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Dolores Claiborne (film)

Dolores Claiborne is a 1995 American psychological thriller drama film directed by Taylor Hackford and starring Kathy Bates, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Christopher Plummer, and David Strathairn. The screenplay by Tony Gilroy is based on the 1992 novel of the same name by Stephen King. The plot focuses on the strained relationship between a mother and her daughter, largely told through flashbacks, after her daughter arrives to her remote hometown on a Maine island where her mother has been accused of murdering the elderly woman for whom she had long been a care-provider and companion.[4]

Dolores Claiborne
Theatrical release poster
Directed byTaylor Hackford
Screenplay byTony Gilroy
Based onDolores Claiborne
by Stephen King
Produced byCharles Mulvehill
Taylor Hackford
Starring
CinematographyGabriel Beristain
Edited byMark Warner
Music byDanny Elfman
Production
company
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • March 24, 1995 (1995-03-24) (United States)
Running time
132 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$13 million[2]
Box office$46.4 million (estimate) [3]

Dolores Claiborne was the second major King film adaptation to star Bates in a leading role after Misery (1990) five years earlier. The film was shot in Nova Scotia in 1994. It was a sleeper hit, grossing close to $50 million worldwide on a $13 million budget and little promotion. The film was well-received by critics, with the performances of Bates and Leigh being especially praised. Kathy Bates stated in a retrospective interview that her performance as the titular Dolores was her favorite performance she had ever given.[5] In 2013, Time named the film among the top 10 greatest Stephen King film adaptations.[6]

Plot

In 1995, Dolores Claiborne works as a domestic servant on Little Tall Island in Maine. Dolores has a struggle with her elderly, partially paralyzed employer, Vera Donovan, in her mansion. Vera falls down the staircase and Dolores ransacks the kitchen. She is caught by a mailman, who sees her standing over Vera with a rolling pin, apparently intending to kill her. Vera dies and the police begin a murder investigation.

Dolores' daughter, Selena St. George, is a successful journalist, living in New York City, who battles depression and substance abuse. Selena arrives in town to support her mother, despite her own doubts about Dolores' innocence. Dolores insists she did not kill her employer. Selena finds little sympathy for Dolores, as the entire town believes she murdered her husband, Joe St. George, 18 years earlier. Some of the town's inhabitants harass her by vandalizing her home, taunting her in the street, and driving by her house and screaming at her. Detective John Mackey, who was the chief detective in her husband's murder case, is determined to put Dolores away for life.

Selena also believes Dolores killed her father and has not seen her mother in 15 years. In 1975, Joe was an abusive alcoholic, and one night Dolores had threatened to kill him with a hatchet if he ever harmed her again. Selena, then 13 years old, was unaware her mother was being abused. Dolores went to work as a housemaid for millionaire Vera Donovan to save money to pay for Selena's education. Dolores went to the bank to withdraw her money so Selena and she could flee Joe's abuse. The plan was abandoned, however, when Dolores discovered that Joe had stolen the money from Selena's savings account.

Dolores says Vera threw herself down the staircase and begged Dolores to put her out of her misery. Mackey refuses to believe her, and reveals that Vera has left her entire fortune to Dolores. Mackey informs them the will is eight years old, which nearly convinces Selena her mother is guilty. Dolores eventually tells Selena that before he died, Dolores realized Joe was sexually abusing Selena when he gave her an heirloom locket. Selena has always furiously denied any abuse, and after a fierce argument, she storms out, leaving Dolores to fend for herself.

Back in 1975, Dolores broke down and confessed Joe's abuses to Vera, who remained characteristically cold until Dolores mentioned that he was molesting Selena. Turning unusually sympathetic, Vera implied she killed her own late husband, Jack, who had died in a car accident in Maryland, and engineered it to look like an accident. She said, "Sometimes Dolores, sometimes you have to be a high-riding bitch to survive. Sometimes being a bitch is all a woman has to hold on to." Vera's confession formed a bond between the two women and convinced Dolores to take control of her situation. As a total solar eclipse approached, Dolores was pointedly given the rest of the day off by Vera, who insinuates that she expects Dolores to use the free time to dispose of Joe, repeating her earlier statement, "Sometimes being a bitch is all a woman has to hang on to."

