Amazon.com Essentials: Both Jane Fonda and Jon Voight won Oscars for their performances in this profoundly moving 1978 flick dealing with the aftereffects of the Vietnam War. Fonda, feeling isolated while her hawkish husband, Bruce Dern, is away in Vietnam, follows a friend's example and volunteers at a veteran's hospital. There she is reacquainted with Voight, an old friend who has returned from the war as a paraplegic. Lonely and disconnected from her husband, Fonda finds love, and fulfilling sex, with Voight. The sex scenes, very steamy for the time, are still provocative. This mature love story is about expanding your horizons, and is both moving and thoughtful. Director Hal Ashby (Harold and Maude) does succumb to melodrama on occasion, but these are forgivable slips. --Rochelle O'Gorman
Amazon.com Essentials: One of the first films to deal with the aftermath of Vietnam, this Hal Ashby drama focuses on the effects war has on the people at home. Jane Fonda plays the wife of a tightly wound Marine officer (Bruce Dern), who is more interested in his own advancement than his wife's existence. When he heads overseas, she volunteers at a V.A. hospital, where she becomes involved with a paraplegic veteran (Jon Voight), whose anger at his injury and pain over his experiences in the war eventually fuels his passion to protest the war--and to be Fonda's lover. Though the film has its excesses and obvious melodramatic roles (such as Robert Carradine as a distraught vet unable to cope), it offers powerful performances by all involved; Fonda and Voight received Oscars, as did the screenplay. --Marshall Fine