Middle-aged suburban husband Richard abruptly tells his wife, Maria, that he wants a divorce. As Richard takes up with a younger woman, Maria enjoys a night on the town with her friends and meets a younger man. As the couple and those around them confront a seemingly futile search for what they've lost -- love, excitement, passion -- this classic American independent film explores themes of aging and alienation.
Ratings
Curator score: 9.2/10
IMDb: 7.4/10
Rotten Tomatoes: 85%
Metacritic: 88
TMDB: 7.1/10
Director
John Cassavetes
Production
Maurice McEndree Productions, Walter Reade Organization Inc., Faces International Films
Cast
John Marley, Gena Rowlands, Lynn Carlin, Fred Draper, Seymour Cassel, Val Avery, Dorothy Gulliver, Joanne Moore Jordan, Darlene Conley, Gene Darfler, Elizabeth Deering, George Dunn, Laurie Mock, Christina Crawford, George Sims, Ann Shirley, Dave Mazzie, Anita White, Julie Gambol, Edwin Sirianni
Where to watch
Sun Nxt, Max
Curator Review
Verdict
A landmark of American independent cinema: raw, abrasive, and emotionally exhausting in a way that still feels alive. Its loose structure and volcanic performances can be punishing, but that intensity is the point.
Best for
Viewers who like uncompromising relationship dramas
Fans of performance-driven, improvisational-feeling cinema
People interested in late-60s American independent film
Anyone drawn to marital breakdown, alienation, and emotional realism
Skip if
You want a tidy plot or clear psychological explanations
You dislike long scenes of confrontation and awkward silence
You prefer polished, conventional storytelling
You need an easy or comforting watch
Overview
Faces is one of those films that feels less written than overheard, as if Cassavetes trapped a series of private implosions and let them spill across the screen. The result is messy, funny, cruel, and painfully human. It turns ordinary social spaces into pressure cookers and makes every glance, pause, and interruption feel like a small emotional event.
Worth noting
What lingers most is the sense of people talking past one another while desperately trying to be seen. The film’s loose, roaming style gives it a restless energy, but it also creates a kind of suffocation: there’s no escape from the characters’ loneliness, only new ways of performing it. That can make it grueling, but also unforgettable.
Bottom line
If you respond to cinema as behavior rather than plot, this is essential viewing. It’s not interested in neat catharsis or moral clarity; it’s interested in the ugly, funny, fragile business of being trapped inside a life that no longer fits.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Karsten (4.5★) · 819 likes
Easily goes down as one of the hardest films to get through. There are really not that many scenes in this thing, especially for its length, but a million different things happened. Hundreds of emotions and unexpected turns happen in the span of 20 minutes. It's moving at such a fast pace but feels like it stays in one spot which reallyyy throws off your sense of time. It's fascinating yet grueling to sit through at times. I'm kind of on the same board as a lot of the other reviews I've seen. Like yeah, I kinda hated it, but I love it.
brendan o'hare (4.5★) · 749 likes
We should try to bring John Cassavetes back to life
Josh Lewis (4★) · 504 likes
drops you into the heat of a middle-aged, middle-class existential crisis not through a coherent psychological point of view but the scattershot emotions, ramblings and rage of a single night on the town in a state of drunken ennui; all captured in cassavetes' signature intense roaming handheld close-ups of high-contrast 16mm. though i think he had an ungenerous read on what cassavetes was ultimately going for (calling it a "dull diatribe against american life" lol) i really like andrew sarris'… more drops you into the heat of a middle-aged, middle-class existential crisis not through a coherent psychological point of view but the scattershot emotions, ramblings and rage of a single night on the town in a state of drunken ennui; all captured in cassavetes' signature intense roaming handheld close-ups of high-contrast 16mm. though i think he had an ungenerous read on what cassavetes was ultimately going for (calling it a "dull diatribe against american life" lol) i really like andrew sarris'… more
Joel Haver (5★) · 402 likes
One of the best there ever was and ever will be. There are many films centered around conversations, but few as astute as Faces in suffocating the audience with the subtext of every word. With every push-in, every extreme close-up, the truth becomes harder and harder to avoid, despite the characters trying their damndest to do just that. There aren’t better performances than the ones in Cassavetes films.
ella (4.5★) · 387 likes
cassavetes shading bergman for making depressing movies and then making a woman under the influence is one of the greatest twists in the cinema history