Dolores and Selena had an argument about Dolores' suspicions regarding Joe's sexual abuse. Selena fled home for the weekend to work at a hotel, where guests had flocked for the eclipse. Joe soon returned from working on a fishing boat, and Dolores offered him a bottle of Scotch to celebrate the eclipse. After Joe got drunk, Dolores revealed she knew he stole from Selena's account and molested his own daughter, then provoked him into attacking her and falling down an old well, leaving him to die as he plunges to the stone bottom.

Selena hears this entire story on a tape left for her by Dolores, who had foreseen her departure. While on the ferry, Selena suddenly uncovers a repressed memory of her father forcing her to give him a handjob. Realizing everything, Selena rushes back to Dolores as she is attending the coroner's inquest. As Mackey makes a case to be sent to a grand jury in an attempt to indict Dolores for murder, Selena arrives and tells him he has no admissible evidence, he is only doing this because of his personal vendetta against Dolores, and that despite an often stormy relationship, Vera and Dolores loved each other. Realizing that the case would likely end with either a dismissal or acquittal, Mackey reluctantly drops the charges. Dolores and Selena reconcile on the ferry wharf before Selena returns to New York.

Cast

Production

Dolores Claiborne was filmed in Lunenburg, Mahone Bay, Chester, Stonehurst, and Digby, all in Nova Scotia, Canada.[7]

Themes and interpretations

Though typically classified as a drama and psychological thriller, some critics, such as Roger Ebert, have classified Dolores Claiborne as a horror film,[8] while it has also been identified as a Gothic romance.[4]

Repression

Film theorist Kirsten Thompson identifies the film as a melodrama, "produced by the repression of specific traumas, [in this case] domestic violence and incest."[9] According to Martha McCaughey and Neal King, the film's use of flashbacks suggest a specific narrative point of view when considering the film's themes of abuse and incest between Dolores, as well as Selena and Joe: "That all the flashbacks save one belong to Dolores tells us that not only are we watching her story; it also tells us of the unavailability of the past to Selena, and of the displacement and repression forced into play by the girl's experience of incest."[10]

The flashback scene in which Selena recalls her father's forcing her to masturbate him on the ferry has been particularly noted by critics: "Here, Selena and the viewer alike come finally to see Joe's transgressions, and by implication, to understand the truth of Dolores' tale. Throughout this scene, the perspective offered by the camera remains firmly focused on the reactions of the victim of the sexual crime."[11]

Feminist interpretation

Dolores Claiborne has been cited as a "self-consciously feminist" film that "combines the melodramatic impulse with the investigative structure of a noir crime thriller and a contemporary feminist consciousness."[12] The film has also been read as an example of a maternal melodrama that features an "idealized mother-figure" who sacrifices the needs of her own for others.[12] In the book Screening Genders, one scholar considered Dolores Claiborne and Stage Door (1937) to be the only "truly feminist" films made in Hollywood, in that they "don't cop out at the end."[13]

Britt Hayes writes of the main character, "Through Dolores, King poignantly explores the way the world often forces women into a series of compromises, and the way those small compromises have a way of stacking up to an imposing height, backing us into a corner until we have no choice but to become bitches...a woman (a wife, a mother) is emotionally and physically abused to the point where she breaks and feels she has no other option [than to become a bitch]."[14] The three main women in the story – Dolores, Serena, and Vera – each repeat, mutatis mutandis, "Sometimes being a bitch is the only thing a woman has left to hold on to."

Reception

 
Kathy Bates was praised by critics for her portrayal in the film.

Dolores Claiborne received generally positive reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes it has an 85% rating based on 47 reviews, with an average rating of 6.9 out of 10. The site's consensus states: "Post-Misery Kathy Bates proves to be another wonderful conduit for Stephen King's novels in this patient, gradually terrifying thriller."[15] On Metacritic the film has a rating of 62 out of 100, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[citation needed]

Janet Maslin of The New York Times called it "a vivid film that revolves around Ms. Bates's powerhouse of a performance... Only after the film has carefully laid the groundwork for a story of old wounds and violent mishaps does the anticlimactic truth become apparent."[16] Roger Ebert gave the film three out of four stars and praised the performances of Bates and Leigh, saying: "This is a horror story, all right, but not a supernatural one; all of the elements come out of such everyday horrors as alcoholism, wife beating, child abuse and the sin of pride."[8]

