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George Segal stars as a Beverly Hills lawyer who discovers he's madly in love with his ex-wife and frantically tries to undo the damage he has done to their relationship. Chasing her around the world, he attempts to prove to her that his love is real.
Blume in Love is writer-director Paul Mazursky's best movie, featuring George Segal's best performance, and the sweetest film distillation of what made the 1970s a charmed and exasperating time. Yes, sweetest--though it's only fair to serve notice of a third-act transgression, and its aftermath, that will have some viewers hitting the Stop button. So be it. This comedy about a privileged manchild (Segal)--a Beverly Hills divorce lawyer--falling ever more deeply in love with his ex-wife (Susan Anspach) is clear-eyed and endlessly forgiving toward all its imperfect, achingly human characters. A milestone of the '70s "American film renaissance," Blume has only grown wittier and wiser with time.
Segal and Anspach are perfectly cast as the California couple whose courtship, marriage, breakup, and postmarital relationship are recalled in scrambled chronology from Blume's vantage in Venice's Plaza San Marco, site of their honeymoon years earlier. The stars' quirky attractiveness, as opposed to conventional movie-star looks, suits the characters' glib, SoCal liberalism and sexual gamesmanship. (The couple meet at a radical-chic fundraiser for César Chávez and frug to a curly-locks band playing "Hey, Mr. Tambourine Man"--a zeitgeist moment to bring fond tears to the eye.) Kris Kristofferson is delightful as an out-of-work musician named Elmo who takes up with the ex-wife, then--to her bemusement--bonds warmly with Blume. There are also priceless dialogues with the psychoanalyst the couple shares (Donald F. Muhich, Mazursky's own analyst previously seen in Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice), and Shelley Winters has a hilarious extended cameo as an on-again, off-again client of Blume's. Nor should we neglect Marsha Mason, exuding great-gal warmth and carnality as the ex-best friend of the exes; it was her first film role of consequence, and just watching her in it made Neil Simon fall in love. --Richard T. Jameson
Great to go back in time...Reviewed by L. Weiss, 2009-03-26
I loved this movie when I saw it at 17 years old having just been dumped and cheated on by my boyfriend! As a child of the 60's and 70's and a bit of a hippie at heart, this movie just made me feel good! Maybe not quite as good as I remember, but fun to go back to. Glad I bought it since I don't think it's ever been shown (or ever will be) on TV.
Retrospective 35 years laterReviewed by Tulipmedia, 2007-05-13
I first saw this film as a new release in 1973, and was, at the time, a 22 year-old licking wounds from his first "lost love", and wondering what the future would bring. What a remarkable opportunity to see it again (for the first time) almost 35 years on, after a life-time of experiences against which to measure my reaction. I simply loved the film in 1973, but simply rejected the ending outright. I am relieved to report that 35 years have left little changed. It is a remarkable film about love, marriage,and the human condition, with superb perfomances and a capture of '70's zetigeist that needs to be experienced and can not easily be described. And the ending is still unfair to the heart and beauty of the film... but that is OK. The many strengths surprisingly more than outweigh Mazursky's curious insistence to assert that "love conquers all".
A bitttersweet 1970's Los Angeles romance for adultsReviewed by Stephen H. Wood, 2007-02-18
When I was a college student in 1970's Los Angeles, I fell in love
with Paul Mazursky's bittersweet BLUME IN LOVE (1973). It is now on
DVD, and I recommend it to all romantics of the world. Beverly
Hills divorce lawyer Stephen Blume (George Segal in a career-best
performance) finds himself getting divorced from wife Nina (Susan
Anspach) when he stupidly cheats on her with his secretary. Blume
befriends a sweet woman named Arlene (Marsha Mason), but still
loves Nina. But she now has a hippie boyfriend named Elmo (Kris
Kristofferson, who made PAT GARRETT AND BILLY THE KID the same
year). Nina met Elmo in a Los Angeles welfare office, where she
works. Blume befriends Elmo to try and get to Nina. She keeps
telling Blume to get lost, but secretly misses him also.
This is an extraordinarily insightful and superbly acted movie
about human relationships and divorce. The dialogue is wonderful.
("I've seen GONE WITH THE WIND eleven times because I know it will
be good." "I raped my ex-wife, and her boyfriend beat me up.")
Writer/director Mazursky gives it an interesting structure,
beginning and ending in Venice (Italy) with a bearded Blume sipping
expresso in an open plaza and watching people around him. They are
in love, and he misses Nina. In flashback, we learn how the two met
and married in Venice, moved to Los Angeles, then several years
later how they got divorced in Las Vegas. And we learn how Blume
meets Arlene, who kind of resents having him always talking and
thinking about Nina during sex. On the other hand, Nina claims she
never thinks of Blume after the divorce. That's not true, as the
last couple of reels reveal. I personally find the last scene
optimistic, but still true-to-life.
Watching a wonderful Sidney Poitier drama called TO SIR, WITH LOVE
(1967), I told myself it could only take place in 1967 London
because of the character relationships, the dialogue, and the city.
Watching BLUME IN LOVE, which was photographed by Bruce Surtees and
designed by Pato Guzman, I told myself it is a time capsule of my
college heyday in 1973 Los Angeles. I was 22. If it was released in
Spring, I was graduating from UCLA; if it was a Fall release, I was
just starting at USC's School of Cinema. The characters bed one
another freely without condoms in a pre-AIDS age and say "the f---
word" often enough to get an "R" rating; and they smoke pot and use
the expression "my old lady" for girl friends.
BLUME IN LOVE is definitely a 1970's movie, one of the finest. I
gets 1973 Los Angeles just right, down to the details. I highly
recommend it to adult moviegoers.
BLUME IN LOVE DVDReviewed by Russell Berry, 2007-02-15
Finally out on dvd in 2007. This is a wonderful overlooked film. Paul Mazursky made a name for himself as one of the great 70s Directors and this is the apex of his output. A fantastic movie that is actually a good representation of a realistic attempt by a "not so weak " man to right his wrongs. The ending is enchanting as is the entire film. An absolute classic in every way.
Character study of a weak manReviewed by dizzheart, 2006-06-03
This movie is about a man (George Segal) who loses his marriage because he brought his secretary home and had sex with her there. He didn't think he was doing anything really wrong by cheating on his wife and he felt entitled to because cheating is a commonplace activity and "everybody does it". He didn't think his wife would know and he seems genuinely puzzled that she minds when she catches him. The question the film left me with was, has he become any less selfish by the end of the movie? He decides he wants his wife back, and he gets her, as he easily gets most everything he wants -- but I wondered if he wouldn't do the same thing again if temptation crossed his path another time. And I wondered also why his wife would go back to such a proven loser. It's an uncomfortable movie, but it's worth seeing if one keeps in mind that these are not heroic people and not meant to be seen that way.