Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • 7 Questions
  • Hadestown: The Musical
  • Dad on Arrival
  • Since We've No Place to Go
  • Nena
  • Hijamat
  • Song for Eresha (A)
  • Free Fall: Who you are
  • Phoebe
  • Red Light
  • Meet Me at the Club
  • Chris & Martina: The Final Set
  • Dreamboi
  • Shelter
  • When the Mind's Free
  • Stronger Together
  • Are You Afraid of the '90s?
  • Liminal
  • Four Girls
  • Possible Days - Trilogy on Tenderness
  • Rita Moreira: chronicles, memories and videotape
  • Me Niego Rotundamente
  • Lo Noy
  • Bombacha
  • Amor Trava
  • Man I Love (The)
  • Loves Company
  • Our Colors Never Fade
  • Mayflies
  • Tracy & Martina: Goin' Out West
  • Test
  • Portrait of the Father at 71
  • What we did in the Shadows
  • Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma
  • Movement Song
  • My Name
  • Miss You, Love You
  • Twice the Beast
  • Two Weeks In
  • Umjolo: There Is No Cure

Angel on My Shoulder

Country: United States, Language: English, 85 mins

  • Director: Donna Deitch
  • Writer: Donna Deitch, Terri Jentz
  • Producer: Donna Deitch

CGiii Comment

Twenty years after stripping bare in Nashville, Welles is stripped bare, in almost all senses, in this chronicle that is part amazing, part exasperating, always compelling. Here is a woman remaining toujours wacky-it is Welles's mode-even as the medical bulletins thud into her weakening body and confidence. She has long days of whininess, but don't we all. She has seeming lapses of sanity (same comment). And sometimes we feel should be understudying Quentin Tarantino understudying Audrey Hepburn. 'I've suddenly realized I'm gay,' she cries one day, in a line out of True Romance via Breakfast at Tiffany's with a bit of The Children's Hour. Deitch film puts all human life into a bungalow, sharpening it with the imminent visit of death.


Trailer...

Cast & Characters

Donna Deitch
Gwen Welles (as Self)