Entertainment Weekly, however, gave the film a negative review, awarding it a D+ rating and saying: "This solemnly ludicrous 'psychological' thriller is like one of Hollywood's old-hag gothics turned into a therapeutic grouse-a-thon – it's Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte for the Age of Oprah."[17]

Box office

The movie debuted at number three for the week of March 26, 1995, with $5,721,920. It went on to make $24,361,867 domestically. That ranks it as the 15th-highest grossing film based on a Stephen King novel, unadjusted for inflation.[18] Adjusting for inflation, it ranks as the 17th-highest.[19]

Awards

Kathy Bates and Jennifer Jason Leigh were nominated for the Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress awards at the 22nd Saturn Awards.[7] Ellen Muth also won the Tokyo International Film Festival Award for Best Supporting Actress.

Home video

Warner Bros. released the film on Blu-ray in November 21, 2017, under the label Warner Archive Collection.[a][20]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ All movies pre-2010 produced by "Castle Rock Entertainment", with few exceptions are owned by Warner Bros. Entertainment.

References

  1. ^ "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved 2022-05-25.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-09-23. Retrieved 2017-09-22.
  3. ^ "Dolores Claiborne (1995)". www.worldwideboxoffice.com.
  4. ^ a b McCaughey & King 2001, p. 149.
  5. ^ Conan, Neal (January 26, 2011). "Kathy Bates: Storefront Lawyer On 'Harry's Law'". NPR. Retrieved October 31, 2015.
  6. ^ Susman, Gary (October 18, 2013). "The Big Chills: 10 Greatest Stephen King Movies". Time. Retrieved October 31, 2015.
  7. ^ a b Beahm 2015, p. 484.
  8. ^ a b Ebert, Roger (March 24, 1995). "Dolores Claiborne Movie Review". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved October 30, 2015.
  9. ^ Thompson 2007, p. 3.
  10. ^ McCaughey & King 2001, p. 148.
  11. ^ Jay 2008, p. 109.
  12. ^ a b McCaughey & King 2001, p. 152.
  13. ^ Gabbard & Luhr 2008, p. 103.
  14. ^ On DOLORES CLAIBORNE And What It Means To Be A Bitch Britt Hayes, Birth.Movies.Death., 2014-05-20.
  15. ^ "Dolores Claiborne (1995)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2022-11-05.
  16. ^ Maslin, Janet (March 24, 1995). "FILM REVIEW; Kathy Bates Stars as a Sardonic Murder Suspect". The New York Times. Retrieved May 14, 2018.
  17. ^ Gleiberman, Owen (April 7, 1995). "Dolores Claiborne". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved October 31, 2015.
  18. ^ . Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on 2014-04-23. Retrieved 2012-08-12.
  19. ^ . Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on 2016-08-22. Retrieved 2012-08-12.
  20. ^ "https://twitter.com/WarnerArchive/status/920386612709617665?s=20". Twitter. Retrieved 2023-05-04. {{cite web}}: External link in |title= (help)

Further reading

  • Beahm, George (2015). The Stephen King Companion: Four Decades of Fear from the Master of Horror. St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 978-1250054128.
  • Gabbard, Krin; Luhr, William (2008). Screening Genders: The American Science Fiction Film. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0813543406.
  • Golden, Christopher; Wagner, Hank; Wiater, Stanley (2001). The Stephen King Universe: The Guide to the Worlds of the King of Horror. Renaissance Books.
  • McCaughey, Martha; King, Neal, eds. (2001). "Sometimes Being a Bitch is All a Woman Has to Hold Onto". Reel Knockouts: Violent Women in Film. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0292752511.
  • Thompson, Kirsten Moana (2007). Apocalyptic Dread: American Film at the Turn of the Millennium. Horizons of Cinema. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0791470442.
  • Weird Lullabies: Mothers and Daughters in Contemporary Film. Peter Lang AG. 2008. ISBN 978-3039118397.

