PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,6/10
567
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaFifty-something Edith Lambert is thrilled to find out that she's expecting a baby, but her husband Harry is less enthusiastic.Fifty-something Edith Lambert is thrilled to find out that she's expecting a baby, but her husband Harry is less enthusiastic.Fifty-something Edith Lambert is thrilled to find out that she's expecting a baby, but her husband Harry is less enthusiastic.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
Michael Abelar
- Lumberyard Man
- (sin acreditar)
Lou Bernard
- Lumberyard Man
- (sin acreditar)
Robert Biheller
- Young Husband
- (sin acreditar)
Ted Blair
- Lumberyard Man
- (sin acreditar)
Gino Cappelletti
- Lumberyard Man
- (sin acreditar)
Charles Dornan
- Surveyer
- (sin acreditar)
Johnny Eimen
- Boy
- (sin acreditar)
Tommy Farrell
- Fred Ainsley
- (sin acreditar)
Jesslyn Fax
- Saleswoman
- (sin acreditar)
Pamelyn Ferdin
- Little Girl in Elevator
- (sin acreditar)
John Francis
- Plumber
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
Film version of the hit Broadway play that ran for over 1,000 performances. Original stars Paul Ford and Maureen O'Sullivan repeat their stage performances as the middle-aged couple dealing with a surprise pregnancy.
Filmed in Concord, Massachusetts, this movie perfectly captures "small town" America just before the 60s went nuts. Affluent Harry and Edith Lambert live in a big house where Harry rants and fumes about everything, especially his daughter Katie (Connie Stevens) and her husband Charlie (Jim Hutton) who live with them. The young marrieds are just big children, depending on poor Edith to do everything for them (cook, clean, do laundry), until Edith breaks the news of her pregnancy.
To make matters worse here, Charlie works for Harry in his local business. As Harry and Edith grapple with the pregnancy, Katie and Charlie are forced to grow up and accept responsibility for their own lives. Sweet and funny, the domestic situations ring a bell even today with the trend of grown children who continue to live with their parents.
Ford and O'Sullivan are excellent. Hutton and Stevens are good. Co-stars include Lloyd Nolan as the mayor, Jane Wyatt as a family friend, Henry Jones as the doctor, Jesslyn Fax as the saleslady, Claude Stroud as the out-of-town friend, and Timothy Hutton as the boy.
When Warners bought the rights to the play, they intended to get big-name stars but eventually went with the original Broadway stars and it's a good thing. Ford and O'Sullivan know their characters inside out.
Filmed in Concord, Massachusetts, this movie perfectly captures "small town" America just before the 60s went nuts. Affluent Harry and Edith Lambert live in a big house where Harry rants and fumes about everything, especially his daughter Katie (Connie Stevens) and her husband Charlie (Jim Hutton) who live with them. The young marrieds are just big children, depending on poor Edith to do everything for them (cook, clean, do laundry), until Edith breaks the news of her pregnancy.
To make matters worse here, Charlie works for Harry in his local business. As Harry and Edith grapple with the pregnancy, Katie and Charlie are forced to grow up and accept responsibility for their own lives. Sweet and funny, the domestic situations ring a bell even today with the trend of grown children who continue to live with their parents.
Ford and O'Sullivan are excellent. Hutton and Stevens are good. Co-stars include Lloyd Nolan as the mayor, Jane Wyatt as a family friend, Henry Jones as the doctor, Jesslyn Fax as the saleslady, Claude Stroud as the out-of-town friend, and Timothy Hutton as the boy.
When Warners bought the rights to the play, they intended to get big-name stars but eventually went with the original Broadway stars and it's a good thing. Ford and O'Sullivan know their characters inside out.
Before Bud Yorkin and Norman Leer shot to fame for films such as "Start the Revolution Without Me" or TV shows like "All in the Family", they had a big stage success with "Never Too Late". And, unlike most Broadway shows that make it to the big screen, the starts of the play, Paul Ford and Maureen O'Sullivan, starred in BOTH!
The story is very simple. Edith is in her 50s and finds herself pregnant. However, oddly, her husband just seems to be in a very foul mood throughout the film...complaining about pretty much everything! You'd think he'd be happy and initially shocked...but his reaction just seemed bizarre and inappropriate. And, speaking of inappropriate, when the daughter and her husband hear about it, suddenly the daughter (Connie Stevens) insists she also wants a baby and her husband (Jim Hutton) also then spends the rest of the film complaining! And, after a while, I just got tired of it!
While the story is fun, at least initially, it just didn't seem the least bit realistic nor enjoyable. Yelling isn't comedy...and this is pretty much yelling from start to finish. It has some good moments here and there...but overall it left me flat.
By the way, if you watch the film, notice that they never use the word 'toilet' in the scene with the toilet. They also act as if it's something unmentionable. Too weird.
