Members of the U.S. Army Old Guard place a flag at each of the over 220,000 graves of fallen U.S. military service members buried at Arlington National Cemetery, May 24, 2012. Memorial Day will be commemorated this weekend across the United States.    REUTERS/Jason Reed  (UNITED STATES - Tags: MILITARY)

Reuters Photojournalism

Our day's top images, in-depth photo essays and offbeat slices of life. See the best of Reuters photography.  See more | Photo caption 

Members of the U.S. Navy Blue Angels fly over the World Trade Center in lower Manhattan as part of the 25th annual Fleet Week celebration in New York, May 23, 2012.  REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz (UNITED STATES - Tags: MILITARY ANNIVERSARY TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)

Fleet Week

The U.S. Navy takes Manhattan for a week.  Slideshow 

Students show emotions at the 2012 Joplin High School commencement ceremony inside the Leggett and Plant Athletic Center at Missouri Southern State University in Joplin, Missouri, May 21, 2012.           REUTERS/Larry Downing    (UNITED STATES - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION)

The Class of 2012

Scenes from this year's commencement ceremonies.  Slideshow 

"Women" remake a wipeout

1 of 2. Annette Bening, Jada Pinkett-Smith and Debra Messing in a scene from ''The Women''.

Credit: Reuters/Picturehouse/Handout

Wed Sep 10, 2008 11:56am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - This summer, two mediocre female-centered movies -- "Sex and the City" and "Mamma Mia!" -- drew huge crowds because they appealed to an underserved audience.

Will ladies of a certain age also flock to see a pallid remake of "The Women," which opens Friday via Picturehouse? If they do, it will be further proof that women are so eager to see their concerns depicted onscreen that they will tolerate very clunky filmmaking.

Clare Boothe Luce's play was a hit on Broadway in 1936, and audiences loved the bitchy 1939 movie version directed by George Cukor and starring Norma Shearer, Rosalind Russell and Joan Crawford. This time, Diane English's script and direction let the actresses down. (The "Murphy Brown" creator produced with Mick Jagger and his production partner, Victoria Pearman.)

English's update keeps the basic story -- contented wife and mother Mary Haines (Meg Ryan) is shattered when she learns her husband is having an affair with shopgirl Crystal Allen (Eva Mendes) -- as well as the all-female cast; there isn't a single man on camera.

A few of the best lines from the play and old movie are retained along with the name of Crystal's favorite nail polish, Jungle Red. But English tones down the catfights in order to celebrate sisterhood. The changes particularly hurt the character of Sylvie Fowler, played by Russell in the original and Annette Bening here. The gossipy, high-powered Sylvie has become less devious and more of a true-blue friend. This might please feminists, but it undermines the drama.

The film repeatedly sacrifices dramatic punch for political correctness. Bette Midler has a delicious cameo as a much-divorced Hollywood agent known as the Countess, but her role is badly truncated. In the original, the countess helped Mary take revenge against Crystal, but that final payoff is missing from the new "Women," which sags when it should snap.

There's another major problem. It's impossible to understand how the four main characters -- Ryan, Bening, Debra Messing (as a housewife with a brood of kids) and Jada Pinkett Smith (as a haughty lesbian columnist) -- ever became friends. They all seem to come from different worlds. Mary and Sylvie are supposed to be college pals, but Ryan looks a decade younger than Bening.

The actresses all have moments when they show what they can do. Ryan is engaging, and Bening does get a chance to deliver a few zingers. Messing is wasted until the final childbirth scene, when she reveals her flair for physical comedy. Candice Bergen, who played Murphy Brown for English, also contributes a stylish cameo. (Trivia buffs might remember that Bergen and Ryan played mother and daughter once before -- in Ryan's first movie, "Rich and Famous.") As Mary's crusty housekeeper, Cloris Leachman steals every scene she's in. Yet they are all poorly served by the flat pacing. These women are ready for action, but the fur never flies.

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter

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