External links

dolores, claiborne, film, dolores, claiborne, 1995, american, psychological, thriller, drama, film, directed, taylor, hackford, starring, kathy, bates, jennifer, jason, leigh, christopher, plummer, david, strathairn, screenplay, tony, gilroy, based, 1992, nove. Dolores Claiborne is a 1995 American psychological thriller drama film directed by Taylor Hackford and starring Kathy Bates Jennifer Jason Leigh Christopher Plummer and David Strathairn The screenplay by Tony Gilroy is based on the 1992 novel of the same name by Stephen King The plot focuses on the strained relationship between a mother and her daughter largely told through flashbacks after her daughter arrives to her remote hometown on a Maine island where her mother has been accused of murdering the elderly woman for whom she had long been a care provider and companion 4 Dolores ClaiborneTheatrical release posterDirected byTaylor HackfordScreenplay byTony GilroyBased onDolores Claiborneby Stephen KingProduced byCharles MulvehillTaylor HackfordStarringKathy Bates Jennifer Jason Leigh David Strathairn Judy Parfitt John C Reilly Eric Bogosian Christopher PlummerCinematographyGabriel BeristainEdited byMark WarnerMusic byDanny ElfmanProductioncompanyCastle Rock Entertainment 1 Distributed byColumbia PicturesRelease dateMarch 24 1995 1995 03 24 United States Running time132 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 13 million 2 Box office 46 4 million estimate 3 Dolores Claiborne was the second major King film adaptation to star Bates in a leading role after Misery 1990 five years earlier The film was shot in Nova Scotia in 1994 It was a sleeper hit grossing close to 50 million worldwide on a 13 million budget and little promotion The film was well received by critics with the performances of Bates and Leigh being especially praised Kathy Bates stated in a retrospective interview that her performance as the titular Dolores was her favorite performance she had ever given 5 In 2013 Time named the film among the top 10 greatest Stephen King film adaptations 6 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Themes and interpretations 4 1 Repression 4 2 Feminist interpretation 5 Reception 5 1 Box office 5 2 Awards 6 Home video 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksPlot EditIn 1995 Dolores Claiborne works as a domestic servant on Little Tall Island in Maine Dolores has a struggle with her elderly partially paralyzed employer Vera Donovan in her mansion Vera falls down the staircase and Dolores ransacks the kitchen She is caught by a mailman who sees her standing over Vera with a rolling pin apparently intending to kill her Vera dies and the police begin a murder investigation Dolores daughter Selena St George is a successful journalist living in New York City who battles depression and substance abuse Selena arrives in town to support her mother despite her own doubts about Dolores innocence Dolores insists she did not kill her employer Selena finds little sympathy for Dolores as the entire town believes she murdered her husband Joe St George 18 years earlier Some of the town s inhabitants harass her by vandalizing her home taunting her in the street and driving by her house and screaming at her Detective John Mackey who was the chief detective in her husband s murder case is determined to put Dolores away for life Selena also believes Dolores killed her father and has not seen her mother in 15 years In 1975 Joe was an abusive alcoholic and one night Dolores had threatened to kill him with a hatchet if he ever harmed her again Selena then 13 years old was unaware her mother was being abused Dolores went to work as a housemaid for millionaire Vera Donovan to save money to pay for Selena s education Dolores went to the bank to withdraw her money so Selena and she could flee Joe s abuse The plan was abandoned however when Dolores discovered that Joe had stolen the money from Selena s savings account Dolores says Vera threw herself down the staircase and begged Dolores to put her out of her misery Mackey refuses to believe her and reveals that Vera has left her entire fortune to Dolores Mackey informs them the will is eight years old which nearly convinces Selena her mother is guilty Dolores eventually tells Selena that before he died Dolores realized Joe was sexually abusing Selena when he gave her an heirloom locket Selena has always furiously denied any abuse and after a fierce argument she storms out leaving Dolores to fend for herself Back in 1975 Dolores broke down and confessed Joe s abuses to Vera who remained characteristically cold until Dolores mentioned that he was molesting Selena Turning unusually sympathetic Vera implied she killed her own late husband Jack who had died in a car accident in Maryland and engineered it to look like an accident She said Sometimes Dolores sometimes you have to be a high