The Darling Family

The Darling Family is a Canadian drama film, directed by Alan Zweig and released in 1994.[1] Based on the theatrical play by Linda Griffiths, the film stars Griffiths and Alan Williams as a couple discussing the state of their relationship after the woman unexpectedly becomes pregnant,[2] blending both scenes in which they talk to each other with scenes in which they verbalize their interior monologues.[3]

The Darling Family
Directed byAlan Zweig
Written byLinda Griffiths
StarringAlan Williams
Linda Griffiths
Music byMychael Danna
CinematographyGerald Packer
Edited byMichael Pacek
Production
company
Cineplex Odeon Films
Release date
  • August 26, 1994 (1994-08-26)
Running time
86 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

Critical response

Geoff Pevere of The Globe and Mail reviewed the film favourably, rating it three stars and writing that "Although made on a minuscule budget and largely restricted to the unventilated spectacle of two people cautiously circling each other in closed spaces, The Darling Family never fails to resonate beyond its dramatic confines. Griffiths' script, which is every bit as critical of She as it is of He, captures precisely the paralyzing self-consciousness of contemporary gender relations, and does so with an economy that can shift from the comic to the tragic in the flick of a phrase: 'Oh no,' He panics at one point, 'she's happy.'"[1]

Writing for Maclean's, Brian D. Johnson was more critical, asserting that "as an excursion into relationship hell, the film has an emotional veracity and psychological insight. But the spartan, deadlocked drama demands a lot of patience from the viewer. It is like one of those exhausting late-night discussions in bed that are destined to go nowhere."[2]

gollark: You also run into the problem that you couldn't cryptographically validate that something was signed by someone's brain-TPM-thing™ and not just a computer running the signature algorithm, unless you have some organization give it a certificate, which then gives them unreasonable amounts of power.
gollark: It's much easier to remember a sequence of random words than a long string of numbers, but if you want to operate on the wordy one you also need to store a big lookup table, which defeats the point.
gollark: Besides, the easy to operate on forms are also annoyingly hard to remember.
gollark: Oh yes, I'll just ??? elliptic curves mentally.
gollark: Well, you could memorize a cryptographic key, although this might be impractical.

References

  1. Geoff Pevere, "Dangerous liaisons". The Globe and Mail, August 27, 1994.
  2. Brian D. Johnson, "Man versus woman: The Darling Family directed by Alan Zweig". Maclean's, September 5, 1994.
  3. Craig MacInnis, "A Darling idea looking for a movie". Toronto Star, August 26, 1994.


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