Wanda
| Genre: | Drama |
| Mood: | Intense |
| Decade: | 1970's |
| Country: | United States |
| Director: | Barbara Loden |
| Actor: | Michael Higgins |
| Actress: | Barbara Loden |
| Release Year: | 1970 |
| Studio: | Parlour Pictures |
| Runtime: | 120 Mins. |
| Format: | Color |
| Rating: | Unrated |
What It's About:
Adrift and penniless in a bleak industrial mining town after agreeing to give up custody of her children, Wanda (Loden) is a desperate, lonely young woman with precious little self-esteem. One night, she wanders into a bar just as a middle-aged thief named Dennis (Higgins) is cleaning out the register. Seemingly indifferent to the danger, she embarks on a fateful road journey with the callous crook.
Why I Love It:
Best known for her role in "Splendor in the Grass," directed by husband Elia Kazan, Loden was a ravishing beauty who transformed herself into a wayward housewife-in-curlers for this absorbing, ultra-realistic character study. Part of a short-lived trend of hard-hitting women's films in the early '70s, "Wanda" remains compelling for Loden's uncomfortably downcast performance, the gritty 16mm look of its rundown locales, and Higgins's marvelously inscrutable turn as a fledgling bank robber. Sadly, this was Loden's only directorial effort. Despite its low-budget aesthetic, "Wanda" shows a depth of emotion and low-key anger few films can match.







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