One Is a Lonely Number
One Is a Lonely Number
PG | 19 June 1972 (USA)
One Is a Lonely Number Trailers

A young woman has difficulty understanding why her husband walks out on her. Alone for the first time, she finds life difficult to cope with and for a time lives with the hope that her husband will come back to her.

Reviews
Perry Kate Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!
Maidgethma Wonderfully offbeat film!
Connianatu How wonderful it is to see this fine actress carry a film and carry it so beautifully.
Aedonerre I gave this film a 9 out of 10, because it was exactly what I expected it to be.
edwagreen While very much clichéd, I thought I was going to see at first a prelude to 1979's "An Unmarried Woman" with Jill Clayburgh. The film begins with a professor of English leaving his wife and she struggles to understand the breakup.Men are not portrayed well here. There is the professor who has a 19 year old on the side, the suave employment agency guy who has more than hiring on his mind and the Monte Markham character, the guy who falls for our heroine only for us to discover that he is married. The only redeeming man of quality is veteran Melvyn Douglas, as an aged grocery store owner who knows the score having experienced life to it fullest with his now deceased wife. When Trish Van Devere thinks he has died, her visit to the morgue is memorable as we see the cold side of the attendant. To him, a dead person is rather a stiff.As the brassy blond experienced with divorce with her divorce league, Janet Leigh steals every scene she is in.The modern day ending of achieving freedom is overstated here.
moonspinner55 Until it degenerates somewhat into drippy man-woman chit-chat, "One Is a Lonely Number" has some wry comments to make on the life of a 27-year-old woman on the verge of being divorced. Trish Van Devere has a soft, fuzzy quality about her which is quiet and likable; when her husband of four years walks out on her without an explanation, she's forced to get a job and face the realization of being alone or dating again (neither of which seems to please her). Rather predictable narrative is spiked by a solid visual sense and good location shooting in and around San Francisco. The film comes from an unusual pedigree (executive producer David Wolper and director Mel Stuart worked together the previous year on "Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory" and screenwriter David Seltzer later wrote "The Omen"), and some of the sequences (such as the hurt spouse packing up her husband's leftover things) were expanded upon in later films such as "An Unmarried Woman" and "Kramer vs. Kramer". Alas, Seltzer's script, adapted from Rebecca Morris' short story "The Good Humor Man", falls too easily into convention, and when a ready-made prince (Monte Markham??) confesses to Van Devere he's married, one is inclined to groan. The material was probably much fresher in 1972, however this scenario has since become well-mined territory for a torrent of "women's pictures". What makes this one interesting are the performances (especially Janet Leigh's as a brassy man-hater) and the stinging sense of helplessness. We follow the work-a-day trials of this single woman as she is forced into a rather crummy job as a swimming pool lifeguard--secretly afraid of the high dive--and has to do things she doesn't want to do. It certainly has impact, but the movie's bracing quality is diluted by the soap opera. A near-miss. ** from ****
Ripshin This movie came under the radar for me - I had never heard of it. Turner Classic Movies gave me the chance, as usual, to experience a film I would probably have never watched, otherwise."One" is a wonderful period piece, with great acting, and a simple but engaging plot.Granted, Janet Leigh's crude supporting character is a bit grating - the humor is jarring - but everyone else is cast perfectly.The San Francisco locale is used effectively, but sparingly.Interestingly, director Stuart also directed "Willy Wonka" the year before; he certainly knew how to work with actors.
Elwen This is the story of Aimee Brower, a 28 year old woman who just recently divorced her husband. The movie takes us on what Aimee goes through trying to make some sense out of her newly found life, realizing that after all you can live by yourself.What I find interesting about the movie is that we get to see the female point-of-view of divorce on the early 70s, when women weren't expected to have a career of their own or something else besides being married.
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