The story is very simple. Edith is in her 50s and finds herself pregnant. However, oddly, her husband just seems to be in a very foul mood throughout the film...complaining about pretty much everything! You'd think he'd be happy and initially shocked...but his reaction just seemed bizarre and inappropriate. And, speaking of inappropriate, when the daughter and her husband hear about it, suddenly the daughter (Connie Stevens) insists she also wants a baby and her husband (Jim Hutton) also then spends the rest of the film complaining! And, after a while, I just got tired of it!
While the story is fun, at least initially, it just didn't seem the least bit realistic nor enjoyable. Yelling isn't comedy...and this is pretty much yelling from start to finish. It has some good moments here and there...but overall it left me flat.
By the way, if you watch the film, notice that they never use the word 'toilet' in the scene with the toilet. They also act as if it's something unmentionable. Too weird.
10ellery99
I thought this movie was GREAT! And I also thought Jim Hutton & Connie Stevens were great as well...I was sorry to see it end! Very enjoyable.....
Since this film followed a successful Broadway play, I can only conclude that the play must have been funnier. I found Paul Ford's character completely repugnant. He is a blowhard who has no appreciation for anyone around him. This is supposed to be hilarious but I just found it irritating and sad. The idea that a lovely, charming woman like Maureen O'Sullivan would be married to the crude, unattractive Paul Ford strains credulity. Not the fault of the actor - he is very funny in other movies - it is instead the result of the hostile screenplay.
In those early Sixties Kennedy years this play and film were big hits with an across the board appeal to generations, but particularly the senior citizen crowd. Paul Ford and Maureen O'Sullivan who repeated their roles from the 1007 performance run Broadway play show that those thought past their prime can still do some things totally unexpected.
Menopause was late coming in the Lambert household of Concord, Massachusetts because Maureen O'Sullivan has announced after a 20 year span after the birth of her daughter Connie Stevens that she is pregnant again. She and Paul Ford are about to be parents again at an age when they should be expecting their first grandchildren. That is of particular interest to Connie Stevens and her husband Jim Hutton who are trying ever so hard to get Connie in a family way.
But in general Ford who is a conservative man by nature is getting all kinds of Ooohs and Ahs from the town for his unexpected virility. His neighbor and rival Lloyd Nolan who is the mayor of the town is really ribbing him something awful.
Sight gags abound in Never Too Late usually involving Ford and his middle age paunch. There's a scene in the pediatric waiting room where Ford is sitting with a bunch of young fathers to be. There's another one in an elevator with Ford and a little girl and some pregnant women with the young girl drawing all kinds of conclusions.
In the non-visual category Ford and Hutton both really tie one on and a bit of truth telling emerges from the booze.
I remember seeing this in the theater back when it first came out and the timeless family situations make Never Too Late as fresh as it was when I first saw it. This could get a remake today and not lose a thing. But until then this fine version will suffice.
Menopause was late coming in the Lambert household of Concord, Massachusetts because Maureen O'Sullivan has announced after a 20 year span after the birth of her daughter Connie Stevens that she is pregnant again. She and Paul Ford are about to be parents again at an age when they should be expecting their first grandchildren. That is of particular interest to Connie Stevens and her husband Jim Hutton who are trying ever so hard to get Connie in a family way.
But in general Ford who is a conservative man by nature is getting all kinds of Ooohs and Ahs from the town for his unexpected virility. His neighbor and rival Lloyd Nolan who is the mayor of the town is really ribbing him something awful.
Sight gags abound in Never Too Late usually involving Ford and his middle age paunch. There's a scene in the pediatric waiting room where Ford is sitting with a bunch of young fathers to be. There's another one in an elevator with Ford and a little girl and some pregnant women with the young girl drawing all kinds of conclusions.
In the non-visual category Ford and Hutton both really tie one on and a bit of truth telling emerges from the booze.
I remember seeing this in the theater back when it first came out and the timeless family situations make Never Too Late as fresh as it was when I first saw it. This could get a remake today and not lose a thing. But until then this fine version will suffice.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesTimothy Hutton, son of Jim Hutton, made his first screen appearance in this movie as the little boy who runs to his father.
- PifiasLate in the movie, after the "drunken fight" scene when Edith tells Harry "it's not true", a portable phonograph (record player) sitting on a table alternates between being crooked on the table and being aligned with the table edge.
- Citas
Charlie Clinton: A lot of people hate you. What's that got to do with it? Look, if the city needs lumber, it might as well be ours.
Harry M. Lambert: Just what do you mean by a lot of people hate me?
- ConexionesReferenced in What's My Line?: Maureen O'Sullivan (1965)
- Banda sonoraNever Too Late
Music by David Rose
Lyrics by Jay Livingston and Ray Evans
Sung by Vic Damone during the opening credits
Played often in the score
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- How long is Never Too Late?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Duración1 hora 45 minutos
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was El bebé de la discordia (1965) officially released in India in English?
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