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Death Becomes Her (1992)
In director Robert Zemeckis' and Universal's extremely-funny,
satirical, inventive and entertaining black comedy and fantasy, it
told about obsessive attempts to alter the aging process due
to modern-day vanity; jaw-dropping award-winning Visual Effects were
used to great comic effect, some of which were very similar to
the effects in the previous year's Terminator
2: Judgment Day (1991) - another Oscar winner for Visual
Effects:
- in the macabre film's grotesque plot that functioned
as a morality play, personal animosities and hatreds were fought
over many years between two long-standing, battling rivals who
were originally childhood friends: glamorous and narcissistic musical
star-actress diva Madeline Ashton (Meryl Streep) and her best friend,
aspiring bookish writer Helen Sharp (Goldie Hawn)
- the film's opening and title credits sequence)
were set in NYC in 1978 at the Fairbanks Theater, where decadent,
bitchy and imperious Broadway actress Madeline was the star-performer
in an adapted Tennessee Williams version of 'Sweet Bird of Youth'
titled Songbird!, with Ann-Margret-inspired production
numbers; the show was poorly received by some early-departing patrons
who criticized Madeline's aging persona (a scene similar to one
in Singin' in the Rain (1952))
Songbird! Playbill Cast Down on Rainy Theater
Sidewalk by a Disgruntled Patron
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Madeline Ashton (Meryl Streep) - Aging Broadway
Star on Stage
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Audience Members: (l to r) Dr. Ernest Menville
(Bruce Willis) and Fiancee Helen Sharp (Goldie Hawn)
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- backstage following the show, Madeline worried in
front of a mirror: "Wrinkled, wrinkled little star, Hope
they never see the scars"; she was visited there by two audience
members, her friend-rival Helen Sharp and her fiancee - wimpy,
mild-mannered plastic surgeon Dr. Ernest Menville (Bruce Willis),
who was an exuberant fan of her performance; she met and entranced
Menville after asking: "Do you think that I'm starting to
need you?"
- the scene shifted to Menville's medical office where
he was performing eye-lift surgery on Madeline; Helen expressed
long-held fears that she would seductively steal him away: ("She
wants you because you're mine. I've lost men to her before");
she realized that he had failed "the Madeline Ashton test" -
her fiancee broke off his engagement, and married Madeline instead
- as a result of her breakup, seven years later, the
overly-depressed and betrayed Helen went into a tailspin, living
as a hermit in an unkempt Manhattan apartment #3C with numerous
cats, and engaging in a junk-food binge, including eating from
a large stock of cans of ready-made sugary cake frosting that tripled
her weight to obese levels of about 200 pounds; she also became
an obsessive and vengeful TV-addict, gleefully watching (and rewatching)
a recorded video of one of Madeline's films in which she was choked
to death
- after being evicted by the police for not paying
her rent to her landlord, and suffering a nervous breakdown; Helen
was admitted to a psychiatric mental hospital in 1984 where her
clinical therapy failed over a period of six months until her black
psychologist (Alaina Reed Hall) suggested that Helen must obliterate
Madeline from her thoughts: ("For any of us to have a life,
you have got to forget about her! You have to erase her from your
mind...you have to completely eliminate...")
- another 7 years later by 1992, Madeline was living
in Beverly Hills, CA, but her career had faltered and her looks
had deteriorated; she had trained her maid Rose (Nancy Fish) to
flatter her with praise about her good looks not just weekly but
every morning; while still in bed, Madeline and husband Ernest
received an invite to a book party to celebrate Helen's release
of her new beauty-book novel "Forever Young";
Madeline mocked the invite card: "Oh, Forever Young! Right.
And eternally fat!"
- her marriage to her downtrodden and now-alcoholic
husband Menville had become miserable; he was discovered passed
out on the floor of the upstairs living room and was served a Bloody
Mary by Rose as a wake-up drink; he asked about his wife: "Is
it up yet?"; his beeper summoned him to his reconstructive
mortician job at the West Lawn Mortuary, where his first duty that
morning was to change the expression on the face of actor Fernando
Rivas, who had died in his hot-tub while making love to his new
18 year-old fiancee from Cuba; the "expression of happiness" on
his face was considered "completely inappropriate" by
Menville's associate Mr. Franklin (William Frankfather) and required
modifications
- to prepare herself for the party, Madeline hastily
paid a visit to Chagall's - her luxury, high-tech spa in BH, where
she turned spiteful toward her young cosmetologist Anna Jones (Michelle
Johnson) who refused to give her a second plasma separation procedure
within a six month period; the tormented Madeline sobbed in despair: "Do
you even care? You stand there with your 22-year-old skin and your
tits like rocks and laugh at me!"; when Madeline offered a
personal bribe, the BH spa owner Chagall (Ian Ogilvy) interceded,
promptly dismissed Anna, and personally recommended treatment elsewhere;
claiming he was a member of a "very select group,"
he offered Madeline the address of a rejuvenation specialist and
New Age mystic Lisle Von Rhuman (Isabella Rossellini) [Note: The
youthful Chagall wore a gold pin at his neck designating membership
in her 'immortality' cult, but seemed to be having bodily-physical
problems - twitching eyes.]
