Join the Comic-Con group
Advertisement

The Grass Harp
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

Buy it now on DVD
Starting at $14.19
trailerWatch trailer

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement

Directed by Charles Matthau.
Based on the novel by Truman Capote, this often-witty coming-of-age drama looks at a young man growing up with an unusual family in the Deep South in the 1940s. After the death of his parents, Collin Fenwick (Edward Furlong) finds himself living in a small town with two of his aunts, Dolly (Piper Laurie) and Verena (Sissy Spacek). Verena is the more stable of the two, an entrepreneur who controls a number of local businesses and rules the roost with a firm hand. Dolly, on the other hand, is a gentle eccentric who claims to hear the voices of the dead as the wind whistles through the grass, and has developed a homemade concoction that supposedly cures dropsy. Dolly's potion attracts the attention of Morris Ritz (Jack Lemmon), a smooth-talking con man from Chicago who wants to snatch the formula away from her. Along the way, Collin also gets to know Catherine (Nell Carter), Verena and Dolly's quick-witted house maid; Amos (Roddy McDowall), a barber who is also the town's one-man rumor mill; Charlie Cool (Walter Matthau), a charmingly cynical retired judge with an opinion about everything; and Sister Ida (Mary Steenburgen), an accordion-toting traveling evangelist who has had a heroic brood of 13 children without benefit of marriage. The Grass Harp was directed by Charles Matthau, the son of Walter Matthau. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
[more]

Be the first to review this movie!

Write a review

Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
The Grass Harp is just about as good a film as can be made from Truman Capote's ethereal novella. That may sound like faint praise, but considering that the source material defied translation to the stage as both a straight play and a musical, it's actually a considerable achievement. Not that the film is perfect, mind you. Kirk Ellis and Stirling Silliphant's screenplay can't quite capture the wistful, delicate flavor of the novel, and the quirkiness of the characters is better suited for the printed page; onscreen, they have a tendency to get a bit cloying. This is partially the fault of director Charles Matthau, who does fall prey to turning some of the gentle emotionalism of the piece into greeting-card sentiments. However, Matthau does a fine job with his cast, an assemblage of talent that is staggering in such a small film. While one can quibble with a few of the accents, the performances themselves are excellent. Piper Laurie is sheer perfection as Dolly, creating a vividly realized portrait of a character that in other hands could come across as blandly mild. She's matched by Sissy Spacek in a startlingly change-of-pace performance that demonstrates the dominance and power that the actress often has to keep under wraps. Walter Matthau is unusually reflective, Nell Carter a sassy delight and Jack Lemmon marvelously oily in smaller parts, and Edward Furlong is near-perfect as the character through whose eyes the story is being told. Harp is not a great film, but it's a film with a great cast. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide
 



Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
liked it.
most people
Most people
liked it.

Other opinions

lyle30116
lyle30116
loved it.
lukasblu
lukasblu
liked it.
MysteriousViolet
MysteriousViolet
is neutral about it.