The Cracker Factory (TV Movie 1979) Poster

(1979 TV Movie)

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6/10
Straightforward examination of the harried housewife...
moonspinner552 September 2007
Natalie Wood in an unsung tour-de-force, playing relatively ordinary housewife and mother who has a mental collapse. Adaptation of Joyce Burditt's popular book, this TV-movie attempts to deal with touchy subject matter in a straightforward, mature, non-exploitive manner, and for the most part is quite successful. While in recovery mode, Wood is unblinking and unblushing, whether relaying her character's personal feelings or describing childhood haunts. The narrative is a bit clogged with medical minutiae (I would've preferred to see more of Wood at home with her family), however the results are relatively well-wrought and quite memorable, and Natalie's work is blessedly unaffected and heartfelt.
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6/10
Tv movie as I crave for but...
searchanddestroy-118 October 2022
There are three kinds of TV movies. First, fiction stories which look like the big screen films, but cheaper: thrillers, comedies, westerns; nothing really exciting most of the time. Second, you have TV movies related to real life of people, gloomy, depressing, not the kind of stuff that most audiences will pay for in a theater, when they go to forget their daily problems, especially when they are with their kids whilst eating popcorn, eccept maybe some films from directors such as Paul Mazursky, Daniel Mann or Peter Bodganovitch. And third, you have, in TV industry, biopics, biographies of famous folks: politics, show bizeness, sport. So this one belongs to the second category, destined to home audiences, people sitting in their sofa and seeking in this kind of movies, some things in common with their own problems; with sometimes a bit of peeping tom line too. Guilty pleasure to observe distress, hopeles, despair. Nathalie Wood is of course excellent here and I think she did not play better for the big screen, where most of time, she played in major, famous movies, with only her presence, her beauty and charisma instead a real actress' play. In TV industry, at least, she could be a real actress and show her skills. That's my own opinion, i can be wrong. This movie is good enough for me but certainly not DAY OF WINE AND ROSES or LOST WEEK END. It is too light hearted for such a subject, not a comedy, but only not depressing, as I expected.
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5/10
How can I view?
murphy826 November 2008
I have always been a big fan of Natalie Wood and own several of her movies, those of which can be purchased on DVD/Video. I have been buying her movies on DVD, or video (when DVD's can't be found). And, while seeing a little sketch of "The Cracker Factory" upon watching a TV biography of Natalie's, I became interested, realizing here was a Natalie Wood movie I have never seen but haven't been able to find. Just now I realized it was a 'made for TV movie'. I'm wondering is there any way to get a copy of this movie? I have read some good reviews from fans here, and it is highly recommended, so it makes me want to watch it even more (sorry for rambling, I was trying to get the minimum lines required).
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The book IS better
jfg1-115 November 2003
Of course, the book is usually better. The author has time to develope the characters, while the film makers do not. That having been said, "The Cracker Factory" is a very good movie. I was pleasantly surprised. Natalie Wood did a remarkably good job of bringing Joyce Burditt's "Cassie" to life. The supporting cast was also good, especially Juliet Mills as Tinkerbell, the night nurse. A good book to read, a good movie to watch, either way, you won't feel let down.
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6/10
A not so wooden performance saves this from total depression.
mark.waltz22 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
While the beautiful Natalie Wood wasn't always one of the better actresses on the screen, sometimes she could surprise audiences and critics by disappearing into a part which is fortunately what she does here. By the 1970's, she was mainly appearing in TV movies and a few of them ("The Affair", the remake of 'Cat on a Hot Tin Roof") were disappointing. But her tendency to bray her lines made her overacting all the more obvious. It works here because it fits the character although the lack of a real back story about what leads to her character's depression, alcoholism and occasional suicide attempts is jarring.

What makes this movie a little more interesting is the fact that it doesn't all focus on her. You've got her long suffering husband (Peter Haskell) at his wits end as well as the various patients and doctor Perry King and nurse Juliette Mills whom she establishes close professional relationships with. The patients range from an angry extremely racist white man, his black target who keeps it all in until exploding (and in several scenes amusingly showing how smarter he is) and three unique women: Shelley Long as an admitted nymphomaniac, Marian Mercer as a chronic sleepwalker and Vivian Blaine as an older woman who is more of van observer of everything going on around her.

