The Woman in Red

    The Woman in Red
    1984

    Synopsis

    When a happily married family man, who would never consider an affair, meets a beautiful woman in red, he is totally infatuated and desperate to make her acquaintance. However, as he tries out various schemes to sneak out to meet her, he realizes that adultery is not quite as easy as it looks.

    Your Movie Library

    Cast

    • Gene WilderTheodore Pierce
    • Charles GrodinBuddy
    • Joseph BolognaJoey
    • Judith IveyDidi
    • Michael HuddlestonMikey
    • Kelly LeBrockCharlotte
    • Gilda RadnerMs. Milner
    • Kyle T. HeffnerRichard
    • Michael ZorekShelly
    • Billy BeckBartender

    Recommendations

    • 90

      Time

      One of this summer's more pungent pleasures: a well-made sex farce of classical proportions. If there is a horse to fall off or an airplane forced to land at the wrong airport, you may be sure Teddy will be aboard.
    • 70

      The New York Times

      Fortunately, most of the film is more appealing than its premise.
    • 70

      Variety

      A wonderful diversion through all of this is Gilda Radner, a relatively plain fellow office worker who initially thinks she’s the object of Wilder’s wanderlust and is bitterly – and vigorously – disappointed when she finds out she isn’t.
    • 63

      Miami Herald

      And so it goes, cleverly, amiably -- infidelity made fun. Wilder seems to have a firm hand on the controls, and the movie works best when he indulges his talent for physical comedy, which is considerable. It works less effectively when we have time to think about what is going on, and how many times we have seen it before, but the pace is quick enough that these times are few. [17 Aug 1984, p.10]
    • 58

      Christian Science Monitor

      There are moments of real humor and real emotion in this otherwise frivolous sex comedy about a married man smitten with a glamorous model.
    • 50

      Chicago Reader

      The film is fairly tolerable as these things go: Wilder takes time off from the steamrolling plot for improvised bits with some actor buddies (including Charles Grodin and Joseph Bologna), and the project as a whole is a lot less mawkish than we've come to expect from Wilder's directorial efforts. Still, it ain't exactly state of the art.
    • 50

      Washington Post

      A picture as secondhand and conventional as The Woman in Red can't generate much enthusiasm, but it displays more buoyancy and incidental comic appeal than one anticipates. Wilder's judgment hasn't proved especially sound, so perhaps it's commercially prudent to pin him down to an apparently reliable pretext or scenario. Still, the results would probably have been more satisfying if his nervous keepers had permitted this sometimes misguided but endearing mutt of a funnyman a slightly longer leash in a slightly roomier kennel. [16 Aug 1984, p.B2]
    • 50

      The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

      Much less painful than a walk in the summer heat, but not quite as pleasant as a swim in a cool pool. [15 Aug 1984]

    Seen by

    • Antihero
    • effy
    • Trollhorn