Kramer vs. Kramer

US (1979): Drama

Winner of five Academy Awards including Best Picture, Actor, and Screenplay, this film remains as powerfully moving today as it was when released in 1979, simply because its drama will remain relevant for couples of any generation. Adapted by director Robert Benton from the novel by Avery Corman, this is perhaps the finest, most evenly balanced film ever made about the failure of marriage and the tumultuous shift of parental roles. It begins when Joanna Kramer (Meryl Streep) bluntly informs her husband Ted (Dustin Hoffman) that she's leaving him, just as his advertising career is advancing and demanding most of his waking hours. Self-involvement is just one of the film's underlying themes, along with the search for identity that prompts Joanna to leave Ted with their first-grade son (Justin Henry), who now finds himself living with a workaholic parent he barely knows. Juggling his domestic challenge with professional deadlines, Ted is further pressured when his wife files for custody of their son. This legal battle forms the dramatic spine of the film, but its power is derived from Benton's flawlessly observant script and the superlative performances of his entire cast. Because Benton refuses to assign blame and deals fairly with both sides of a devastating dilemma, the film arrives at equal levels of pain, growth, and integrity under emotionally stressful circumstances. That gives virtually every scene the unmistakable ring of truth -- a quality of dramatic honestly that makes Kramer vs. Kramer not merely a classic tearjerker, but one of the finest American dramas of its decade. (Jeff Shannon, Amazon.com)


· Best Picture 1979: Stanley R. Jaffe - Producer (Jaffe, Columbia)
· Actor 1979: Dustin Hoffman
· Supporting Actress 1979: Meryl Streep
· Directing 1979: Robert Benton
· Writing (Best Screenplay based on material from another medium) 1979: Robert Benton


· Supporting Actor 1979: Justin Henry
· Supporting Actress 1979: Jane Alexander
· Cinematography 1979: Nestor Almendros
· Film Editing 1979: Jerry Greenberg

9 nominations, 5 Awards