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Tagline: In the age of free love, everything has a price | Tagline: In the age of free love, everything has a price | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Synopsis== | ||
+ | An American Divorce (1978) | ||
+ | |||
+ | A [[GTA V: Richards Majestic|Richards Majestic]] Production | ||
+ | |||
+ | "In the age of free love, everything has a price." | ||
+ | |||
+ | A tear-jerky. pseudo-feminist melodrama about “ordinary people’ (i.e. bored rich socialites in Liberty City) | ||
+ | having cowardly affairs, doing coke in disco boots, getting divorced and fighting for custody of their | ||
+ | over-privileged, one-dimensional children in the 1970s. 'An American Divorce" won lots of awards because | ||
+ | it captured the Zeitgeist of a decade that completely threw in the towel on moral responsibility and musical | ||
+ | taste. After an hour and a half of watching upper-middleclass white people with enormous afros weep in | ||
+ | Algonquin cafes and spurting mawkish dialogue like “But my kids are my life!" and “It’s time I did something | ||
+ | for myself!”, the inevitable happy ending can't come fast enough. We won’t ruin it for you, but everyone dies, | ||
+ | thank God. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Also featured on the [[GTA V: classicvinewood com in-game Website|classicvinewood.com ingame Website]]: | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Anamericandivorcemoviegtav.jpg|600px]] | ||
+ | |||
[[Category:Grand Theft Auto V]] | [[Category:Grand Theft Auto V]] |
Latest revision as of 02:33, 12 October 2013
"An American Divorce" is a movie produced by Richards Majestic Studios
Tagline: In the age of free love, everything has a price
Synopsis[edit]
An American Divorce (1978)
A Richards Majestic Production
"In the age of free love, everything has a price."
A tear-jerky. pseudo-feminist melodrama about “ordinary people’ (i.e. bored rich socialites in Liberty City) having cowardly affairs, doing coke in disco boots, getting divorced and fighting for custody of their over-privileged, one-dimensional children in the 1970s. 'An American Divorce" won lots of awards because it captured the Zeitgeist of a decade that completely threw in the towel on moral responsibility and musical taste. After an hour and a half of watching upper-middleclass white people with enormous afros weep in Algonquin cafes and spurting mawkish dialogue like “But my kids are my life!" and “It’s time I did something for myself!”, the inevitable happy ending can't come fast enough. We won’t ruin it for you, but everyone dies, thank God.
Also featured on the classicvinewood.com ingame Website: