Monica Marko (last seen in "Love Happens"), Wes Tritter (last seen in "Bird on a Wire"), David W. Rose, Sharon Wahl, George Goodman, Tom Heaton (last seen in "Bandolero!"), Cathy Bayer, John Paterson, Antony Holland (last seen in "McCabe & Mrs. Miller")
RATING: 5 out of 10 adult magazines (a gift from Grandpa!)
