It's My Turn

Synopsis: A successful but stressed mathematics professor (Clayburgh) goes to her father's wedding and falls in love with her father's bride's son (Douglas), a prematurely retired pro baseball player. She must choose between him and her current boyfriend (Grodin), between Chicago and New York, and between research and administration.
Genre: Comedy, Drama
Director(s): Claudia Weill
Production: Sony Pictures Entertainment
  1 nomination.
 
IMDB:
5.5
R
Year:
1980
91 min
178 Views


[]

KATE:

Let me show you how

to construct the map S,

which is the fun

of the lemma anyhow.

Okay?

So you assume you have

an element

in the kernel of gamma.

That is, an element in C such

that gamma takes you

to zero in C prime.

You pull back to B

by the map G,

which is surject--

Hold it, hold it, hold it.

That's-- That's not unique.

Yes, it is unique,

Mr. Cooperman.

Up to an element

in the image of F. All right?

So we pulled it back

to a fixed B here,

then you take beta of B,

which takes you

to zero in C prime

by the commutivity

of the diagram.

It's therefore in the kernel

of the map G prime,

hence is in the image

of the map F prime,

by the exactness

of the lower sequence.

No.

So we can pull it back

No.

to an element in A prime.

It's not well-defined.

Which it turns out

is a well-defined module

of the image of alpha.

And thus defines an element

in the co-kernel of alpha.

And that's the snake.

And on Monday

we'll address ourselves

to the co-homology

of groups

and Mr. Cooperman's

next objections.

This-- This stuff

is just garbage.

It's another diagram chase.

When are we going to move on

to something interesting?

Like your new group?

Any progress

with the two fusion?

Nope. Still stuck.

Maybe you've gone as far

as you can with it, Dr. G.

That's possible.

I've started looking

at it with a whole new angle.

Oh.

And if it works,

I'll be famous.

Oh.

That would be terrific.

I can relax.

I'll be famous

for having taught you.

F*** face.

[]

Famous.

[]

[]

MAN:

Schneider.

Schneider, don't tell me

in all of Chicago

you can't get that wood.

Look, screw Consolidated!

[WHISPERING]

Screw Consolidated.

Screw me.

I'm-- I'm actually talking

on the phone.

I'm sorry.

Look, we've gotta get

the lumber by the 13th

or we can't start.

If you can't get the birch,

get the maple,

if you can't get the maple,

then go with

the goddamn $8 oak.

Formica.

Formica looks great.

Yeah, yeah.

But, you know, get something.

I don't care where you go

to get it, but get--

One thing I'm not gonna do.

I'm not gonna sit on my butt,

take Consolidated's word,

and wait till

the market bumps to 10.

We gotta

make a deal by noon.

Okay, Schneider?

I don't wanna yell at you,

but you know what I'm saying?

Okay, Schneider.

God, you're cute

when you're mad.

Do they wonder

what you're like at home?

What am I like at home?

You're like

one perfect a**hole at home.

Perfect, huh?

Yeah.

You know--

These pillows.

I don't know, they're so big.

Nobody's gonna

be able to sit here.

I would've helped you

if you waited for me.

Don't try to get

on my good side.

I didn't know you

had a good side.

[MOCKING TONE]

I didn't know you

had a good side. Heh.

Oh, God. I don't know

what I'm gonna do

about this interview

in New York this weekend.

Oh, thank you.

You peeled the onions.

This is great.

Thank you.

Plus,

there's this dumb wedding.

Should I go or not?

Go.

I don't think so.

Don't go.

Why not?

Look, your father's

getting married.

Go to your father's wedding.

Go to your father's wedding.

I am staying

in this dumb hotel

so my father won't even know

that I'm in town.

I told you that.

I'm gonna be the spinster

at this wedding.

You're a spinster,

don't feel bad.

I'm not.

Come here, come here.

Look at me. Look at me.

Come with me to the wedding.

