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Grey Gardens

  • TV Movie
  • 2009
  • TV-PG
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Drew Barrymore and Jessica Lange in Grey Gardens (2009)
The official trailer from the HBO original film "Grey Gardens."
Play trailer0:31
4 Videos
58 Photos
BiographyDrama

The lives of Edith Bouvier Beale and her daughter Edith, aunt and cousin of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Onassis.The lives of Edith Bouvier Beale and her daughter Edith, aunt and cousin of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Onassis.The lives of Edith Bouvier Beale and her daughter Edith, aunt and cousin of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Onassis.

  • Director
    • Michael Sucsy
  • Writers
    • Michael Sucsy
    • Patricia Rozema
  • Stars
    • Drew Barrymore
    • Jessica Lange
    • Jeanne Tripplehorn
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Sucsy
    • Writers
      • Michael Sucsy
      • Patricia Rozema
    • Stars
      • Drew Barrymore
      • Jessica Lange
      • Jeanne Tripplehorn
    • 62User reviews
    • 29Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 6 Primetime Emmys
      • 36 wins & 33 nominations total

    Videos4

    Trailer #1
    Trailer 0:31
    Trailer #1
    Inside Grey Gardens
    Featurette 3:33
    Inside Grey Gardens
    Inside Grey Gardens
    Featurette 3:33
    Inside Grey Gardens
    HBO Films in Production: Grey Gardens
    Interview 1:44
    HBO Films in Production: Grey Gardens
    Clip #1
    Promo 0:32
    Clip #1

    Photos58

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    + 52
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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Drew Barrymore
    Drew Barrymore
    • Little Edie
    Jessica Lange
    Jessica Lange
    • Big Edie
    Jeanne Tripplehorn
    Jeanne Tripplehorn
    • Jackie O.
    Ken Howard
    Ken Howard
    • Phelan Beale
    Kenneth Welsh
    Kenneth Welsh
    • Max Gordon
    Arye Gross
    Arye Gross
    • Albert Maysles
    Louis Ferreira
    Louis Ferreira
    • David Maysles
    • (as Justin Louis)
    Daniel Baldwin
    Daniel Baldwin
    • Julius 'Cap' Krug
    Malcolm Gets
    Malcolm Gets
    • George 'Gould' Strong
    Louis Grise
    • Young Buddy
    • (as Louis Grisé)
    Joshua Peace
    Joshua Peace
    • Adult Buddy
    Neil Babcock
    • Young Phelan Jr.
    Ben Carlson
    Ben Carlson
    • Adult Phelan Jr.
    Olivia Waldriff
    • Young Jackie
    Neil Girvan
    • Concierge
    Timm Zemanek
    Timm Zemanek
    • Inspector
    Arnold Pinnock
    Arnold Pinnock
    • Deputy
    Perry Mucci
    Perry Mucci
    • Young Photographer
    • Director
      • Michael Sucsy
    • Writers
      • Michael Sucsy
      • Patricia Rozema
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews62

    7.411.6K
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    Featured reviews

    8lastliberal

    If you're stuck Edie, it's only with yourself.

    Taking the magnificent 1975 documentary and turning it into a dram is a big risk - and I really feel that it payed off.

    What was really great was the back-story that you didn't get in the documentary. Ken Howard (Michael Clayton, "Crossing Jordan") played Big Edie's husband, Malcolm Gets ("Caroline in the City") played George "Gould" Strong, and Daniel Baldwin was Julius Krug, all important characters in the 1936 portion of the film.

    Drew Barrymore was absolutely magnificent as "Little" Edie, and Jessica Lange was amazing as "Big" Edie. The passive-aggressive attitude displayed made for some super entertainment. The co-dependency made for some outstanding drama. They were an endearing couple.

    Things were really in a disgusting state with cats and raccoons all over the place when Jackie Kennedy Onassis (Jeanne Tripplehorn) shows up after numerous stories made the papers outlining the fact that the women were broke.

    They were so far gone that they couldn't see how badly they looked in the documentary made about them. Eddie still thought she was destined to be a star.

    If Drew Barrymore doesn't get a Golden Globe for this, something is very wrong.
    8robbieturner

    I have SEEN the full unedited version of this !!

    I have to say that I was as dubious about this project as anyone Else...

    Some one was remaking a documentary as a drama ?!? when the documentary may be the most perfect movie I have ever seen ?!? But in all seriousness this movie takes the subject firmly in hand and KNOCKS IT OUT OF THE PARK !!! ITS Brilliant !!! First off you can tell it was written by a true lover of the original, secondly Drew and Jessica are almost indistinguishable from there real counterparts.

    I cant say more with out giving stuff away but this my be the best thing I have seen in years !

    As Lil Edie would say ...."Its Absolutely Terrific"
    9middleburg

    Filling in the missing pieces in this bittersweet tale of love and loss

    The psychological exploration of the Maysles' film of Grey Gardens was riveting, disturbing, entertaining, but ultimately confusing. Who in the world were these colorful-sad women, living in genuinely shocking conditions. Were they mentally ill--was it a put-on--there were so many missing pieces--that those of us who saw the film in the 70s have always remembered this strange sad tale--a sort of benign "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane" kind of tale of lost souls--lost to the world, lost in their own memories and (to us) bizarre fantasy world.