But with Natalie Wood as the star and the focus of the main story, all eyes are on her, and she is very convincing. It's nice to see her playing a character that you aren't annoyed with out of the fact that she can't seem to get herself together. This could have gone into campy territories with some of the situations but fortunately avoids that. It is also very different than "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" so it is not at all a ripoff. King and Mills show good authority in their roles as very concerned staff members, and Haskell is able to show the various sides of a worried husband, not quite perfect but still loyal. Long makes a splashy showing in an early role for her, coming on halfway through the film and nearly stealing it. A good TV movie, not a great one, and not one I'd feel watching more than once, but a decent story about how important mental health is, and not giving cliched variations of the types of characters you usually see in these type of films.
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9/10
Natalie Wood startingly good as an alcoholic
Dara-311 April 1999
I had read the book by Joyce Burditt -- even wrote her a fan letter, so was prepared NOT to like this television movie. Boy, was I wrong. Natalie Wood plays a wise-cracking suburban mom with a severe alcohol addiction. She loses control in a supermarket and ends up on the seventh floor of a hospital where they put the addicts and mentally ill. She has a crush on her psychiatrist and a wonderfully warm relationship with the night supervisor played by Juliet Mills. She confronts the pain she puts her family through, especially the children. Despite the serious subject matter, she is so charming and witty you can laugh and then cry with her. Highly recommend.
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9/10
Brilliant performance
jarrod766 April 2004
Natalie Wood's performance in 'The Cracker Factory' is quite simply, brilliant. The fact she wasn't nominated for an Emmy for this performance is unforgivable. Her character is a nuanced mix of and belligerence and insecurity - with real depth and humour. When she found a part she could really relate to, there was such honesty in her work.

The film itself rises above the 70's telemovie 'disease of the week' cliche, although it would have made an interesting feature film under the right director.

It's a shame that Natalie died two years after this film, it would have been fascinating to watch her grow and mature as an actress. We have such a great gallery of portraits from her - from child parts (Tomorrow is Forever, Miracle on 34th St) to ingenue roles (Rebel Without a Cause) to the leading lady material of Splendor in the Grass and Love with the Proper Stranger. She didn't do too many films in the 70's or 80's - but The Cracker Factory shows how well she had developed.

Great support by Shelley Long, Juliet Mills etc... (the music score is a little distracting though - esp. during her speech to Perry King)

I have seen the movie several times and am floored by Wood's performance each time. Highly recommended.
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10/10
The Brilliance of Natalie Wood
soccrstr629 July 2010
Having just finished Suzanne Finstad's biography of Natalie Wood, I was eager to see The Cracker Factory because it was one of Natalie's favorite roles and a performance that she was very proud of. I have seen almost all of Natalie's films, and after watching this one, I can definitely say that it is perhaps her best work as an actress. Don't get me wrong, she was excellent in all of her films, but in The Cracker Factory, her acting was sheer brilliance. She was extremely convincing as Cassie, a depressed alcoholic housewife who drifts in and out of mental treatment. The role not only called for tough dramatic acting, which Wood of course tackles excellently, but also calls for an actress that has great comic timing due to Cassie's acerbic wit, which Natalie displays effortlessly and hilariously.

The supporting cast is also in top form. Peter Haskell is great as the distant husband, Perry King is good as Cassie's psychiatrist, Juliet Mills is excellent as a supportive nurse, and a young Shelley Long is superb as the manic depressive Cara. The film itself is very good overall, although the music and certain parts of the script make it obvious that it is a made for TV movie.

In a great production, however, the highest honors must go to Natalie Wood. In her biography, Finstad writes about how Natalie often felt that her acting was inferior to her peers that had studied Method Acting in New York at the Actor's Studio (like James Dean). Watching The Cracker Factory, it is obvious that she had no reason to feel that way, her acting was brilliant, as good and even better than many of the great Method actors. I only wish that Wood would have received the critical recognition for this performance that she so richly deserved.
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10/10
Natalie Wood Shines!
BaileySEA7 November 2008
Burt Brinckerhoff's exceptional made-for-television movie "The Cracker Factory" based upon the Joyce Rebeta-Burditt book of the same name offers a phenomenal performance by the late, great Natalie Wood. Natalie Wood shines as Cassie Barrett, a suburban alcoholic housewife who's in and out of the local hospital mental ward. She gives a rare look into the turbulent life of a wife and mother who suffers from depression, alcoholism and slight mental difficulty. Wood's Cassie Barrett is a spunky, bright individual looking for answers as to why she can't seem to handle her own life, while others do. Wood is warm, witty, intelligent and adds a special glow to this perceptive film.
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9/10
Cleveland housewife who doesn't get human support has an alcohol problem.
paultrefzger-120 February 2005
An underrated TV movie.

