DVD: The Group

Sex in the Thirties city for female college friends, in a neglected Sidney Lumet gem

Mary McCarthy’s 1963 novel The Group inspired Candace Bushnell to write Sex and the City, a connection highlighted on this DVD of Sidney Lumet’s 1966 adaptation. Only the breezy style of the newsletter which keeps eight female friends from Vassar’s Class of ‘33 in touch bears real comparison. This is a broader saga about women’s experiences and ambitions in the years up to World War Two. It’s also an unexpected entry in Lumet’s great series of New York films, as these Manhattan wives, daughters, doctors and socialites grip as strongly as his more familiar male cops and lawyers, moving to the centre of stories which usually sideline them. By turns bleakly realistic and sharply satiric, its two and a half hours whip by.

The way prim, pretty Dottie (Joan Hackett, pictured below) quietens and stills as she offers her virginity to Richard Mulligan’s blunt bohemian is one of many small, perfect moments from a fine, now half-forgotten female cast. The blood-smeared hand she inspects in the bathroom afterwards joins contraception, spousal violence, lesbianism and the rigours of flat-chested breast-feeding amongst the frankly handled feminine themes.

Thirties fashion and interior design is precise, but Boris Kaufman’s elegantly roaming camera and equally sharp script and editing make this feel like a contemporary film about women alive in their time, set in neither 1936 nor 1966 aspic. War clouds are looming, and concerned types such as Hal Holbrook’s literary editor put their faith in Communism and the psychiatrist’s couch. Larry Hagman’s alcoholic louse of a husband and the fierce delusion of Kay (Joanna Pettet) that their marriage must succeed is, though, a timeless tragedy.

Lumet’s close attention to his actresses’ vividly truthful faces is its own reward. This is a bare-bones, extras-free release, but a valuable one.

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
This feels like a contemporary film about women alive in their time

rating

4

explore topics

share this article

more film

Joachim Lang's docudrama focuses on Goebbels as master of fake news
The BFI has unearthed an unsettling 1977 thriller starring Tom Conti and Gay Hamilton
Estranged folk duo reunites in a classy British comedy drama
Marianne Elliott brings Raynor Winn's memoir to the big screen
Living off grid might be the meaning of happiness
Tender close-up on young love, grief and growing-up in Iceland
Eye-popping Cold War sci-fi epics from East Germany, superbly remastered and annotated
Artful direction and vivid detail of rural life from Wei Liang Chiang
Benicio del Toro's megalomaniac tycoon heads a star-studded cast
Tom Cruise's eighth M:I film shows symptoms of battle fatigue
A comedy about youth TV putting trends above truth
A wise-beyond-her-years teen discovers male limitations in a deft indie drama