ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,1/10
8,8 k
MA NOTE
Bill Denny et Charlie Walters sont deux parieurs compulsifs qui n'ont en commun qu'une malchance incroyable.Bill Denny et Charlie Walters sont deux parieurs compulsifs qui n'ont en commun qu'une malchance incroyable.Bill Denny et Charlie Walters sont deux parieurs compulsifs qui n'ont en commun qu'une malchance incroyable.
- Prix
- 1 nomination au total
Vincent Palmieri
- First Bartender
- (as Vince Palmieri)
Sierra Pecheur
- Woman at Bar
- (as Sierra Bandit)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film is dedicated to actress Barbara Ruick who appears in the movie as a barmaid and who died on location during the filming. The end title card memorializing this reads: "FOR BARBARA 1933-1973". She was married to composer John Williams, who had worked with Robert Altman the previous year on "The Long Goodbye". It is to be noted that a great many female characters in the film are called "Barbara", possibly in tribute to Ruick.
- GaffesSome of the balls hanging from Charlie's sombrero keep changing position throughout the scene.
- Citations
Bill Denny: Goddamnit, lady, you don't throw oranges on an escalator!
- Autres versionsThe DVD cuts approximately three minutes worth of incidental scenes and bits, because the distributor was either unable or unwilling to reach an arrangement for music licensing.
- ConnexionsFeatured in The 78th Annual Academy Awards (2006)
Commentaire en vedette
As usual, the greatness in Altman comes in the unexpected nuances: the perfect Las Vegas lounge act, with Elliott Gould putting in his repartee like joining a musical theatre number onstage. George Segal "getting down to the oldies" may date the film, along with his sweaters, but this is an enjoyable and surprising movie that exposes the hollowness and joylessness of compulsion without getting all holy about it. The younger working girl's search for feeling with her endless succession of tricks is a more easily noticeable parallel to what emerges as the film's core: George Segal's character finding his capacity for change. The shenanigan with Gould, Segal and the cross dresser strays dangerously close to outtakes from MASH. The film's greatest moment, aside from the surprisingly shattering denouement coming two minutes later, is when Segal has run from $2000 to $82,000. He's rolling everything right at the craps table when this little pea brained moron comes up and puts $1 on the seven. Elliott Gould offers to throw a hundred dollar chip at her to make her go away (if you don't know, the seven ends the streak and betting on it in the middle of a streak should be punishable by water torture). Sure enough, Segal rolls a seven and the streak ends. Everyone looks at the little moron and she says, "I don't care, it's my birthday and I won!" and picks up her $2. That is classic. Looking at Segal's performance you can see shades of what Ben Gazzarra would do decades later in Todd Solondz's "Happiness" as another man who doesn't feel anything.
- mockturtle
- 27 déc. 2002
- Lien permanent
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Détails
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 10 900 000 $ US
- Durée1 heure 48 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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