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Fried Green Tomatoes
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Directed by Jon Avnet
A woman learns the value of friendship as she hears the story of two women and how their friendship shaped their lives in this warm comedy-drama. Evelyn Couch (Kathy Bates) is an emotionally repressed housewife with a habit of drowning her sorrows in candy bars. Her husband Ed (Gailard Sartain) barely acknowledges her existence, and while he visits his aunt at a nursing home every week, Evelyn is not permitted to come into the room because the old women doesn't like her. One week, while waiting out Ed's visit, Evelyn meets Ninny Threadgoode (Jessica Tandy), a frail but feisty old woman who lives at the same nursing home and loves to tell stories. Over the span of several weeks, she spins a whopper about one of her relatives, Idgie (Mary Stuart Masterson). Back in the 1920s, Idgie was a sweet but fiercely independent woman with her own way of doing things who ran the town diner in Whistle Stop, Alabama. Idgie was very close to her brother Buddy (Chris O'Donnell), and when he died, she wouldn't talk to anyone except Buddy's girl, Ruth Jamison (Mary-Louise Parker). Idgie gave Ruth a job at the cafe after she left her abusive husband, Frank Bennett (Nick Searcy). Between her habit of standing up for herself, standing up to Frank, and serving food to Black people out the back of the diner, Idgie raised the ire of the less tolerant citizens of Whistle Stop, and when Frank mysteriously disappeared, many locals suspected that Idgie, Ruth, and their friends may have been responsible. Evelyn finds herself looking forward to her weekly visits with Ninny, and is inspired by her story to take a new pride in herself and assert her independence from Ed. Fried Green Tomatoes was based on the novel Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe by actress-turned-author Fannie Flagg, who makes a cameo appearance as the leader of a self-help group. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Fried Green Tomatoes is a warm adaptation of Fannie Flagg's popular women's novel that does equal justice to its two featured time periods, while offering useful messages about friendship and standing up for oneself. However, it does teeter on the edge of man-hating and the related exaggerations now and again. How else to explain that sympathetic Ruth Jamison (Mary Louise-Parker) gets romantically entwined with a man so loathsome that not only does he beat her, but he's also a member of the Ku Klux Klan? Fried Green Tomatoes is certainly short on subtlety, polarizing its characters into selfless saints and cruel sinners, but this approach does deliver an unambiguous rallying cry for viewers to apply its self-help agenda to their own lives. Kathy Bates' Evelyn Couch is the viewer's surrogate, as well as the most common demographic of Flagg's readership; overweight and bossed around by her husband, she takes the yarn spun by Jessica Tandy's Ninny Threadgoode and uses is it to channel her dormant feminism. The script, as adapted by Flagg, director Jon Avnet, and Carol Sobieski, is sometimes quite leaden, oozing with simplistic Southern metaphors and the kind of melodrama that features not one, but two accidents involving locomotives. But it can also be subtle, especially in handling the unspoken lesbianism of Mary Stuart Masterson's Idgie Threadgoode. Fried Green Tomatoes is the kind of epic of pop feminism and the old South that should be a favorite for those who gravitate toward these topics. Others may find it heavy-handed, but still worthwhile. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 

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