Plot
The loons are back again on Golden Pond and so are Norman Thayer, a retired professor, and Ethel who have had a summer cottage there since early in their marriage...
Release Year: 1981
Rating: 7.5/10 (13,452 voted)
Director:
Mark Rydell
Stars: Katharine Hepburn, Henry Fonda, Jane Fonda
Storyline The loons are back again on Golden Pond and so are Norman Thayer, a retired professor, and Ethel who have had a summer cottage there since early in their marriage. This summer their daughter Chelsea -- whom they haven't seen for years -- feels she must be there for Norman's birthday. She and her fiance are on their way to Europe the next day but will be back in a couple of weeks to pick up the fiance's son. When she returns Chelsea is married and her stepson has the relationship with her father that she always wanted. Will father and daughter be able to communicate at last?
Writers: Ernest Thompson, Ernest Thompson
Cast: Katharine Hepburn
-
Ethel Thayer
Henry Fonda
-
Norman Thayer Jr.
Jane Fonda
-
Chelsea Thayer Wayne
Doug McKeon
-
Billy Ray
Dabney Coleman
-
Bill Ray
William Lanteau
-
Charlie Martin
Christopher Rydell
-
Sumner Todd
(as Chris Rydell)
Taglines:
when life is at its finest...when love is at its fullest...
Release Date: 22 January 1982
Filming Locations: Concord, New Hampshire, USA
Opening Weekend: $89,213
(USA)
(6 December 1981)
(2 Screens)
Gross: $119,285,432
(USA)
(31 December 1982)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia: Frances Sternhagen was nominated for the 1979 Tony Award (New York City) for Actress in a Play for "On Golden Pond".
Goofs:
Continuity:
There are windows on the landing of the stairway up to the second floor. When Chelsea and her new boyfriend the dentist and the dentist's son arrive it's dark outside. But sunshine is coming through the windows on the landing. Whereas all other windows are showing dark. And the time is verified that it is dark outside when Chelsea comes into the house and greets her father.
Quotes: Norman:
"Ethel Thayer." It sounds like I'm lisping, doesn't it?
User Review
Veteran actors prove they can still hack it on Golden Pond.
Rating: 10/10
Mark Rydell's On Golden Pond was a surprise hit in 1981, finishing third in
box office grosses after Rocky III and E.T. Such an occurrence was unheard
of in Hollywood, considering the key players in the film, Henry Fonda and
Katharine Hepburn, each had not had a hit film in almost twenty years and
were both hardly spring chickens in the business. Both these veteran actors
proved they could still make it in Hollywood among young starlets, and
triumph. Still, when you see "On Golden Pond," you sense that their teaming
together for the first time in their careers is purely a special occasion,
an opportunity of a lifetime that few actors in their seventies receive.
They in turn have left us with a wonderful showcase of movie talent, a film
of warmth, good humor, and love.
It always amazes me when I read that Henry Fonda had only received two
Oscar nominations during his career, one of which he earned for this film.
Like his good friend Jimmy Stewart, Fonda was rarely a boisterous actor. He
had a natural ease to his acting, a gift for making audiences believe that
every word he uttered was truth. Now, in his final screen performance as
Norman Thayer Jr., Fonda had to reach deep into his own personal experience
and his advancing years to create a character who struggles with his own
mortality. Norman is a grouchy curmudgeon who has memory lapses and heart
palpitations. He has a loving and cheerful wife, Ethel (Hepburn), but a
difficult relationship with his only daughter, Chelsea (Jane Fonda). He and
Ethel journey back to their cottage on the lake for what may be their last
summer. Immediately, Norman comes face to face with his old age and his
inability to remember what should be familiar sights. I especially like the
scene where he gets lost in the woods looking for strawberries and scares
himself when he is unable to find his way back. Ethel has such faith in him,
sure he will "get back on that horse" and be as valiant as he once was. What
more could you want from a wife?
Chelsea arrives after many years away from her parents, bringing with her a
new boyfriend (Dabney Coleman) and his son, Billy (Doug McKeon). You can
sense the tension between Chelsea and Norman the minute she walks in the
door. This reunion is fascinating not only because we can never tell where
the difficulty lies in their relationship, but also the fact that these
problems also exist on and off the screen. The father-daughter relationship
between Henry and Jane was also very turbulent ever since Jane began her
protests in Vietnam, much to the chagrin of her father. This collaboration
of the two was meant to mend fences between them. Not often do the personal
lives of actors collide so eloquently in Hollywood, but here it seems just
about right.
The sequence where Norman and Bill (Coleman) attempt to build a
conversation is originally conceived and acted so naturally. He carefully
asks Norman if it would be alright if Chelsea and he sleep together in the
same room at the cottage. Of course, Norman makes this confrontation as
difficult as possible, making Bill nervous and jerking him around.
Ironically, Bill comes back at him, not allowing Norman to use him in petty
mindgames and hoping they would become friends, which is obviously "not an
easy task." This is an unsettling turn for Norman and the audience, but it
is necessary for the story to progress and for Norman to respond accordingly
to the other characters in the story.
Ethel and Norman volunteer to let Billy stay with them for the summer while
Chelsea and Bill head off to Europe. Billy is not pleased with the
arrangement at the outset, but gradually bonds with Norman through learning
to fish on the pond. While Billy is not necessarily an original character,
it is fascinating to see him try to understand Norman, and in turn how
Norman learns to associate with the son he never had. It is a learning
experience for both of them, even though they are many generations
apart.
Many reviewers have remarked that ON GOLDEN POND uses a conventional story
and revives it with great performances from the cast. It is interesting to
note that the screenwriter, Ernest Thompson, altered his own play in order
to escape a bit of the conventionality that the film medium required. The
framework may seem as original as an old shoe, but the added touches in the
script and its delivery give this film a certain magic that only classical
Hollywood films possessed. Fonda has a great way to end a career with this
role, placing himself completely within Norman's world and searching within
and through the role for his own solutions to life's problems. His Oscar was
given to him for more reasons than mere charity. Hepburn is delightful as
Ethel, working so well with Fonda that it does not seem as if they are
acting. For a couple of old Hollywood actors who never even met before this,
they each prove they are true masters of their craft. Jane Fonda takes a
supporting role this time, incorporating some of the same motives as her
father into her part, and as a result delivers a special performance. Mark
Rydell is one of those directors that often gets left off the list of the
all-time greats, but proves once again here he is a masterful storyteller.
In this project, he allows both the visual elements of the pond and his
actors to make magic, a truly memorable combination.
On Golden Pond is not an epic, but what it accomplishes runs close to epic
proportions. It is very rare that a stageplay converts so well to the screen
like this one. On Golden Pond is vibrant, emotional, and so heartfelt, it is
impossible not to like, unless you are a curmudgeon like Norman Thayer. It
is also unique that great actors such as these will agree to try again for
Hollywood glory so late in their careers. It is up to us viewers to
experience this wonder before the chance is lost and these thespians finally
close up the cottage and head off to their retirement.
0