Angst-ridden Jewish comic (Woody Allen) wins then loses kooky girl from midwest (Diane Keaton).
Reviewed by Chris Tookey
Extremely charming period comedy, based on the stars' true-life romance. A memento to the self-indulgent anxieties of the "me" generation in the 70s, it incurred some critical hostility on release; but it was a turning-point for Woody Allen, who began in this movie to turn away from one-liner gags and create characters who were three-dimensional, vulnerable and even likeable.