- at the gala, red-carpet book party event, Helen
(now aged 50) looked beautifully rejuvenated, svelte and slimmed
down, radiant, and thin, wearing a sexy red dress; the jealously-raging
Madeline was dumb-founded and became fearful that Helen would again
steal the "unhappy" Ernest away from her; her fears were
justified - while speaking to Ernest, Helen criticized Madeline
was ruining his career as a plastic surgeon: "She married
a brilliant surgeon and turned him into an undertaker"; she
was eager to learn how Helen succeeded in becoming thin and youthful-looking
- she was even more motivated when she happened to
find her younger male lover Dakota Williams (Adam Storke) with
a younger, naked female (Carrie Yazel) ("a little piece of
meat") on the side, who then dumped her: "Go find someone
your own age, Madeline!"; she drove erratically in a heavy
rainstorm (a scene reminiscent of a similar one in The
Bad and the Beautiful (1952) after Lana Turner was discarded
by Kirk Douglas)
- the envious Madeline immediately sought out the
wealthy socialite who had earlier been recommended to her by Chagall
(Ian Ogilvy) - a devotee of her treatment; Madeline paid a late-night
visit to Lisle who lived in a towering, massive, marble-laden Gothic
Beverly Hills mansion with numerous handsome bodyguards (including
Fabio)
- the beautiful enchantress Lisle was introduced,
wearing only an elaborate bead necklace covering her bare breasts;
she knew the reason for Madeline's visit and empathized with Madeline's
misery about old age ("This is life's ultimate cruelty. It
offers us a taste of youth and vitality, and then it makes us witness
our own decay"); she unveiled a mysterious immortality potion
inside a gold box (with an Ankh symbol) and an inner egg - a youthful
elixir that would cure aging and secure eternal life ("A touch
of magic in this world obsessed with science. A tonic. A potion")
Lisle Von Rhuman (Isabella Rossellini)
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A Box With an Ankh Symbol
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Egg Structure Inside the Box
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The Pink Potion Inside a Vial
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- Lisle claimed she was 71 years of age although she
looked like a 38 year-old, and explained: "It stops the aging
process dead in its tracks and forces it into retreat. Drink that
potion and you'll never grow even one day older. Don't drink it,
and continue to watch yourself rot"; Madeline was reluctant
when she saw the exorbitant price to pay for the potion, and prepared
to leave; Lisle pricked Madeline's finger with a knife, drew blood,
and then dipped her knife in the potion, and back to Madeline's
bloody cut, to demonstrate how the powerful elixir in her system
revitalized her left hand and would do the same for her entire
body; Madeline was very pleased with the immediate effects of the
potion on her left hand - her wrinkles and age spots disappeared
- Lisle explained how the drink was also a mixed blessing
as a Faustian bargain; Madeline must conceal the potion's existence:
("The secret that we share must never become public"),
and after 10 years of beauty, she was required to disappear from
the public eye - "...before people become suspicious, you
have to disappear from public view forever. You can retire. You
can stage your own phony death or, as one of my clients simply
said, 'I vant to be alone'" [Note: a reference to Greta Garbo]
- the greedy Madeline turned over a check for payment
and readily drank the potion ("Bottoms up!") - causing
shivers, before Lisle could offer her another warning: ("Now
a warning..."); Madeline responded incredulously:
"NOW a warning?!"; Lisle urged her to treat her body well
as she placed a gold pin on Madeline's bodice: "Take care of
yourself. You and your body are going to be together a long time,
be good to it. Siempre vive: Live forever"; before departing,
she watched instantaneous changes taking place in her body via a
mirror - she appeared more youthful and glamorous (her butt cheeks
tightened and her drooping boobs rose and firmed up), and she exclaimed: "I'm
a girl!"
Madeline: "Bottoms Up!"
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Gold Pin Signifying 'Live Forever'
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Madeline: "I'm a Girl!"
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- meanwhile during Madeline's absence, the vengeful
Helen met with Ernest in his home, seduced him with a slinky red
dress with a leg slit to reveal her leg, and stole his allegiance
back, repeating the words: "Sexual. Sensual. Sexy. Sex. Sex.
