Georgie Soloway es un compositor de éxitos pop románticos que no puede amar, ni a sí mismo ni a los demás. Pasa sus días con varias mujeres volando su avión y apareciendo en el mundo que lo ... Leer todoGeorgie Soloway es un compositor de éxitos pop románticos que no puede amar, ni a sí mismo ni a los demás. Pasa sus días con varias mujeres volando su avión y apareciendo en el mundo que lo rodea.Georgie Soloway es un compositor de éxitos pop románticos que no puede amar, ni a sí mismo ni a los demás. Pasa sus días con varias mujeres volando su avión y apareciendo en el mundo que lo rodea.
- Nominado a 1 premio Óscar
- 1 nominación en total
- Marty
- (as Joe Sicari)
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaTo achieve maximum realism, Director Ulu Grosbard insisted that Dustin Hoffman appear live at the now-shuttered rock palace Fillmore East. Cameras captured the reaction of the regular Friday night audience gathered for an actual Grateful Dead concert.
- ErroresWhen Georgie runs through the streets after stealing a magazine, the magazine appears and reappears from his hands in between cut away shots that shows the guy chasing him.
- Citas
Dr. Solomon F. Moses: Don't argue with me what's crazy. I know crazy. And you're crazy. I got now hanging around with me eight fellas who think they're reindeers. So I got no time for you fruitcake. Busy busy busy. Everyplace is craziness. So quick, what do you want for Christmas Charley?
Georgie Soloway: I'd like a new life and a day without fear.
Dr. Solomon F. Moses: Oh that's a shame. I got you a choo-choo train.
- Versiones alternativasTV version removes almost all of the steel drum scenes and a brief scene with some semi-nudity (Dr. Moses' receptionist naked, seen above the waist).
- ConexionesReferenced in Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In: Guest Starring Carroll O'Connor (1971)
- Bandas sonorasBunky and Lucille
Music and Lyrics by Shel Silverstein
Performed by Dr. Hook (as Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show)
What makes this a movie worth seeing are the actors; Dustin Hoffman, Barbara Harris, and Jack Ward all turn in supreme performances. Even the bit parts are well-written and equally well-acted. The dialogue is sharp, witty and sadly comic.
Dustin Hoffman plays a highly successful songwriter who suffers from insomnia and the dementia it brings as he looks back on the relationships he's had throughout his life, hoping to break his loneliness.
Hoffman does an excellent job of portraying a creative genius, one whose creativity is so abundant he seems unable to turn it off. In most of the scenes, Hoffman is strumming a guitar, singing under his breath, presumably writing a new song with each emotion he feels at any given moment. Because the music that flows through him occupies so much of his brain, he seems unable to focus on human relationships and by middle age the loneliness catches up with him.
Hoffman drifts in and out of reality. Deciding which scenes are real, and which are his imagination is up to the viewer. Or as Hoffman tells his psychiatrist "Why should I come back to reality? What's it ever done for me?"
It should also be noted that as much as Simon and Garfunkel did for "The Graduate," so does this film's soundtrack accentuate the overall feel of the movie with music from Ray Charles and Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show.
- ebercaw
- 11 ago 2004
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Wer ist Harry Kellerman?
- Locaciones de filmación
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- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 229,644