DiscoverSubtext: Conversations about Classic Books and FilmsLove and Loneliness in “Arthur” (1981) – Part 2
Love and Loneliness in “Arthur” (1981) – Part 2

Love and Loneliness in “Arthur” (1981) – Part 2

Update: 2024-09-02
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It’s awful being alone, according to millionaire playboy Arthur Bach, and nobody should be alone. And so he forestalls this feeling by getting drunk, picking up prostitutes, and laughing at his own jokes. Yet love in its true form can be a lonely business, as his servant Hobson reminds him, because it involves growing up, getting serious, and taking care of someone other than oneself … only to lose them—in one way or another—to the inevitable advance of time. What is it about working class Linda Marolla, whom Arthur first encounters in the process of shoplifting a tie for her father’s birthday, that gets him beyond this impasse? Wes & Erin continue their discussion of Steve Gordon’s 1981 romantic comedy “Arthur,” and why, if you want to learn to become independent, sometimes the best that you can do is to fall in love.





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Love and Loneliness in “Arthur” (1981) – Part 2

Love and Loneliness in “Arthur” (1981) – Part 2

Wes Alwan and Erin O'Luanaigh