riding bitch to survive Sometimes being a bitch is all a woman has to hold on to Vera s confession formed a bond between the two women and convinced Dolores to take control of her situation As a total solar eclipse approached Dolores was pointedly given the rest of the day off by Vera who insinuates that she expects Dolores to use the free time to dispose of Joe repeating her earlier statement Sometimes being a bitch is all a woman has to hang on to Dolores and Selena had an argument about Dolores suspicions regarding Joe s sexual abuse Selena fled home for the weekend to work at a hotel where guests had flocked for the eclipse Joe soon returned from working on a fishing boat and Dolores offered him a bottle of Scotch to celebrate the eclipse After Joe got drunk Dolores revealed she knew he stole from Selena s account and molested his own daughter then provoked him into attacking her and falling down an old well leaving him to die as he plunges to the stone bottom Selena hears this entire story on a tape left for her by Dolores who had foreseen her departure While on the ferry Selena suddenly uncovers a repressed memory of her father forcing her to give him a handjob Realizing everything Selena rushes back to Dolores as she is attending the coroner s inquest As Mackey makes a case to be sent to a grand jury in an attempt to indict Dolores for murder Selena arrives and tells him he has no admissible evidence he is only doing this because of his personal vendetta against Dolores and that despite an often stormy relationship Vera and Dolores loved each other Realizing that the case would likely end with either a dismissal or acquittal Mackey reluctantly drops the charges Dolores and Selena reconcile on the ferry wharf before Selena returns to New York Cast EditKathy Bates as Dolores Claiborne Jennifer Jason Leigh as Selena St George Ellen Muth as Young Selena Taffara Jessica Stella Murray as 5 year old Selena Judy Parfitt as Vera Donovan Christopher Plummer as Detective John Mackey David Strathairn as Joe St George Eric Bogosian as Peter John C Reilly as Constable Frank Stamshaw Bob Gunton as Mr Pease Roy Cooper as Magistrate Wayne Robson as Sammy Marchant Ruth Marshall as Secretary Weldon Allen as Bartender Tom Gallant as Searcher Kelly Burnett as Jack DonovanProduction EditDolores Claiborne was filmed in Lunenburg Mahone Bay Chester Stonehurst and Digby all in Nova Scotia Canada 7 Themes and interpretations EditThough typically classified as a drama and psychological thriller some critics such as Roger Ebert have classified Dolores Claiborne as a horror film 8 while it has also been identified as a Gothic romance 4 Repression Edit Film theorist Kirsten Thompson identifies the film as a melodrama produced by the repression of specific traumas in this case domestic violence and incest 9 According to Martha McCaughey and Neal King the film s use of flashbacks suggest a specific narrative point of view when considering the film s themes of abuse and incest between Dolores as well as Selena and Joe That all the flashbacks save one belong to Dolores tells us that not only are we watching her story it also tells us of the unavailability of the past to Selena and of the displacement and repression forced into play by the girl s experience of incest 10 The flashback scene in which Selena recalls her father s forcing her to masturbate him on the ferry has been particularly noted by critics Here Selena and the viewer alike come finally to see Joe s transgressions and by implication to understand the truth of Dolores tale Throughout this scene the perspective offered by the camera remains firmly focused on the reactions of the victim of the sexual crime 11 Feminist interpretation Edit Dolores Claiborne has been cited as a self consciously feminist film that combines the melodramatic impulse with the investigative structure of a noir crime thriller and a contemporary feminist consciousness 12 The film has also been read as an example of a maternal melodrama that features an idealized mother figure who sacrifices the needs of her own for others 12 In the book Screening Genders one scholar considered Dolores Claiborne and Stage Door 1937 to be the only truly feminist films made in Hollywood in that they don t cop out at the end 13 Britt Hayes writes of the main character Through Dolores King poignantly explores the way the world often forces women into a series of compromises and the way those small compromises have a way of stacking up to an imposing height backing us into a corner until we have no choice but to become bitches a woman a wife a mother is emotionally and physically abused to the point where she breaks and feels she has no other option than to become a bitch 14 The three main women in the story Dolores Serena and Vera each repeat mutatis mutandis Sometimes being a bitch is the only thing a woman has left to hold