Sex!"; she convinced him to quit being weak-willed and to
divorce his wife, and then join her to plot and kill Madeline;
their plan (seen in a montage) was to invite her over for dinner
and then overdose her with narconol (an alcohol-based tranquilizer)
and booze, and stage a DUI car accident on Mulholland Dr. [Note:
This was essentially the same murder plot in The
Postman Always Rings Twice (1946).]
- once Madeline returned home, she argued with Ernest
and they called each other names: ("You're a cheap, tacky
little tramp") and "You're a tragic, boozy, flaccid clown...You're
not even a man anymore. And I need a man! A real man, not some
drunken, broken-down flaccid undertaker who is just as dead
below the waist as his clients are. Hey, I might have more fun
with one of your clients! At least I'd know I'd be getting something
stiff..."); incensed, he angrily choked her at the top of
the stairs and then pushed her down the stairs where she broke
her neck; in a panic, he called Helen, telling her that he believed
that Madeline was dead from a lethal fall down the stairs
- however, being immortal due to the potion, Madeline
revived behind him as a 'living dead' banshee during his call;
he found her approaching toward him with her head twisted backwards
(180 degrees) and he screamed; [Note: A reference to Linda Blair's
transformation in The Exorcist (1973)];
she performed a "backwards walk" with her rotated head,
and gave a shocked cry: "My ass! I can see my ass!";
Ernest added: "And there's something really wrong with your
neck, too"; she begged: "Ernest, what's wrong with me?" and
he diagnosed a dislocated neck; she was able to twirl her rubbery
neck around 360 degrees and straighten out her head
180 Degrees Twisted Head
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"Backwards Walk" With Her Rotated Head
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"My ass! I can see my ass!"
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- the two visited the Beverly Hills hospital where
the attending befuddled ER doctor (Sydney Pollack) couldn't find
any pulse or heartbeat; the frazzled doctor asked Ernest for a
drink from his whiskey flask before he diagnosed a fractured wrist
in three places and two shattered vertebrae with bone protrusions
- without any pain; he declared that she was technically dead with
a temperature below 80 degrees; a few moments later, the traumatized
doctor's heart was being revived with defibrillator paddles in
another operating room
- Ernest also delivered his incredulous diagnosis:
"You're sitting there, you're talking to me, but you're dead!"
and Madeline promptly fainted; her body was sent to the morgue, where
Ernest retrieved her from a body bag within a deep-freeze drawer,
and returned her to their home; with materials taken from his mortuary
(including formaldehyde), he repaired and freshened up her colorless,
reanimated body with makeup paint
- Helen arrived and expected to find Madeline dead
as they had planned; the sneaky Madeline overheard them and realized
the co-conspirators had plotted against her life (Helen:
"We have to bury her in Death Valley and be done with her once
and for all...She was a home wrecker. She was a man-eater. And she
was a bad actress"); she approached and told the two that she
had been listening; Helen exclaimed: "She's alive!"
- the revived Madeline brandished a double-barreled
shotgun and blasted her arch rival Helen Sharp's abdomen (a beaming
Madeline glowed: "These are the things that make life worth
living!") and sent her flying backwards into the garden pool;
she then coerced Ernest through blackmail to help her prepare the
body for burial: ("Do you know what they do to soft, bald,
overweight Republicans in prison, Ernest?")
- when Helen rejuvenated and crawled out of the pool,
she was at first ignorant of the large non-fatal hole in her midriff,
and she growled: "Look at me, Ernest! Just look at me! I'm soaking wet!";
suddenly, it occurred to Madeline that Helen was also "undead" -
she confirmed it when she located the pin on Helen's blouse and
exclaimed how Helen had also taken Lisle's magic potion formula
for her own comeback: "You took the potion!"
- a bitch fight occurred with shovels between Helen
and Madeline - accusing each other of taking the identical potion;
Madeline chortled: "You're a walking lie, Helen, and I can
see right through you!" while peeking through the hole; Helen
struck Madeline with a shovel and temporarily dislodged her head
on her very flexible neck; the shadows of the two cat-fighters
were reflected onto the floor [Note: An allusion to the sword duel
in The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938).];
Madeline's head was also pounded into her body - but she was able
to adjust it by pulling up on it; the two cat-fighters soon gave
up trying to kill each other, because it was an impossibility ("We
can't even hurt each other! We can't even inflict pain!"),
and they eventually reconciled
- when Ernest told them that he was preparing to leave
for good, they convinced him to repair them and touch-up their
outer looks before his final departure; but when they realized
that both of their bodies still needed constant upkeep, he protested
staying any longer: ("'Til death do us part! Well, you girls
are dead. And I'm parting, Cheers!"); they selfishly connived
to keep him under their command by getting him drunk; Ernest was
knocked unconscious
- Ernest awoke next to Lisle's pool where she was
swimming naked; the two had schemed to get him to drink the potion,
and Lisle pricked his finger to demonstrate the potion's power;
Ernest was urgently begged by Lisle to take the potion, but he
was reluctant to take the elixir (even though it was offered free
of charge in exchange for his surgical skills): "I don't want
to live forever. I mean, it sounds good, but what am I gonna do?
