*Please note: This scene has been shortened to respect copyright. It was tough to cut, because Bill Conti's music builds powerfully as the camera tracks Clayburgh's Erica, in a mild state of shock. The full scene-- which clip can't, as of this posting, show up in search results-- can be found here.:
[ Ссылка ]
A continuation of the present scene is here:
[ Ссылка ]
The scene:
Erica is a relatively sheltered upper-middle class New York woman who thought she and her husband were, for the most part, happily married. One day after lunch, he drops a bomb: he's in love with another woman. Written and directed by Paul Mazursky, An Unmarried Woman (1978) is the story of how Erica, having being married for 15 years, adapts after her husband, leaves her for a younger woman. New York City envelops this story, much as it did in other movies shot in 1977 -- Annie Hall, The Goodbye Girl, Saturday Night Fever, Looking for Mr. Goodbar, The Turning Point.
Cinematography by Arthur J. Ornitz, music by Bill Conti, costume design by Albert Wolsky, editing by Stuart H. Pappe, production design by Paul Guzman, set decoration by Edward Stewart.
For copyright reasons, I kept the clip under 3 minutes, which means Erika's full reaction missing from this scene-- she walks a little further, then starts to vomit. Find the full movie, and watch it-- despite the subject matter, it's buoyant.
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