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Hey Good Lookin'

  • 1982
  • R
  • 1h 16min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,2/10
1,4 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Hey Good Lookin' (1982)
An outrageous, affectionate look at coming of age in Eisenhower-era Brooklyn.
Reproducir trailer1:30
1 vídeo
95 imágenes
Adult AnimationDark ComedyHand-Drawn AnimationSatireAnimationComedyDramaRomance

Una mirada escandalosa y cariñosa a la mayoría de edad en el Brooklyn de la era Eisenhower.Una mirada escandalosa y cariñosa a la mayoría de edad en el Brooklyn de la era Eisenhower.Una mirada escandalosa y cariñosa a la mayoría de edad en el Brooklyn de la era Eisenhower.

  • Dirección
    • Ralph Bakshi
  • Guión
    • Ralph Bakshi
  • Reparto principal
    • Richard Romanus
    • David Proval
    • Jesse Welles
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,2/10
    1,4 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Guión
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Reparto principal
      • Richard Romanus
      • David Proval
      • Jesse Welles
    • 25Reseñas de usuarios
    • 10Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:30
    Trailer

    Imágenes95

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    + 89
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    Reparto principal27

    Editar
    Richard Romanus
    Richard Romanus
    • Vinnie
    • (voz)
    David Proval
    David Proval
    • Crazy Shapiro
    • (voz)
    Jesse Welles
    Jesse Welles
    • Eva
    • (voz)
    Tina Romanus
    • Rozzie
    • (voz)
    • (as Tina Bowman)
    Danny Wells
    Danny Wells
    • Stomper
    • (voz)
    Larry Bishop
    Larry Bishop
    • Stomper
    • (voz)
    Tabi Cooper
    • Stomper
    • (voz)
    Juno Dawson
    Juno Dawson
    • Waitress
    • (voz)
    Shirley Jo Finney
    Shirley Jo Finney
    • Chaplin
    • (voz)
    Martin Garner
    • Yonkel
    • (voz)
    Terry Haven
    • Alice
    • (voz)
    Allen Joseph
    Allen Joseph
    • Max
    • (voz)
    Bernie Massa
    • Stomper
    • (voz)
    Gelsa Palao
    • Stomper
    • (voz)
    Paul Roman
    • Stomper
    • (voz)
    Philip Michael Thomas
    Philip Michael Thomas
    • Chaplin
    • (voz)
    • (as Philip M. Thomas)
    Frank DeKova
    Frank DeKova
    • Old Vinnie
    • (voz)
    Angelo Grisanti
    • Solly
    • (voz)
    • Dirección
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Guión
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios25

    6,21.4K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    8Quinoa1984

    Ralph Bakshi's Mean Streets

    You remember Mean Streets- Scorsese's rough and raw and unpredictable tip of the hat to Little Italy (and, consequently, episodic though with a little plot), which was about as personal as movies could get. With Hey Good Lookin', warts and all, Bakshi has his Mean Streets. It's about two guys, Vinny and Crazy (Shapiro), who go lookin' for girls, start up a possible rumble, and just act like cool and wacky 50s Brooklynites. But to say that this is simply what it's about is nonsense; it's about mood and time, if that doesn't sound too pretentious, and about an abstract sensibility (or, if you will, an impression) of what life was like in Brooklyn hopped up with lots of rock and roll and attitude. It is, indeed, none other than a Bakshi film.

    But what does this mean for those who've only seen his work from Fritz the Cat and Lord of the Rings (or, on the lower end of the spectrum though more recent, Cool World)? What may seem like chaos in a Ralph Bakshi film isn't a fault but the actual style of the piece. Everything and anything can happen in a scene, and like an early Scorsese or Cassavetes it's extremely improvisational. This might seem weird since it's animation (and sometimes folks it really is). Baskhi, however, is a delightfully unbalanced force in animation. His characters are ugly and crude and physical and filled with such puffed up cliché or (yes) stereotype via ethnicity or race or (especially) sex, that it's easy to see why some would be turned off in a second.

