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If These Walls Could Talk [1996] [VHS]
 
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If These Walls Could Talk [1996] [VHS]

VHS ~ Demi Moore
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Actors: Demi Moore, Sissy Spacek, Cher, Anne Heche, Catherine Keener
  • Directors: Cher, Nancy Savoca
  • Format: HiFi Sound, PAL, Colour
  • Language English
  • Classification: 15
  • Studio: Medusa Pictures
  • VHS Release Date: 8 Sep 1997
  • Run Time: 93 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00004CTUN
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 3,261 in Video (See Bestsellers in Video)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Regardless of your opinion on the topic, If These Walls Could Talk is a bold and provocative examination of how the laws and attitudes about abortion in the United States have both changed drastically and remained so much the same. Three women, three time periods, one house: each finds herself in trouble and must face the overwhelming decision about what to do with the unwanted pregnancy.

The first segment is the most powerful, featuring Demi Moore as a young, recently widowed nurse in 1952. With no-one to turn to and with limited financial means, her options are few. Catherine Keener costars as her harshly judgmental sister-in-law. The next piece occurs in 1974 as Sissy Spacek, a mother of four trying to earn a college degree, discovers she's pregnant with her fifth child. Her utterly modern feminist daughter encourages Spacek to get a newly legal abortion, but it's a complex decision. In the final segment, college student Anne Heche becomes pregnant by her married professor. Her best friend, played by Jada Pinkett, is resolutely against abortion and the two wrangle over right and wrong. As the young woman tries to learn about her options, she finds herself enmeshed in the pro-life demonstrations outside the abortion clinic. Cher, who directs this segment (the other two are directed by Nancy Savoca), costars as a doctor at the clinic.

While trying to be even-handed and demonstrating the different choices different women make, the film does have a decidedly pro-choice leaning. Yet the power of the movie is undeniable and it raises significant questions on both sides of the abortion debate, making it an important film for women (and men) everywhere to watch and talk about. --Jenny Brown



Synopsis

A thought provoking drama which looks at the issue of three unplanned pregnancies, involving three women, in three very different political climates.

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 3 different versions of abortion in three different times., 2 Dec 2000
By A Customer
This video shows an extremely realistic portrayal surrounding the controversial issue of abortion. Taken from three different perspectives and times it tacals both anti and pro views. Although a difficult subject to deal with,it has been done so very well. It is informative going back in time when different values were in place and abortion wasn't an option and upto today's availability and choice. This video contains three short films and is an overall well done and accurate piece.
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5 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A decidely rhetorical HBO movie, but unlikely to persuade an, 26 Jul 2005
By Lawrance M. Bernabo (The Zenith City, Duluth, Minnesota) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)      
"If These Walls Could Talk" is one of the most didactic films you are likely to see, but given that there is no issue in contemporary America that is more polarizing than that of abortion it could well be that it is one of the least persuasive films you will see as well. Those who are pro-choice will see it as compelling, while those who are pro-life will see it as offensive, and those who have not made up their minds are too young to watch anything that originally aired on HBO. That is especially true of this film, which has a pair of scenes that will upset you regardless of gender or ideology.

The conceit of "If These Walls Could Talk" is that three women, living in three different times in the past half-century but in the same house, find themselves pregnant. Each faces a different situation, both personally and in terms of the legal and social climate regarding abortion. In 1952, Claire Donnelly (Demi Moore) is a young nurse whose husband had been killed in Korea. She has a moment of weakness and when she discovers she is pregnant she desperately tries to find someone who can perform an illegal abortion. In 1974, Barbara Barrows (Sissy Spacek) is a mother of four older children who has started work on a college degree when she finds herself pregnant. This baby means no early retirement for her husband and that their oldest daughter can forget about going to the college of her choice, so Barbara considers a legal abortion. In 1996, Christine Cullen (Anne Heche) learns she is pregnant by her married college professor. Christine is considering an abortion and discovers the local clinic is besieged by anti-abortion protesters, with volunteers escorting women inside past the gauntlet.

What I find interesting about "If These Walls Could Talk" is the way that the writers have dressed up their rhetoric. The death of each person in this movie, whether they are born or unborn, is tragic because death is inherently tragic, and there is certainly an extent to which you can read things both ways in this 1996 movie. After all, the death of a woman because of a "back alley" abortion can be seen as an argument for making abortion legal so that it does not happen, but it also serves as evidence for the idea that women should not have abortions in the first place.

Yet in the total context of the movie the preferred reading for such a things seems clear. Within that context the decision not to have an abortion is not just a pro-life decision, but a pro-choice one as well (to wit, she chooses life). Plus, we see a world where the people who carry guns and placards are fanatics in the crazy sense of the word instead of the deeply devote meaning. There are two sides to the issue, and in each vignette those two sides are represented, and the common denominator is that the side that is most judgmental is the side that loses in each instance. It is just that from a political perspective, one side of the dispute is inherently more judgmental than the other.

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3.0 out of 5 stars cliched, 30 April 2009
By Ms. L. Bishop "Lora" (UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Whilst undeniably compelling and well acted, I felt this film adhered to so many of the cliches that have been established about abortion. Pregnant Demi Moore resorts to trying to abort herself with a knitting needle. When it was unsuccessful I was fully expecting her to produce a bottle of Gin and start running the bath. She instead resorts to a "back street" abortion, (done on her kitchen table) and surprise surprise, not long after the procedure she is seen kneeling on the floor in a pool of blood. It is not clear whether she dies, but I think we are to assume she does. The point that is so clumsily being laboured is that abortion is a good thing to have available legally, as look what happened to women when it wasn't legal. (This argument is still touted oh so shamelessly today by those in the Pro Abortion arena. I believe it is as flawed an argument now as it was then. Legal doesn't necessarily equate to safe. Women still die from complications of abortion. Clinics are just better at covering it up than their illegal back street buddies were)

As for the third part of the film, those protesting against abortion outside the clinic are shown to be half crazed religious nuts, of dubious sanity and intelligence,yet again conforming to the cliche. And of course, a piece of drama about abortion just wouldn't be complete without the altruistic abortion doctor (only concerned with helping women)being shot by the mean old Anti abortion protester.

On the whole I was disappointed at the end of this film. I felt as if I had been watching a piece written and directed by a bunch of GCSE drama students.
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