Barbra Streisand's adaptation of Pat Conroy's lyrical, passionate novel concerns romance as it emerges from the ashes of a traumatic childhood. Southerner Tom Wingo is going through a midlife crisis: He's got no job, a disintegrating marriage, and a drinking problem. But he gets a jolt of reality when he hears that his sister has attempted suicide. Tom instantly heads to New York to meet Susan Lowenstein, his sister's psychiatrist. As Tom provides Susan with information about his sibling and their dysfunctional family, the two become more intimate and soon begin an affair. As the romance blossoms, the repressed Tom and the guarded Susan find they are able to help each other with their respective problems. In particular, Tom is finally able to discuss a devastating incident from his youth. A tearjerker in the best sense of the term, THE PRINCE OF TIDES-- featuring outstanding performances from the Oscar-nominated Nick Nolte and director Streisand--offers a cathartic release and somewhat bittersweet ending that is a truly satisfying cinematic experience.
A disillusioned southern football coach leaves his crumbling marriage to travel to New York and reveal his tortured childhood in order to help his psychologically troubled twin sister. At the same time, he gives his sister's psychiatrist the courage to cure her own woes.
Actor Jason Gould, who played the role of Bernard Woodruff, is the son of director-actress Barbra Streisand.
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Widescreen
Audio:
Dolby Surround- English, French, Spanish, Portuguese
Additional Release Material:
Interactive Menus
Scene Selection
Source Writer
Pat Conroy: Novelist/Screenwriter
Review 1:
"...Kate Nelligan's fine, forceful performance is award caliber....Nolte also acts with uncommon feeling..."
Source: Rolling Stone
p.55 01/09/1992
Review 2:
"...Effective, well-crafted...entertainment about the therapeutic power of love..."
Source: Sight and Sound
p.52-3 03/01/1992
Review 3:
"...La Streisand's masterpiece of middlebrow kitsch..." --- Rating: B
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.60 01/27/1995