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The Mirror Has Two Faces
Overlook Pick

The Mirror Has Two Faces

A story about just how wrong two people can be before they can be right.
67
User Score388 ratings
TMDB 6.716+19962h 6mEnglish
ComedyDramaRomance

Synopsis

Rose Morgan, who still lives with her mother, is a professor of Romantic Literature who desperately longs for passion in her life. Gregory Larkin, a mathematics professor, has been burned by passionate relationships and longs for a sexless union based on friendship and respect.

Director
Barbra StreisandFrom TMDB credits
Studio
TriStar Pictures4 production companies
Release
November 15, 1996Released
Box Office
$41MBudget $42M

Top Cast

8 of 44
Barbra Streisand
Barbra Streisand
Rose Morgan
Jeff Bridges
Jeff Bridges
Gregory Larkin
Pierce Brosnan
Pierce Brosnan
Alex
Lauren Bacall
Lauren Bacall
Hannah Morgan
Mimi Rogers
Mimi Rogers
Claire
George Segal
George Segal
Henry Fine
Brenda Vaccaro
Brenda Vaccaro
Doris
Austin Pendleton
Austin Pendleton
Barry

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Dec 25, 2023

It takes it's time to get going this, but once we've met the characters and it gets into it's swing, its quite an amiable showcase for the star. "Gregory" (Jeff Bridges) is a rather dry university professor who's looking for a distinctly platonic form of female companionship. He places an add and amongst the responses is one from "Rose" (Barbra Streisand). Thing is, she didn't volunteer for this - her recently married sister "Claire" (Mimi Rogers) nominated her... Anyway, the two meet and rather surprisingly they click. A few rather rushed escapades later and it's clear that the two are falling in love - despite the obvious scepticism of her mother "Hannah" (Lauren Bacall) - and that "Rose" is now ready to takes things to a next level that "Gregory" is scared silly of... Meantime, her sister and husband "Alex" (Pierce Brosnan), upon whom "Rose" has always had a bit of a crush, are having difficulties and with "Gregory" playing his hand particularly badly, well - might "Rose" stray? The last forty minutes or so are well paced with some pithy dialogue and as "Rose" finds her true personality the characterisations begin to come alive a little better. There are a couple of fun scenes with the all too sparingly used Bacall and Streisand sabre-rattling and the rest of it, well I reckon there are some clear parallels with "What's Up Doc?" (1972) as the story heads to an increasingly predicable denouement. It's quite watchable, but you'll probably never remember it or the duet with Bryan Adams at the end.

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