Ha-ha, I'm just kidding.

The reason I don't wanna go

to this wedding

is I can't stand the woman

that my father is marrying.

I mean, why does he have

to marry someone his own age?

You know, he could have married

a-- A chorus girl.

Really.

I understand.

No, you don't. You don't.

I mean, she's making him

sell the house.

She doesn't even know

how to swim.

She doesn't know how to swim?

Oh! You never said

she didn't know how to swim.

That's serious.

Give me a break.

A woman, who doesn't know how

to swim, is getting married.

We're having Grand Marnier

omelets for dessert.

We're having peaches

for dessert.

Cooperman

is snapping at my ass,

my father is marrying

someone I hate.

We're having

Grand Marnier omelets, okay?

[]

[HUMMING]

[]

Carry your two.

KATE:

I'd like to kill

that little Cooperman.

Now he's working

on the two fusion.

Jesus.

[SIGHS]

[SIGHS]

I should work this weekend

instead of running around

to a pointless interview.

They probably just want me

because I'm a woman.

I just don't wanna go up

for it and not get it, you know?

Oh, Homer.

Uh, no.

Do you know that I'm not even

sure that I want this job.

I mean, I don't know

I want an administrative job.

It's boring.

Do you know--?

Are you making fun of me?

What? No.

Go ahead. I'm-- I'm--

Oh, no.

BOTH:

You are!

Do you know what I'd like?

What?

God, if I could just solve

this problem.

I-- Do you understand,

it would be--?

I would be in a-- In a class

with Euclid and Newton.

Really.

Uh-huh.

I would be--

Except for Newton made his

breakthrough when he was 22.

Uh-oh.

Homer!

Okay.

It's not funny.

No, no.

This is serious.

I'm-- Oh, listen.

You kidding?

Talking about your breakthrough.

This is my life!

Of course, I'm listening.

Look, maybe...

Maybe I don't even

have to make a choice.

Maybe I can take this job.

I'll have time

to do my own work.

Then the only problem I'd have

would be leaving you.

Which might not

be a bad idea.

[LAUGHS]

[LAUGHS]

Kate, taking Homer with you

to New York this weekend?

No, what for?

To hang around outside

my interview?

No. To go with you

to your father's wedding.

I'm not sure

I'm gonna go.

Really?

Mm.

The original daddy's girl?

I think I might just go

to the interview

and come right back.

Well, I hope you get it.

It sounds like a great job.

I'd have to move to New York.

I'd go in a second.

Really?

What about Homer?

We're just getting settled,

you know?

Yeah, I know.

He's very nice, you

know.

He makes me laugh.

Yeah, I know.

He gives me lots of space.

Yeah, I know.

Of course I care,

she's my daughter too.

[WHISPERING]

Interview or wedding?

Either.

Well, why?

What does she say?

She's not eating or what?

Lucy.

On the left, I think.

Uh, appendicitis is what?

No, just a--

Oh, is her stomach hard

with pain?

Is her stomach hard with pain?

Is her stool loose?

Is her stool loose?

No.

It's not appendicitis.

Not appendicitis.

It's probably just

an upset stomach.

Yeah, just--

Just have her rest.

I thought that was fixed?

It broke?

It broke again?

All right,

well, don't--

Don't worry about it.

How did the audition go?

All your experience counts

for something.

Other people could

have big resumes but,

I mean, you know about--

[KATE GRUNTS]

HOMER:
Unfeeling husbands.

[KATE GROANS]

Audrey, look, I wanna talk

to you about this more, but--

L-Let me call you back.

[SIGHS]

I cannot wear this

to an interview.

Katherine,

take it easy.

Take it easy.

You said it yourself.

You probably won't even

get the job.

It's just

an affirmative action ploy.

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Eleanor Bergstein

Eleanor Bergstein (born 1938) is an American writer, known for writing and co-producing Dirty Dancing, a popular 1980s film based in large part on her own childhood. more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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