Dolores Claiborne
Dark secrets, family torments and two murders swirl around the stoic, hardened figure of Dolores Claiborne (Kathy Bates), a housekeeper accused of murdering her employer of 22 years. Then there was that timely accident that took Dolores's husband (David Strathairn) during the solar eclipse of 1975. Yet with all the sombre suffering that follows Dolores like a miasma of pain, none of it compares with the heartache of a relationship she has with her grown daughter (Jennifer Jason Leigh). Although this flick is rife with horror, it is not of the supernatural kind, but rather of the torment only real people can impose on one another. The script is full of colourful language, and director Taylor Hackford successfully weaves several plot threads and psychological dilemmas throughout this engrossing tale without diminishing any of them. He not only culls intense performances from his cast, but he also brings to life the landscape around them. When Dolores Claiborne's best-kept secret is finally given up, it occurs under the surreal backdrop of a solar eclipse that is a truly sensational bit of cinematography.
| Director/s Taylor Hackford |
Writer/s Tony Gilroy (screenplay) |
Cast
| Kathy Bates | Dolores Claiborne |
| Jennifer Jason Leigh | Selena St. George |
| Judy Parfitt | Vera Donovan |
| Christopher Plummer | Det. John Mackey |
| David Strathairn | Joe St. George |
| Eric Bogosian | Peter |
| John C. Reilly | Const. Frank Stamshaw |
| Ellen Muth | Young Selena |
| Bob Gunton | Mr. Pease |
| Roy Cooper | Magistrate |
| Wayne Robson | Sammy Marchant |
| Ruth Marshall | Secretary |
| Weldon Allen | Bartender |
| Tom Gallant | Searcher |
| Kelly Burnett | Jack Donovan |
| Matt Appleby | Kid on street |
| Thomas Skinner | Kid on street |
| Vernon Steel | Ferry vendor |
| Taffara Jessica Stella Murray | Young Selena (Age 5) |
| Susan Lane | Crying girl |
| Frank Adamson | Detective supervisor |
| Edward Rubin | Detective supervisor (as Ed Rubin) |
| Sandy MacDonald | Sheriff |
| Dean Eilertson | Moving man |
The Adaptions >
Rating:
Add Review