Though it's a little dated and the variety of psychiatric stereotypes is a little annoying, but really it's a very good TV movie that I wish were available on video. It's one of Natalie Wood's best performances and she captures the Cassie Barrett character right on. The Cleveland setting gives it a great middle America setting and Marian Mercer, Shelley Long (before "Cheers") and the supporting cast are as up for this as is Natalie.

It's about alcoholism and promotes AA but doesn't go overboard in preaching to us. To the contrary, The "Cassie" character, thanks to the writing and to Natalie Wood, kick the wind out of the "typical" therapy people and methods.
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8/10
sobering
nomorefog30 April 2011
Warning: Spoilers
This is the movie that proves Natalie Wood can act. Being beautiful, it was axiomatic once in Hollywood that beautiful women couldn't act. Or maybe it was against the entrenched male status quo way of looking at things that they weren't allowed to act.

Anyway, 'The Cracker Factory' is about a troubled housewife, and in the part I think that Natalie Wood as Cassie Barrett, gives it all she's got. The character has mental problems and is also struggling to curb her alcoholism in the hope that she will not become a permanent mental patient and lose her husband and family. Shelly Long has a supporting part as an inmate of Wood's in the 'cracker factory' of the title. This is a true obscurity and is not listed in any film guide or credit listing of Natalie Wood's that I can get my hands on. It was made for television but looks good and has a believable script, contributions to a project that seems to have had a lot of thought put into it, unlike a lot of other movies specially made for television.

Wood gives a bravura performance reminiscent of her part in 'Splendour in the Grass', but while she was young in that film, here she is a middle aged woman struggling to maintain her sanity with an unsympathetic mother and demands at home from spouse and children that she is simply emotionally incapable of fulfilling. As a result she ends up in the 'cracker factory', and not for the first time. This situation I think is far more interesting than 'Splendour in the Grass', as the story is seen within the context of adults attempting to adjust to life's demands as they already exist, as opposed to how they are going to do so in the future. 'Splendour in the Grass' was a portrayal of life in a small town, and the social pressures on young people to avoid sex in order that they not bear the responsibility of having children too young. The roles Natalie Wood plays in both films are similar, the difference being that they are a generation apart from one another. Cassie Barrett appears to be Wilma, that is if she had ever been allowed by her mother to grow up and move away from that small Kansas town.

There is no explanation as to why Cassie gets to be in such a predicament of drinking too much, and living as if she has no responsibilities in life. Whilst in the hospital, Wood's character has a confrontation with a Catholic priest where she attempts to explain her bewilderment and despair, but it becomes obvious that the priest has no idea what she is talking about. Cassie appears to be a lapsed Catholic, but as a final straw attempts to find some answers from the church. For a Catholic priest, a woman's place is in the home with a husband and children and the priest rebuffs her as a shameful alcoholic. Character actor John Harkins gives a great performance as the staid and unfeeling man of the cloth, but the sequence in question, as well as the rest of the film belongs to Natalie. The denouement is ambiguous with Wood returning to her family for Thanksgiving with the audience not knowing how long the truce she has anxiously cobbled together with her husband is going to last.

This is a thoughtful and illuminating film which examines the effects of alcoholism and mental illness on individuals and society in a non-judgmental manner. It is very frank, and definitely for adults only. It is also a very good film that deserves to be seen by Wood fans as well as others who appreciate insightful entertainment, and comes with a high recommendation.
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9/10
Vastly Underrated--One of Natashia's Best Performances
paulb4731 January 2018
Yup it's made for TV not a major Hollywood studio production supported by all it's "Star Making Machinery", (which was in place in Wood's early days). NONETHELESS There is much to be admired and appreciated in this tour de force perfornance. Made NO LESS Relevant with the passing years NOR with the passing of Ms Wood herself where Booze was by all believable accounts a huge factor. It was by all reputable accounts a night of drunken brawling. JR has some 'splaining to do' Still! Overall though the message here is "Don't hide behind the "disease model" of addiction. Take accountability.
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10/10
Exceptional!
RodrigAndrisan16 June 2021
I really like movies with people with mental problems, it's one of my favorite subjects, one of my favorite movies has always been "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" (actor Sydney Lassick has a similar role in both movies). I didn't thought this "The Cracker Factory" would be so good. There are many powerful, extraordinary scenes, Natalie Wood and Shelley Long they outdid themselves. Delia Salvi is great in a supporting role, the scene in the cemetery when she starts hitting the tombstone of her dead husband is very impressive. Absolutely worth seeing and not only once, it's an original drama intertwined with comic moments. From what I read about Natalie Wood, her character in this movie, Cassie Barrett, is very close to her in real life.
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