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Up the Sandbox

1972

Action / Comedy / Drama

5
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Fresh60%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled48%
IMDb Rating5.8101472

young motherknocked unconscious

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Paul Benedict Photo
Paul Benedict as Dr. Beineke
Stockard Channing Photo
Stockard Channing as Judy Stanley
Barbra Streisand Photo
Barbra Streisand as Margaret Reynolds
Lois Smith Photo
Lois Smith as Elinore
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
901.34 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 38 min
P/S ...
1.63 GB
1904*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 38 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by moonspinner557 / 10

"If this is what it's like to be a mother, I turn in my ovaries!"

Low-keyed, but nevertheless wicked and funny comedy-drama that sneaks up on you. Barbra Streisand, in terrific comic form, plays a stressed-out, unsatisfied New York housewife afraid of telling her brilliant husband she's pregnant for the third time. The film is made up of her many daydreams, some of which are hilarious (the bit where she enlarges her breasts at a party) and some that meander without much point (the assault on the Statue of Liberty). Nevertheless, Barbra's lovely and is completely at ease in this non-flashy role, just as content to sit and listen to her girlfriends bitch in the park as she is telling off Fidel Castro at a political rally. David Selby is nicely understated as Barbra's husband and Jane Hoffman is a hoot as her meddling mother. I have many favorite lines from this film, but you rent "Up The Sandbox" and discover them for yourself. A minor treat. *** from ****

Reviewed by mark.waltz4 / 10

One weird LSD trip after another.

As a devoted wife and mother, Barbra Streisand brings fun into her Manhattan household. Playing with her children as she bathes them, teasing husband David Selby with water from a plant as they prepare for bed, or taking her kiddies grocery shopping in their rough neighborhood, she seems to enjoy her life. Her nagging shrew of a mother (the very funny Jane Hoffman) keeps urging her to move out to New Jersey so she can get away from the undesirables in the community. Streisand meets the same moms at her Riverside Park playground on a daily basis for typically boring conversations that would drive any woman bonkers after a while. Before you know it, she is having strange fantasies about her husbands's female colleague, an old college professor of her own, an encounter with a transsexual Fidel Castro & smashing her mother's head into an anniversary cake. She also somehow ends up a terrorist, tipping the Statue of Liberty over with the yet uncompleted original World Trade Centers right in the background, visible with the floors of one of the buildings not yet completed.

An ill-advised drama about one woman's crisis in finding her place in the new world of a new woman, this really delivers no message other than the fact that men and women have to compromise in order to make it work. There are some hysterically funny comments about the red tape of living in New York, where even going to the doctors can be a challenge because of all the red tape. For some reason, the pregnant Streisand decides not to tell her husband that she is expecting their third child and as a result, goes through all of these hallucinations of people she encounters and how she truly does not want to end up like her mother. For me, the highlight of the film was the fantasy sequence at a family anniversary party where mother and daughter get into a cat fight and her reaction to the little girl snapping pictures in everybody's face. It was like watching Elizabeth Taylor with the little girl in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" who truly does get ice cream on her face.

If this is supposed to be a "women's lib" film, the only liberation seems to be the fact that the character has an exciting fantasy life. Some people may truly be disturbed by the whole Statue of Liberty sequence with the Trade Centers in the background, but this being almost 40 years before 9/11, you can't tie the film together with that horrific terrorist attack. The supporting cast consists of some of New York's finest character actors, including Conrad Bain (playing basically the same doctor character he portrayed on "Maude"),musical theatre legend George S. Irving, and two actors from "The Jeffersons"-Isabel Sanford and Paul Benedict, who for some reason ends up in a fantasy sequence with Streisand in Africa. Trying to explain this in writing is difficult, so watching it may be better. You may be perplexed, but you won't be bored.

Reviewed by jboothmillard3 / 10

Up the Sandbox

I was give the film on DVD as a free gift with another purchase, I had never heard of this film, and to be honest it is not one I would choose to watch, but I thought I'd give it a go anyway before getting rid of it, from director Irvin Kershner (Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back, Never Say Never Again, RoboCop 2). Basically young wife and mother Margaret Reynolds (Barbra Streisand) is seriously bored of her day to day life in New York and feeling rejected by her husband Paul (David Selby),who for the majority is out working. To get her through her boredom she has constant and increasingly outrageous and bizarre fantasies and daydreams of various unrelated incidents, including her mother Elizabeth (Ariane Heller) breaking into the apartment, and visiting a tribal ceremony based on fertility and having a musical party where strange transformations occur. There also Margaret having a relationship with Cuban communist politician Fidel Castro (Jacobo Morales),and perhaps the most surreal daydream is her joining a gang of terrorists who are setting up explosives and blowing up the Statue of Liberty. There are a few scenes where Paul tries to make it up Margaret and their children, but he cannot escape his business ethic, and it is obvious Margaret longs to escape and experience a new and perhaps better life than they have now, but in the end there is some kind of resolution. Also starring Jane Hoffman as Mrs. Koerner, John C. Becher as Mr. Koerner, Terry Smith as Peter, Gary Smith as Peter and Paul Benedict as Dr. Beineke. Streisand I suppose gives a good likable performance if a little kooky like we are used to with her past films, the story of a bored mother is fine, but I the mixing of the normal domestic home life with the surreal dream sequences I found just too weird and confusing, it was hard to differentiate between the two, and I didn't find myself laughing all that much either, maybe just titters, so it is definitely not a comedy film I would watch again. Adequate!

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