    Hey Good Lookin' doesn't want the most amount of viewers like a Disney flick. Bakshi has a crazy means to his vision, but for those tuned in it's a deranged kind of bliss. His film is alive and wild in not just the style of drawing but in little set-ups (where else will you get a raucous sex scene in a pile of hamburgers, or a car busting through a music hall and killing the band). Sometimes the comic set-ups merely bring up some chuckles, and others are total riots. While this time Bakshi might not have the best musical accompaniment- the songs range from being slightly catchy 50s throwbacks to crappy would-be-50s-really-80's tunes- and the chaos in the storyline or specific scenes might backfire once or twice into total "what the hell is this" territory, mostly it's all good.

    This is a true wildman pulling off a personal vision of a time and place with an eye for character, a knack for casting true to the setting as opposed to higher-scale talent (David Proval, also of Mean Streets, incredibly plays Crazy Shapiro), and if it's not one of his very best, it's close.
    8ThePanos

    Excellent Animated Film

    The first time I saw this film was at 3am after returning home from a bar. I had only caught the end at the time but was greatly impressed. In fact the movie had left such an impression on me that I spent a month trying to locate a copy on video cassette. This video is now among one of my most prized tapes.

    The story is based around two good friends, Crazy Shapiro and Vinnie. Vinnie is the leader of a gang known as the 'Stompers'. Vinnie isn't much of a leader, and Crazy is a loose canon. The story takes us on a journey of how Vinnie dealt with his cowardly ways and how Crazy took a leap to insanity.

    One of the reasons this movie has made it into my all time favorites is due to how the movie ends.

    This movie like most Psychedelic cartoons is not for everybody. You will either love it or hate it.
    lor_

    Imaginative, realistic animation

    My review was written in August 1982 after a Times Square screening.

    Ralph Bakshi's "Hey, Good Lookin'" is an adult-themed animated feature that successfully demonstrates the ability of the cartoon format to handle subjects generally thought of as live-action material, in this case a slice-of-life humorous character study of young people in Brooklyn, circa 1953. Shelved by Warner Bros. In 1975 while nearly completed, the final product (finished in the interim) evidences its stop-and-start history with awkward transitions and variable sound quality, but is well worth a platformed release at this time to tap the young adult audience that supports uninhibited comedy-drama.

    While echoing Bakshi's own successful "Heavy Traffic", "Good Lookin'" really takes as its point of departure another WB picture, Martin Scorsese's 1973 "Mean Streets". The filmmaker even uses two of "Mean Streets"'s leading players, Richard Romanus and David Proval, to voice his main animated characters, Vinnie and Crazy, whose adventures in womanizing and gang brawling form the core of this period piece.

    Bookended by an awkward flashback structure (which makes for an anticlimactic coda to the film), "Good Lookin'" succeeds in counteracting the ongoing nostalgia craze by portraying the good old days of the 1950s in New York as a violent, generally ugly time. The familiar Bakshi style uses painted backgrounds which emphasize a trash-laden, tenement look to the metropolis. In the foreground are beautifully animated grotesque characters, lampooning assorted ethnic and youth stereotypes, to the beat of unobtrusive "doo-wop" music written in the style of the early 1950s.

    What makes this different from other Bakshi films (and other animated pictures as well) is the absence of fantasy or anthropomorphic animals: a down-to-earth story told strictly via animation. Though he reportedly had some live-action featured early on in the project (a la "Heavy Traffic" and "Coonskin") final version of film is strictly animated. The only fantasy segments involve (typically), garbage cans coming to life and Crazy's strange nightmare of being devoured by giant, distorted women.

    What Bakshi uses his animation for is to exaggerate, giving the odd personages and their antics (familiar from subsequent vulgar exercises such as the recent hit "Porky's"), an appropriate absurity not possible in live-action. Also, the sex and profanity, abundant enough to earn an R rating, avoid the documentary representation problems (i.e., exploitative nudity in teen pics) by virtue of being animated.

    Funny most of the way, "Good Lookin'" is hurt by a segue into melodrama in the later reels. Crazy lives up to his name by going nuts and shooting several members of the Black Chaplains gang. Audiences hooked up until this point will have to swallow an abrupt change of tone, but given the film's abbreviated running time this is not a fatal flaw.

    Four lead characters are wonderfully etched. Vinnie, the definitive greaser, his nutty Jewish pal Crazy, the buxom neighborhood sex symbol Roz and her endlessly knoshing girlfriend Eva. The actors' vocal performances are solid, as is a pleasant musical score highlighted by the title cut. Other than some variable sound recording of the voice tracks, tech credits are good.
    vertigo_14

    Sold!

