| Shelley Duvall, Sissy Spacek, Janice
Rule, Robert Fortier, Ruth Nelson, John Cromwell, Sierra Pecheur.
Robert Altman's Three Women takes a surreal, improvisational and
rather eerie look at the lives of three women in a western desert
town. The plot centers around the youngest of the women, Pinky (Sissy
Spacek), an eccentric, withdrawn woman trying to begin a new life.
She finds work as an attendant at a hot springs spa catering to
the elderly and infirm. There she befriends her co-worker Millie
(Shelley Duvall), an equally strange but more outgoing woman; the
two bond, and are soon sharing an apartment. Pinky becomes increasingly
dependent on Millie, eventually adopting aspects of her personality
and appearance. This obsessive attachment is threatened when Pinky
discovers Millie with a man -- Edgar (Robert Fortier), the macho,
faux-cowboy husband of local artist Willie (Janice Rule), the last
of the title's three women. Pinky's subsequent, desperate actions
precipitate the film's enigmatic conclusion, involving an unexpected
series of confrontations and role reversals amongst the three women.
This story tends to take a backseat to the elliptical, spooky imagery,
particularly the desert landscapes, and the quirky performances
-- not surprising, given that the film was reportedly shot without
a full screenplay and inspired by Altman's own dreams. |