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Whether they travel in groups of three or four, accomplished women of a certain age and their wacky adventures are having a movie moment. The latest entry in this subgenre is a frothy outing that sometimes falls flat, but at least The Fabulous Four doesn’t oversell its theme of friendship or its aha moments of catharsis.
Whatever the feature’s shortcomings, its title is not false advertising; there’s nothing ho-hum about the central quartet of characters, longtime friends who gather when one of them decides, on very short notice, that she’s getting married. As with Book Club, though, the fabulosity is more about the actors — in this case, two true icons (Susan Sarandon and Bette Midler) and two supreme masters of quippery (Sheryl Lee Ralph and Megan Mullally). The opening credits are a valentine to all four.
The Fabulous Four
The Bottom Line
Best so far of the 60-something gal-pal lot.
Release date: Friday, July 26
Cast: Susan Sarandon, Bette Midler, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Megan Mullally, Bruce Greenwood
Director: Jocelyn Moorhouse
Screenwriters: Ann Marie Allison, Jenna Milly
Rated R,
1 hour 39 minutes
Director Jocelyn Moorhouse is no stranger to powerhouse female casts, with varied results (How to Make an American Quilt, The Dressmaker). Here she mainly steps out of the way of her stars and lets them shine, though it isn’t until the final half-hour that the proceedings hit their stride. This is especially evident when the story’s faint undercurrent of Shakespearean mistaken identity is brought into the glaring light, in a sequence that’s played, shot and framed to perfection (Roberto Schaefer is the DP). For a good share of the hijinks, the screenplay by Ann Marie Allison and Jenna Milly deploys gags that rely far too much on TikTok and THC gummies (because it’s funny when boomers use them?).
The action revolves around a wedding weekend in sunny Key West, with Midler’s aggressively exuberant and insecure Marilyn tying the knot for the second time, only a few months after the death of her husband of 48 years. So there’s that.
And there’s the absurd deception concocted by Kitty (Ralph), a botanist finding her entrepreneurial groove with cannabis edibles, and Alice (Mullally), a rock singer with a deep appreciation for Kitty’s wares. Their mission is to lure heart surgeon Lou (Sarandon) to Florida for the festivities because Marilyn very much wants her there, even though the two women haven’t spoken in many years, since Marilyn hooked up with Lou’s boyfriend when they were in their 20s. That she went on to build a life with him, for nearly half a century, is a seriously complicating factor.
It turns out that Lou, a Hemingway fan and a cat lover, is also remarkably gullible. And so she boards a flight south with her friends in the belief that they’re taking her to collect the six-toed cat she’s won from the Hemingway museum. It’s a ruse that necessarily crumbles within minutes of the three friends’ arrival at Marilyn’s palatial waterfront home.
Cue the wedding-preliminary this and that, the roving bacchanalia of drinking and partying and parasailing, with Marilyn’s fiancé steering clear by design (his and the screenwriters’), so as not to intrude on the girls’ weekend. And cue the awkwardness and accusatory silences between Marilyn and Lou, the latter reluctantly sticking around for the big celebration but keeping her wary distance in the meantime. Along the way, she meets two fetching men: bar owner and super-flirt Ted (Bruce Greenwood) and twinkly-eyed, Hemingway-quoting ship captain Ernie (Timothy V. Murphy). Sarandon is terrific at signaling the flushed, girlish self-consciousness that their attention, Ted’s in particular, ignites in Lou.
But to its credit, the movie doesn’t treat singlehood as a problem to be fixed. Ralph, whose character is not in looking-for-love mode, delivers a key line about the strength of single women, and she does it with an offhand, in-the-moment sharpness that makes it all the more potent.
There are less subtle messages in a subplot involving Kitty’s ultra-narrow-minded daughter, Leslie (Brandee Evans), who’s eager to book her vibrant mother into a church-run nursing home, and the enthusiastic male stripper (Kadan Well Bennett) who turns out to be someone close to both women. Alice, meanwhile, is on a nonstop libidinous journey through this life, finding a younger man to meet her needs wherever she goes. Her personality comes through loud and clear, but however lovely Mullally’s singing voice, Alice’s bona fides as a successful and famous recording artist — one who’s recognized by a cameoing Michael Bolton — are lost in the mix. It’s Mullally’s virtuoso comic delivery that clicks here, and the way she and the equally adept Ralph play off each other (with editor Gabriella Muir’s deft work in sync with their back-and-forth).
Refreshingly, a Greek chorus of Zillennials — Renika Williams, David Goren and Abigail Dolan as the wedding party Lou meets on her flight to Florida — cheer Lou on, in both TikTok and real-world terms, as the characters’ respective adventures crisscross the island.
Midler’s Marilyn remains something of a ditzy cipher for much of the movie, in ways that sometimes leave the performance floundering but ultimately make sense. It’s at once weird and cogent that Marilyn’s TikTok obsession — incessantly recording and posting proof of her fabulous existence — is more alarming to Alice and Kitty than the fact that she’s marrying someone she’s known only a few months. In the final stretch, when Marilyn falls apart in a way that’s both private and spectacular, the method behind her busy, empty madness makes perfect sense — and, without making a fuss of it, the screenplay addresses the suddenness of her marriage plans.
Marie Schley’s costumes speak volumes without shouting. At the movie’s core is the real-life contrast between stylish Marilyn, with her marital wealth, and the comfort-centric utilitarian look that serious-minded, self-reliant Lou favors. The split between them, and how they find their way back to each other, requires daffy physical business (did someone say “Kegel ball”?) and other bits, not all of which land. The Fabulous Four aims past the formula trappings and, though its misses might be evident, it also hits the bull’s-eye.
Full credits
Distributor: Bleecker Street
Production companies: Southpaw Entertainment, HMP, Blue Rider Media, Peachtree Media Partners, Gramercy Park Media, Bronte Pictures
Cast: Susan Sarandon, Bette Midler, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Megan Mullally, Bruce Greenwood, Timothy V. Murphy, Renika Williams, David Goren, Abigail Dolan, Kadan Well Bennett, Michael Bolton, Brandee Evans, Sophie von Haselberg
Director: Jocelyn Moorhouse
Screenwriters: Ann Marie Allison, Jenna Milly
Producers: Richard Barton Lewis, Lauren Hantz
Executive producers: Gabrielle Jerou-Tabak, Susan Sarandon, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Megan Mullally, Joshua Harris, Greg Friedman, Jatin Desai, Mark Fasano, Ford Corbett, Nathan Klingher, Mitul Patel, Andrew Karpen, Kent Sanderson, Patty Long, Blake Northfield, Steven Toll, Randy Jones, John Hantz, Lindsay Hurd, Charles Zhong, Crystine Zhang, Walter Josten, Patrick Josten, Joel Michaely, Rob Hinderliter, Marc David Levine, Chris Clarke, Ashlee Clarke, Joey Suquet, Ann Marie Allison, Jenna Milly
Director of photography: Roberto Schaefer
Production designer: Cat Smith
Costume designer: Marie Schley
Editor: Gabriella Muir
Composer: David Hirschfelder
Casting directors: Lisa Fincannon, Craig Fincannon
Rated R,
1 hour 39 minutes
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