    I became a Bashki film from the first time I saw American Pop. It was the most amazing cartoon I'd ever seen and since then, I'd been on the look out for more Bashki cartoons.

    Hey Good Lookin' is my second round of Bashki. And, though I didn't like it as much as American Pop, I did like it. It was a darkish cartoon look at rumble life of a couple of 1950s hoods. But, unlike American Pop, which also had the bazaar stlyistic drawings of dark alley life, Hey Good Lookin' has a lot of cartoonish humor like a guy being caught up in a basketball game and chucked in a basketball hoop. I liked it all except for the ending, which got me a little confused, getting wrapped up in Crazy's hypnotic dreaming sequence dancing around and shooting antennea's and stuff. I wasn't sure when it ended. But nonetheless, I did like this movie, and I'd definitely check out more Bashki films.
    6TheFearmakers

    One Night Flashback

    Often compared to GREASE being that the main character, a suave/strutting New York City hood, resembles John Travolta, animation icon Ralph Bashki's HEY GOOD LOOKIN' is more Martin Scorsese's MEAN STREETS as an adult-oriented cartoon, and for two good reasons...

    The first is that the script and some of the artwork were created in the mid-70's, right after STREETS came out and where Bashki was to originally combine animated and live-action characters... leaving only a few genuine locations, from a dingy poolhall to Coney Island...

    But the main similarity to the Scorsese proto-mob classic is that Richard Romanus and David Proval, who played Michael and Tony, voice the main characters Vinnie... a suave, bragging lady's man... and his psychotic sidekick Crazy, resembling a circus clown on acid...

    While the visual animation is terrifically bright yet urban gritty... combining the director's COONSKIN and HEAVY TRAFFIC... it simply doesn't feel like a throwback to the 1950's, where the flashbacked story takes place...

    Instead centering more on the two buddies basically just hanging around, mostly with two girls, while the violent gang aspect is less than peripheral (attempting traits from THE WARRIORS to THE WANDERERS)... and a musical singing-group side-story feels out of place...

    So overall, Ralph Bashki's HEY GOOD LOOKIN' would have probably worked better as an animated short since... while there's plenty of noisy action... not much literal ground's really covered.

    Argumento

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    • Curiosidades
      Live-action footage was shot as part of Ralph Bakshi's original vision to have the film be a combination of live-action and animated characters (like ¿Quién engañó a Roger Rabbit? (1988)). The only animated characters were Vinnie, Rozzi, Crazy, and Eva. The rest of the cast were live action characters shot on live action sets. This version was finished in the late 1970s. When it was initially shown to Warner Brothers executives, they told Bakshi that they loved it. A week later, they told Bakshi that the idea of having live-action and animated characters in the same frame would never work, as it was too unbelievable. Warner executives also referenced the controversy from Bakshi's film "Coonskin" (1975). He was forced to throw out all the live action footage and reanimate it. Bakshi, having to pay himself, took five more years to complete it around other projects before its official release in 1982.
    • Pifias
      At 52m 44s (on the DVD) Rozzie's left breast's nipple & areola are noticeably out of her shirt; only the areola and nipple are her base skin color instead. Just a few seconds earlier, she had completely tucked her chest into her shirt.
    • Citas

      Crazy Shapiro: Well, sometimes I wanna draw a picture of it.

      Vinnie: A picture? Hey, Hey.. Norman Rockwell, draw me a picture here. Come on, come on. Draw me a picture.

      Crazy Shapiro: I can't draw. It's just, like, I "feel like it" sometimes.

      Vinnie: Hey listen to me, will ya? There's two-million faggots in Greenwich Village that "feel like it?" You know what I mean? You wanna be two-million and one, huh?

      Crazy Shapiro: Your mother!

    • Conexiones
      Referenced in La joven esposa (1994)

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    Preguntas frecuentes17

    • How long is Hey Good Lookin'?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • When was the soundtrack released?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 1 de octubre de 1982 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official site
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Эй, хорошо выглядишь
    • Empresa productora
      • Bakshi Productions
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      1 hora 16 minutos
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono

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