13 thoughts on “WCW: Joan Allen

  1. Don’t make me chose Kendra!

    Okay, okay…for me Pleasantville for her outstanding transforative performance. She is so convincing as a woman who slowly decides to embrace life and listen to her emotions and desires. Then a tie for second place with Peggy Sue and Tucker, with great clothes for all three. Though The Crucible was an outstanding film with an equally outstanding cast.

    I need to find a few more of the films you shared to complete my Joan Allen fix. And yes, please Joan, make some more films!!

    1. Seconding Pleasantville. Bits of it have aged poorly, but it’s still a strong overall story.

  2. She’s a brilliant actress. She inhabits her roles and you don’t see her “acting”. She’s right up there with the lauded Meryl Streep in talent (and anyone else) and I’m sad to see all those nominations and no wins. I sometimes confuse her with Cherry Jones who is another great but underrated actress. Does she qualify for Frock Flicks?

  3. Add me to those who loved reading “Mists of Avalon” but was unimpressed w the series…

    1. Unimpressed with the series, having watched it before reading the books. It was, however, one of my first costume crushes once I started sewing.

  4. My mom loved Ethan Frome, but I just thought it was depressing. Major props to Joan Allen, though. :)

  5. Joan Allen was THE frock flick actress of my teen years – we actually watched “The Crucible” and “Tucker: A Man and His Dreams” in my high school English and economics classes respectively, and I think I saw “Pleasantville” in the theater three times. I do love her in “The Crucible” in particular.

  6. What? No The Notebook? It’s a cheesy movie but she’s great in it. (And one of the few movies that’s a better movie than it is a book).

    She’s one of many actresses that gets overlooked. She’s a damn fine actress and should get a lot more attention than she has.

  7. Oh, goddess, “Mists of Avalon”–such a compelling book, despite the erratic style. I enjoyed parts of the telly series, including most of the cast, although I kept envisaging Linda Hunt as Vivian. But the priestess’s doeskin (?) tunics were pretty bad, as I recall–fresh out of wardrobe. (Being royalty, of course, the female leads could get away with beachy hair.)

  8. Wait isn’t she the mom in The Notebook?!?!?! That totally needs to make the list.

  9. Not a day doesn’t go by that I don’t think her Joan Allen’s faaaaaaaaaabulous, smartly tailored blue suit in Pleasantville.

  10. I think I’ve only seen her in Pleasantville and Mists of Avalon, but I thought she did a great job in both! I agree that “Mists” didn’t live up to the scale of the novel (it was just….a too watered-down version of the book across the board), but that flaw wasn’t on account of the acting talent involved, which I felt was all really solid for the main female roles (Morgaine, Vivian, Gwenwyfar, Igraine, and Allen’s role Morgause). I loved the costumes too! Occasionally the fabrics are so unlikely for the period that it catches my eye and bothers me a teeeny bit, but like…..King Arthur stories are myth and magic, the story isn’t true-to-period anyways so the costumes don’t need to be either. They helped tell the story wonderfully.

  11. She is so great in everything and so underrated, it’s maddening. I think her favorite of the frock flicks is Pleasantville, she is SO PERFECT in the 1950s!

    Now I need to go back and see all her movies that I missed. I actually love the book Ethan Frome, but I read it when I was nearly 40 which I’m sure makes a difference. I can absolutely see why teenagers would hate it, it’s infuriating because it just makes kids hate classics.

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