When a Man Loves a Woman

1994

Action / Drama / Romance

12
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 69% · 99 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 77% · 25K ratings
IMDb Rating 6.5/10 10 23614 23.6K

Plot summary

An airline pilot and his wife are forced to face the consequences of her alcoholism when her addictions threaten her life and their daughter's safety. While the woman enters detox, her husband must face the truth of his enabling behavior.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
October 23, 2020 at 10:41 AM

Director

Top cast

Meg Ryan as Alice Green
Andy Garcia as Michael Green
Ellen Burstyn as Emily
Tina Majorino as Jess Green
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
1.13 GB
1280*694
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
2 hr 5 min
Seeds 5
2.31 GB
1920*1040
English 5.1
R
23.976 fps
2 hr 5 min
Seeds 10

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by sharky_55 7 / 10

I am not your problem to solve.

When a Man Loves a Woman works as almost a rom-com in reverse, in which husband and wife begin madly in love but slowly realise they are wrong for each other. It is easy to bring two strangers together; it is harder to admit that they must part. The opening is posed like any conventional romance. They seem to 'meet-cute' in a bar, with eyes only for each other. There isn't only a spark but a blazing inferno, as she straddles him right there and then while some poor schmuck sips his drink quietly. When it's revealed they are married, that is merely another sign of the strength of their blissful relationship, so in love that they still play games with each other. But she is an alcoholic.

If you saw Addicted to Love you would have thought Meg Ryan could never make the transition into the darkier, edgier roles, but here she isn't playing a caricature, but a real mother and human being who hides her darkness, stashes it away in bottles. Her character is a twist on the usual Meg Ryan figure, blonde and full of laughter, at least until she has a drink. The performance feels lived in because of how easily and quietly she is able to deflect and shift blame when hard questions are directed at her. During their holiday in Mexico, paradise in the pool, she grips her husband tightly, spins him around, and attempts to will the problem away. Blink and you'll miss how effortlessly Alice turns Michael's accusations back onto him, by confessing that during long flights away from home she replaces him with a bottle. Or two, or three.

But the movie breaks new ground when Alice returns from rehab sober, and suddenly the relationship is no longer defined by her alcoholic status and the role of Michael as the one picking her back up. A more conventional plot would have placed this objective at the end of the film, have it be their salvation and pave the way for a happier future. But Mandoki knows that sometimes one addiction can hide harder truths, and positions its exit to reveal ugly secrets about the imbalance of their marriage. There is a scene right after Michael returns from his first AA meeting that establishes both their perspectives perfectly, and how their opinions on drinkers could not be anymore different. Watch how their dialogue starts with little jabs at each other and then spirals into words designed to wound; watch how Andy Garci explodes and splatters a portrait of a man whose pride and ego has been bruised at the thought of not being enough for his wife. And Alice in turn weeps because she can't make him see that her sins might not be so easy to make amends for.

All this and more is spelt out to the audience in the conclusion, where the film goes all Notting Hill on us and narrates in two powerful monologues that nevertheless feel as if each character is tripping over to get their apologies in. Having bared their souls, they hastily patch things up and are entwined once again in a kiss over the credits. The whole thing stinks of executive meddling, as if the head honchos realised that both leads had discovered something deep and uncomfortable about their lives, and were scared of not having this resolved by the final shot. If the film is brave for allowing its romantic pair to admit their faults, it could have been even braver by allowing them to find their own way back.

Reviewed by inkblot11 8 / 10

When a man loves a woman, he can become an "enabler" to an alcoholic, as this wonderfully poignant film shows

Michael Green (Andy Garcia) and his wife, Alice (Meg Ryan) are living the good life in San Francisco. They are both professionals, they live in a lovely home, and they have two beautiful daughters (Tina Majorino and Mae Whitman). But, they also have a secret. Alice is a "closet" alcoholic, who is on the verge of showing it to the world and Michael is doing his best to cover for her to everyone. Things are complicated, for Alice seems happier when she is in the "party mood" and Michael loves her so much that he actually appears to relish his role as the one Alice calls on to put herself back together. Yet, even a vacation to Mexico does not help Alice find the self-happiness she needs to lose the bottle. Also, Alice injures herself at home, scaring the girls beyond measure and they are suffering from neglect, too. Therefore, Alice has to enter a "Betty Ford" type clinic. But, will Michael and Alice both like and love each other when Alice is sober? This is a great movie for its honest portrayal of the effects an alcoholic has on the family he or she loves and on the long climb out of the world of alcoholism. Alice and Michael are not really living the American dream but the American nightmare, because of Alice's need for one drink after another. Both Ryan and Garcia are truly wonderful in roles that call upon them to be both lovable and repugnant, at the same time. The other cast members, including Ellen Burstyn and the two lovely little girl-actresses, are also just perfect. Naturally, the settings in San Fran and Mexico are great, especially the Green's beautiful old house. Costumes, too, are very well-chosen and all other other productions values of direction, photography and story are most worthy, too. Then, too, the film also has great value as a movie to show the realities of alcoholism to any audience that could benefit from such a view. In summary, if you are a man or woman who loves movies that tell a tale well, with gorgeous stars, even if it might result in a few shed tears, this is a great choice. You might even pop it in when you need a "good cry", for it has wonderful cathartic elements.

Reviewed by faithpersecuted33 8 / 10

Terrific film.

Great film about addiction! Not just romance, but how to help someone in need. Everyone needs to see this film again and again.

The acting was amazing and the locations.

You finish this movie wondering, and hopeful. The human spirit has such capacity for love and compassion, and our modern society such drive to deny and eliminate it. Wonderfully crafted performances by Meg and Andy. Good writing and direction. There are moments that echo right into our own lives, and humour that makes you smile with your soul. I wish all Hollywood films could be like this.

What I also loved was the lack of profanity.

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