What if I get bored?....And what if I get lonely? Who am I gonna
hang around with, Madeleine and Helen?....I'll have to watch everyone
around me die. I don't think this is right. This is not a dream.
This is a nightmare! You people all have to be stopped"
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Lisle's Offer of the Elixir-Potion to Ernest
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- he rejected drinking the potion, pocketed it, fled
to another area of the mansion (pursued by her three guards Tom,
Dick and Harry), and ran into a large room where Lisle (with Chagall's
assistance) was hosting an evening spring party for all of her
clients (with invited guests Greta Garbo (Bonnie Cahoon), Jim Morrison
(Dave Brock), Marilyn Monroe (Stephanie Anderson), Andy Warhol
(Bob Swain), Elvis (Ron Stein), and James Dean (Eric Clark)); as
he fled via elevator to the rooftop, he was temporarily trapped
and pursued by Madeline and Helen, who insisted that he drink the
potion to save his life when suspended in mid-air many stories
up; he adamantly refused and shouted out: "You're on your
own!"
- when the scaffolding broke, Ernest fell through
the ceiling of stained glass windows (Michelangelo's The Creation
of Adam) above the swimming pool where Jim Morrison (of The
Doors) was poolside, accompanied by a disrobing blonde female
(Lydia Peterkoch); he was able to successfully get away in James
Dean's vintage Porsche, return home to pack his things, and head
to the airport
- the two rivals pursued Ernest, in vain, and finally
realized and admitted that they had only each other to rely upon
for support, friendship, and mutual maintenance of their deteriorating
bodies: (Madeline: "We just have to be very careful with ourselves.
We have to take care of each other. I'll paint your ass; you paint
mine")
- in the ending set 37 years into the future, heavily-black
veiled Madeline and Helen attended (seated in the far back) a chapel
funeral service for the praised and eulogized Ernest for his visionary
and exemplary life and how he had learned "the secret of eternal
life"; both smug, 'living dead' females in a fragile state
of disrepair (for disobeying and not taking care of themselves)
appeared to be living mannequins - physically-corrupted bodies
with rotting, peeling, and cracked gray flesh; during their hasty,
premature departure to touch up their bodies, they noisily and
disruptively left the memorial service
At Ernest's Funeral 37 Years Later
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Shattered Into Pieces: "Do you remember where
you parked the car?"
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- as they proceeded down the outdoor steps of the
church chattily complaining to each other, Helen lost her footing
on their earlier dropped can of spray paint, and she tumbled down
the flight of steps, deliberately taking Madeline with her; both
of their bodies shattered into large pieces at the curbside - one
of their disembodied hands annoyedly drummed its fingers; Helen's
decapitated head sardonically muttered to Madeline's head: "Do
you remember where you parked the car?"
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Helen Sharp 7 Years Later - Obese and In a Tailspin
A Video of Madeline Being Strangled to Death - Watched Gleefully by Helen
Disturbed Helen In Physical Therapy in a Mental Institution
An Aging Madeline in 1992 in Beverly Hills, CA
Dr. Menville - Mortician at the West Lawn Mortuary
Madeline's 22 Year-old BH Spa Specialist Anna Jones (Michelle Johnson)
Spa Owner Chagall (Ian Ogilvy) - With a Gold Pin at his Neck, and With Eye Problems
Madeline with a Rejuvenated Helen at the Book Party Event
Madeline Entranced by the Magic Potion to Offer Youth
The Elixir Surging Through Cut in Madeline's Pricked Finger on Her Left Hand
Helen's Sexy Seduction and Scheming with Ernest to Divorce Madeline and Then
Kill Her Rival
Montage of a Planned Plot to Kill Madeline In a Staged DUI Accident
Madeline Angrily Choked by Ernest at Top of Stairs and Pushed, Found With a Broken
Neck
"Ernest, What's Wrong With Me?"
The Befuddled Doctor (Sydney Pollack) at the Beverly Hills Hospital
Helen Blasted in the Abdomen by a Revived Madeline's Shotgun
Madeline's Flexible Head During Bitch Fight With Shovels
The Two Co-Conspirators Plot To Get Ernest To Stay To Tend to Their Bodies
To Ernest: "Drink it!"
"We have to take care of each other"
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