on to Reception Edit Kathy Bates was praised by critics for her portrayal in the film Dolores Claiborne received generally positive reviews from critics On Rotten Tomatoes it has an 85 rating based on 47 reviews with an average rating of 6 9 out of 10 The site s consensus states Post Misery Kathy Bates proves to be another wonderful conduit for Stephen King s novels in this patient gradually terrifying thriller 15 On Metacritic the film has a rating of 62 out of 100 indicating generally favorable reviews citation needed Janet Maslin of The New York Times called it a vivid film that revolves around Ms Bates s powerhouse of a performance Only after the film has carefully laid the groundwork for a story of old wounds and violent mishaps does the anticlimactic truth become apparent 16 Roger Ebert gave the film three out of four stars and praised the performances of Bates and Leigh saying This is a horror story all right but not a supernatural one all of the elements come out of such everyday horrors as alcoholism wife beating child abuse and the sin of pride 8 Entertainment Weekly however gave the film a negative review awarding it a D rating and saying This solemnly ludicrous psychological thriller is like one of Hollywood s old hag gothics turned into a therapeutic grouse a thon it s Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte for the Age of Oprah 17 Box office Edit The movie debuted at number three for the week of March 26 1995 with 5 721 920 It went on to make 24 361 867 domestically That ranks it as the 15th highest grossing film based on a Stephen King novel unadjusted for inflation 18 Adjusting for inflation it ranks as the 17th highest 19 Awards Edit Kathy Bates and Jennifer Jason Leigh were nominated for the Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress awards at the 22nd Saturn Awards 7 Ellen Muth also won the Tokyo International Film Festival Award for Best Supporting Actress Home video EditWarner Bros released the film on Blu ray in November 21 2017 under the label Warner Archive Collection a 20 See also EditList of films featuring eclipsesNotes Edit All movies pre 2010 produced by Castle Rock Entertainment with few exceptions are owned by Warner Bros Entertainment References Edit AFI Catalog catalog afi com Retrieved 2022 05 25 Powergrid Dolores Claiborne Archived from the original on 2017 09 23 Retrieved 2017 09 22 Dolores Claiborne 1995 www worldwideboxoffice com a b McCaughey amp King 2001 p 149 Conan Neal January 26 2011 Kathy Bates Storefront Lawyer On Harry s Law NPR Retrieved October 31 2015 Susman Gary October 18 2013 The Big Chills 10 Greatest Stephen King Movies Time Retrieved October 31 2015 a b Beahm 2015 p 484 a b Ebert Roger March 24 1995 Dolores Claiborne Movie Review RogerEbert com Retrieved October 30 2015 Thompson 2007 p 3 McCaughey amp King 2001 p 148 Jay 2008 p 109 a b McCaughey amp King 2001 p 152 Gabbard amp Luhr 2008 p 103 On DOLORES CLAIBORNE And What It Means To Be A Bitch Britt Hayes Birth Movies Death 2014 05 20 Dolores Claiborne 1995 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved 2022 11 05 Maslin Janet March 24 1995 FILM REVIEW Kathy Bates Stars as a Sardonic Murder Suspect The New York Times Retrieved May 14 2018 Gleiberman Owen April 7 1995 Dolores Claiborne Entertainment Weekly Retrieved October 31 2015 Dolores Claiborne Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on 2014 04 23 Retrieved 2012 08 12 Stephen King Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on 2016 08 22 Retrieved 2012 08 12 https twitter com WarnerArchive status 920386612709617665 s 20 Twitter Retrieved 2023 05 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code title code help Further reading EditBeahm George 2015 The Stephen King Companion Four Decades of Fear from the Master of Horror St Martin s Griffin ISBN 978 1250054128 Gabbard Krin Luhr William 2008 Screening Genders The American Science Fiction Film Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0813543406 Golden Christopher Wagner Hank Wiater Stanley 2001 The Stephen King Universe The Guide to the Worlds of the King of Horror Renaissance Books McCaughey Martha King Neal eds 2001 Sometimes Being a Bitch is All a Woman Has to Hold Onto Reel Knockouts Violent Women in Film University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0292752511 Thompson Kirsten Moana 2007 Apocalyptic Dread American Film at the Turn of the Millennium Horizons of Cinema SUNY Press ISBN 978 0791470442 Weird Lullabies Mothers and Daughters in Contemporary Film Peter Lang AG 2008 ISBN 978 3039118397 External links EditDolores Claiborne at IMDb Dolores Claiborne at Rotten Tomatoes Dolores Claiborne at AllMovie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dolores Claiborne film amp oldid 1153188654, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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