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Meryl Streep | ||
Bruce Willis | ||
Goldie Hawn | ||
Isabella Rossellini | ||
Ian Ogilvy | ||
Adam Storke | ||
Nancy Fish | ||
Michelle Johnson | ||
Mary Ellen Trainor | ||
Meryl Streep | Madeline Ashton Menville | |
Bruce Willis | Dr. Ernest Menville | |
Goldie Hawn | Helen Sharp | |
Isabella Rossellini | Lisle Von Rhuman | |
Ian Ogilvy | Chagall | |
Adam Storke | Dakota | |
Nancy Fish | Rose | |
Alaina Reed-Hall | Psychologist | |
Michelle Johnson | Anna | |
Mary Ellen Trainor | Vivian Adams | |
William Frankfather | Mr. Franklin | |
John Ingle | Eulogist | |
Clement von Franckenstein | Opening Man | |
Petrea Burchard | Opening Woman | |
Jim Jansen | Second Man |
Director |
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Producer |
Robert Zemeckis
Steve Starkey |
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Writer |
Martin Donovan
David Koepp |
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Cinematography |
Dean Cundey
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Musician |
Alan Silvestri
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Helen, a writer, and Madeline, an actress, have hated each other for years. Madeline is married to Ernest, who was once Helen's fiance. After she recovers from a mental breakdown, Helen vows revenge by stealing back Ernest and plotting to kill Madeline. Both rivals have secretly drunk a miracle cure for aging; they accidentally discover, when each tries to eliminate the other, that they have become immortal and that "life" will never be the same again. |
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Features
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