Citation :
« Cynthia Scott's The Company of Strangers [...] is a disquisition on female aging, personal histories, memory, life and death, and the coexistence of past and presence. The film maps these topics onto the aged female body, a body imagined as active, mutable and vital even while it signals decay and mortality. »
-- Angela Stukator
Source :
STUKATOR, Angela. « Hags, Nags, Witches and Crones: Reframing Age in The Company of Strangers », Canadian Journal of Film Studies / Revue canadienne d'études cinématographiques, vol. 5, no. 2 (1996). (p. 51)
[en anglais]