Aurora Greenway
Shirley MacLaine
Aurora Greenway

“Come to laugh, come to cry, come to care, come to terms.”
Aurora, a finicky woman, is in search of true love while her daughter faces marital issues. Together, they help each other deal with problems and find reasons to live a joyful life.
Terms of Endearment (1983) Original Trailer [FHD]
Aurora Greenway
Shirley MacLaine
Aurora Greenway
Emma Greenway Horton
Debra Winger
Emma Greenway Horton
Garrett Breedlove
Jack Nicholson
Garrett Breedlove
Vernon Dahlart
Danny DeVito
Vernon Dahlart
Flap Horton
Jeff Daniels
Flap Horton
Sam Burns
John Lithgow
Sam Burns
Patsy Clark
Lisa Hart Carroll
Patsy Clark
Rosie Dunlop
Betty King
Rosie Dunlop
Teddy Horton
Huckleberry Fox
Teddy Horton
Tommy Horton
Troy Bishop
Tommy Horton
Younger Tommy Horton
Shane Serwin
Younger Tommy Horton
Melanie Horton
Megan Morris
Melanie Horton
I hated the story, let's get that out of the way first. This film is about character acting at it's best, though, and Shirley MacLaine ("Aurora") and Jack Nicholson ("Garrett") bring us charisma and entertainment in spades which thankfully rescues the really pedestrian plot from abject mediocrity. Since her birth, "Aurora" has fussed over her daughter "Emma" (Debra Winger) and upon the death of her husband, settles down to a rather vicarious existence living life through her daughter, her husband "Flap" (Jeff Daniels) and their children. She is a strong willed woman, with love that can be gentle and kindly, or that can be rude and interfering with much of the frequently sardonic humour emanating from her disinclination to let them live their own lives. Next door we find "Garrett", a somewhat disreputable womaniser. A former astronaut who trades well on his erstwhile status, but who takes a bit of a shine to "Aurora" - and that's another source of lively comedy as the two clash with engaging regularity. The last hour descends rather quickly into melancholy, though, as the young "Emma" has to deal with her own problem husband, and an illness that starts to focus the attention from all concerned onto what really matters with their relationships. MacLaine is always good with these rough-round-the-edges roles and here there is plenty of chemistry on the sparing occasions in which she and Nicholson feature. Sadly, for me anyway, the rest of this hovers way too close to melodrama and though at its best it is really good, for the most part I was rather underwhelmed by the family antics that underpinned so much of the (over-long) story.
Read full reviewJames L. Brooks | Best Director for 'Terms of Endearment' | Behind the Oscars Speech
James L. Brooks on TERMS OF ENDEARMENT
James L. Brooks Wins Best Director: 1984 Oscars
Terms of Endearment Wins Best Picture: 1984 Oscars
Shirley MacLaine Says Jack Nicholson Is "Channeling"
Shirley MacLaine Wins Best Actress: 1984 Oscars
Jack Nicholson Wins Supporting Actor: 1984 Oscars
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