    The HBO film fills in many of the pieces--with heartbreaking detail. Jessica Lange and Drew Barrymore are nothing short of astonishing in their reincarnation of this tragic mother and daughter duo. We see their elegance, their fragility, the tricks that life played on them--with vivid detail. The easy fluidity between the past and the present makes for a riveting drama that resonates almost as much as the original documentary. But there is a difference--in the documentary, there was much more humor--Big Edie and Little Edie were characters, and you felt sorry for them--yet you really noticed their resilience and delight at life. Yes they were caught up in the past with their obsessive dwelling on events from that distant golden age of their's--but they also seemed to relish their relationship, their day-to-day coping, their ice cream, their animals--it was really not THAT sad! The movie is much more heartbreaking--because we see the glamorous lives they led--and the contrast with the emptiness of their final denouement in Grey Gardens feels overwhelmingly sad. We suspected that especially Little Edie was mentally ill in the original--delusional--paranoid. In the film, there is no doubt. She was helpless from the beginning.

    Pieces have been filled in--but there are still empty pieces that abound--the role Little Edie's brothers had or didn't have in their lives, how the wealthy relatives so completely ignored or were unaware of their living conditions--why the Edies so completely retreated from the "real world" when people with much more heartbreaking situations (and much less of a moneyed background) can not only cope but overcome---these are all still mysteries which will probably never be answered--can only be speculated upon--and which will allow "Grey Gardens"--both the documentary, and now the film--to retain an enduring mystique and fascination.
    9keith-712-383468

    I just wish little Edie could have seen this film...

    Not sure why it took me so long to view this film (I rarely watch made-for-cable-television films, so that explains that.) I've seen the documentary a number of times and always came away from it wishing I would have had the opportunity to meet the Edies and, particularly, little Edie. I can't explain it, but there's just something so marvelously endearing about her. She should have been a "somebody" other than just being Jackie O.'s cousin.

    Watching the 1975 Maysles record of the closing days of Grey Gardens always sets me to thinking, perhaps too much, about what I saw play out between my own deceased mother and grandmother. It always takes me a couple of days to shake that film loose.

    I watched the documentary, again, three days ago. Tonight I watched the film--is there a genre known as augmented documentary? The augmented documentary floored me. In particular, Barrymore's performance is stunning. She IS little Edie! I know the documentary very well, all the "classic" lines; and, Barrymore's delivery of them was like...well, watching little Edie in the documentary. Yet, seeing more of the Beales' past played out in rich detail connected so many dots for me (e.g. the very special gift given to Edith by Krug that figures prominently at the film's end.)

    At the film's end, I was sorely missing my mother. She was the little Edie in my life; and, she would have loved this film. My grandmother, or big Edie, would have loved it, too. Thankfully, furniture covered with plastic and strict rules about animals in the house (never cats, and only the occasional small dog not allowed in bedrooms) kept the living arrangement tidy; but, the big Edie and little Edie dynamic was all there. So much laughter, so many tears, so much love and so much dislike. This film captured it all for me. Perhaps, to really appreciate it, one needs to have lived it to a certain degree. If one hasn't, I can see where the film might come across less than excellent.

    9/10 stars from me and only because the film didn't incorporate "The Marble Faun" eating corn with big Edie; and, I missed little Edit remarking on her "revolutionary" dress for the day.
    7moonspinner55

    "A completely priceless life..."

    Playing the squalor-ridden, self-deluded Edith 'Little Edie' Bouvier Beale, Drew Barrymore is a revelation. In this dramatization of events surrounding the filming of the 1975 cult documentary "Grey Gardens", Jessica Lange's Edith, Sr. and Barrymore's Edie have a marvelous rapport as high society mother and daughter who fall on financial hard times. Cousins of Jacqueline Kennedy, the Beales--tucked away for years in a seaside house in East Hampton, New York--were a portrait-perfect example of missed opportunities, squandered dreams, and a freaky sort of lazy optimism that bordered on ridiculousness. They let their water and power lapse, their animal-infested home rot away, until cousin Jacqueline came to their rescue in 1971 and helped to fix the place up (and save the twosome from eviction). Lange withers away in frighteningly real fashion, while flirtatious Barrymore carries on as if every day is New Year's Eve. Both performances are spot on, though this is certainly Drew's shining moment as a serious actress; nailing the cadence of Edie's voice, her slouch and boxy walk, not to mention her high-on-life spirit, Barrymore is very funny and touching. The film goes back in time to give us a peek at how the Beale women managed to get to such a low point in life, and while the narrative is condensed and at times restricting, the pacing of the cable-made film seldom lags (as the original documentary did). It's a thoughtful movie about dreams so easily dashed, and the unforgiving price we pay for living in the past.

    More like this

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the original Grey Gardens (1975), David Maysles asked Edith 'Little Edie' Bouvier Beale who she would want to portray her mother, Edith Bouvier Beale, if a movie based on Grey Gardens were made. She suggested Ethel Barrymore, Drew Barrymore's great-aunt, who died in 1959.
    • Quotes

      Phelan Beale: Damn Ganymede.

      George 'Gould' Strong: I'm right here Phelan, I can hear you!

    • Crazy credits
      At the end of the credits, where the American Humane Society's traditional credit is displayed, Little Edie's voice adds "No animals were harmed in the making of this movie."
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: 17 Again/State of Play/Grey Gardens/Is Anybody There?/Earth (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      Tea For Two
      from the musical "No No Nanette"

      Lyrics by Irving Caesar

      Music by Vincent Youmans

      Performed by Drew Barrymore and Jessica Lange

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 18, 2011 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • HBO
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 灰色花園
    • Filming locations
      • The Fairmont Royal York Hotel - 100 Front St W, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • HBO Films
      • Specialty Films (II)
      • Locomotive
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $12,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 44 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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