Hello TCM Fans, I'm new to the message board. As a child or a young person I saw a movie featuring a pretty woman whose trench coat, or the belt of her trench coat, or perhaps the hem of her dress, is repeatedly caught in her car door. She is filmed driving about town, going about the errands of life, oblivious to the visible tail she's dragging, or the flag she's flying. I remember her making sandwiches in a small 1950s-'60s kitchen. I think she was waiting for a man, or preparing for his arrival. I remember wanting to see the movie again and to understand it better. I knew the clothing caught in her car door stood for something more, because it happened over and over, but I didn't know what. Later, I thought It was a revolving tick of the character, that somehow advanced the story, too. Today, still not sure what it meant in the film, I think of the car-door imagery as a metaphor for having too many irons in the fire, trying to keep cool, while broadly but unknowingly signaling that I'm barely keeping a grip. It seems I saw the film in the late sixties or early seventies, but I can't picture where I was, so the date is indefinite. I see it in black-and-white in my mind, but it could have been a color film I saw on b&w TV. Years later, when I tried to describe the movie, someone said, "I think that's a Robert Altman film." Well, now that I've seen a few, that makes sense, but scouring Mr. Altman's fabulous filmography hasn't helped me name it. Can you?