Manhattan thumbnail
Manhattan
Synopsis
On the heels of Annie Hall, the Oscar-winning romantic comedy that rocketed Woody Allen to the front ranks of American filmmakers, Manhattan continued Allen's romantic obsessions in a slightly darker, more pessimistic vein. Allen stars as Isaac Davis, a TV comedy writer sick of the pap he is forced to churn out and harboring dreams of being the great American novelist. His love life is in barbed-wire territory: he is tormented by his second ex-wife Jill (Meryl Streep), a lesbian who has written a tell-all book about their marriage, and he is dating teenager Tracy (Mariel Hemingway), to whom he refuses to commit, and keeps hinting that a breakup may be imminent. Isaac's disillusioned (and married) best friend Yale (Michael Murphy) has begun an affair with the cerebral writer Mary Wilke (Diane Keaton). While Isaac makes a last minute, sink-or-swim decision to quit his job and devote all of his time to book writing, and neurotically moans about what the lack of a full time job will do to him (My parents won't have as good of a seat in the synagogue, he moans. They'll be far away from God... away from the action) Yale is crippled by his lack of resolve, as indicated by his inability to leave his wife Emily (Anne Byrne). Meanwhile, Isaac and Mary) begin to fall for one another. Tracy then tells Isaac the basic truth that none of his hung-up friends and past lovers fully realizes: You have to have a little more faith in people. Manhattan is both a seriocomic dissection of perpetually dissatisfied New Yorkers and an ode to the city itself, filmed in glorious black-and-white by ace cinematographer Gordon Willis, and set to a score of rhapsodic George Gershwin music.~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Full Credits
  • Director:
    Woody Allen,
  • Writer:
    Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman,
  • Producer:
    Charles H. Joffe,
  • Cinematographer:
    Gordon Willis,
  • Editor:
    Susan E. Morse,
  • Executive Producer:
    Robert Greenhut, Jack Rollins,
  • Cast:
    Michael Murphy, Mariel Hemingway, Woody Allen, Meryl Streep, Diane Keaton,
  • Assistant Editor:
    Michael R. Miller,
  • Second Assistant Director:
    Joan Van Horn,
  • Camera Operator:
    Fred Schuler,
  • Script Supervisor:
    Kay Chapin,
  • Boom Operator:
    Vito L. Ilardi,
  • Property Master:
    Leslie Bloom,
  • Set Dresser:
    Justin Scoppa Jr., Morris Weinman,
  • Sound Editor:
    Dan Sable,
  • Key Grip:
    Robert Ward,
  • Assistant Sound Editor:
    Lowell Mate,
  • Casting Associate:
    Jeremy Ritzer, Howard Feuer,
  • Production Assistant:
    Charles Zalben, Cheryl Hill,
  • Wardrobe Supervisor:
    C.J. Donnelly,
  • Still Photographer:
    Brian Hamill,
  • Sound Mixer:
    James Sabat,
  • Production Design:
    Mel Bourne,
  • Costume Design:
    Albert Wolsky,
  • Assistant Director:
    Frederic B. Blankfein,
  • Casting:
    Juliet Taylor,
  • Carpenter:
    Joseph Badalucco Jr.,
  • Transportation Captain:
    James Fanning,
  • Screenplay:
    Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman,
  • Costumer:
    Clifford Capone,
  • Unit Manager:
    Michael Peyser,
  • Scenic Artist:
    James Sorice, Cosmo Sorice,
  • Assistant Camera:
    Jim Hovey,
  • Music Arranger:
    Tom Pierson,
  • Sound Re-Recording Mixer:
    Jack Higgins,
  • Production Manager:
    Martin Danzig,
  • Hairstylist:
    Romaine Greene,
  • Production Office Coordinator:
    Jennifer Ogden,
  • Gaffer:
    Dusty Wallace,
  • Extras Casting:
    Aaron Beckwith,
  • Unit Publicist:
    Scott MacDonough,
  • Conductor:
    Zubin Mehta,
  • Set Decoration:
    Robert Drumheller,
  • Makeup Artist:
    Fern Buchner,

Technical specifications

Manhattan logo