Une femme et sa fille émigrent du Mexique pour une vie meilleure en Amérique, où elles commencent à travailler pour une famille où le patriarche est un chef nouvellement célèbre et son épous... Tout lireUne femme et sa fille émigrent du Mexique pour une vie meilleure en Amérique, où elles commencent à travailler pour une famille où le patriarche est un chef nouvellement célèbre et son épouse est fragilisée.Une femme et sa fille émigrent du Mexique pour une vie meilleure en Amérique, où elles commencent à travailler pour une famille où le patriarche est un chef nouvellement célèbre et son épouse est fragilisée.
- Prix
- 5 victoires et 15 nominations au total
Ian Donovan Hyland
- Georgie
- (as Ian Hyland)
Cecilia Suárez
- Monica
- (as Cecilia Suarez)
Avis en vedette
I started watching this just hoping for a few laughs, this being an Adam Sandler movie. Instead, I found a deep story dealing with issues relevant to real life: what are the values that define you as a person? What is acceptable and what is not? Why one has to draw the distinction between what feels good and what is good?
Spanglish is a good movie backed up by some great performances by Paz Vega and Adam Sandler. Tea Leoni performs her role well and Cloris Leachman is an able support, at times adding a flavor of dry comedy.
I won't reveal the plot. All I'll say is it is worth your time. A funny movie with a solid story and something to take away later.
Spanglish is a good movie backed up by some great performances by Paz Vega and Adam Sandler. Tea Leoni performs her role well and Cloris Leachman is an able support, at times adding a flavor of dry comedy.
I won't reveal the plot. All I'll say is it is worth your time. A funny movie with a solid story and something to take away later.
There is most certainly something in Spanglish for every member of your family! The cast is fabulous. Spaniard Paz Vega appears quite natural and convincing as Mexican Flor Moreno. Adam Sandler shows definite versatility as both a dramatic and comedic actor. Tea Leoni, here almost outshines everyone in her role of a rather endearing but neurotic American housewife. And the young, Shelbie Bruce, playing the role of Flors daughter, Cristina, waxes totally bilingual/bicultural.
However, do not let your pre-viewing expectations get too high! Regardless of being a must see film for all Hispanics who live, have lived or who have had an extended stay in the U. S., Spanglish does have its faults! Producer/director/writer, James L. Brooks, despite having directed such classics as Broadcast News, As Good As It Gets and Terms of Endearment, seems that here there are moments he became too enamored of his own work, causing some excesses. The film drags a bit at over 2 hours. It would have been a more enjoyable film if Brooks had left at least 10 or 15 minutes on the cutting room floor.
In most of the standard areas one eveluates regarding the production values used in making Spanglish... It seems that just about all of them are quite acceptable. Probably even a tad better than most!
However, Spanglish does suffer from moments of rather lackluster script-writing and direction of its principle characters, with too many mugging facial close-ups. These exaggerated expressions often did not seem the least bit natural. Spanglish also would like to convince us that someone can go from a beginner in English to someone with tremendous proficiency in a breezy 2 or 3 months! That seems like quite a lot of Suspension of Disbelief! If it were that easy, we would all speak five languages, right? Despite the few weaknesses highlighted here, Spanglish is guaranteed to impact you a lot! 7*******
This review was redacted after going over the IMDb guidelines for submitting Reviews with the utmost intensive and extreme care. I am certain that it meets all the standards and points mentioned therein. So most certainly...I hope this Review will meet with Your approval and considered to be Helpful.....Enjoy!
However, do not let your pre-viewing expectations get too high! Regardless of being a must see film for all Hispanics who live, have lived or who have had an extended stay in the U. S., Spanglish does have its faults! Producer/director/writer, James L. Brooks, despite having directed such classics as Broadcast News, As Good As It Gets and Terms of Endearment, seems that here there are moments he became too enamored of his own work, causing some excesses. The film drags a bit at over 2 hours. It would have been a more enjoyable film if Brooks had left at least 10 or 15 minutes on the cutting room floor.
In most of the standard areas one eveluates regarding the production values used in making Spanglish... It seems that just about all of them are quite acceptable. Probably even a tad better than most!
However, Spanglish does suffer from moments of rather lackluster script-writing and direction of its principle characters, with too many mugging facial close-ups. These exaggerated expressions often did not seem the least bit natural. Spanglish also would like to convince us that someone can go from a beginner in English to someone with tremendous proficiency in a breezy 2 or 3 months! That seems like quite a lot of Suspension of Disbelief! If it were that easy, we would all speak five languages, right? Despite the few weaknesses highlighted here, Spanglish is guaranteed to impact you a lot! 7*******
This review was redacted after going over the IMDb guidelines for submitting Reviews with the utmost intensive and extreme care. I am certain that it meets all the standards and points mentioned therein. So most certainly...I hope this Review will meet with Your approval and considered to be Helpful.....Enjoy!
Adam Sandler returns to romantic comedy/drama in Spanglish, written and directed by James L. Brooks, who has fine tuned the genre with excellent scripts and sensitive acting (Terms of Endearment, As Good as It Gets). It doesn't quite measure up to his best work, but that's still saying something.
Deborah Clasky (Tea Leoni) hires a housekeeper/cook, Flor Moreno (Paz Vega), who doesn't speak English. Flor, a single mother, has a teenaged daughter, Cristina, and the two eventually move into a summer beach house with Leoni, her two kids, and husband, John Clasky (Adam Sandler), a world renowned chef. Deborah is a nervous, controlling type A personality, who has recently lost her job and begins to question her worth. Her subsequent actions such as lowering the self esteem of her overweight daughter, Bernice, and doting over Flor's daughter without mother's consent starts a sequence of events that pulls the two families apart and draw two frustrated, lonely people together, namely Sandler and Vega. They connect, of course, but what they do about it forms the focus of the storyline. At times this film thematically recalls classics like Roman Holiday or Brief Encounter.
The film begins in such a manner to make one think that it isn't anything special but builds its story and characters into solid foundations until you begin to care about what happens. This is almost two films thematically. There is the developing love story between Sandler and Vega, and there is also the story of Vega, the mother, and her daughter. This is not just a family torn apart or a budding, forbidden romance, it is also the core mother-daughter dynamic seen though the teenaged daughters and their respective mothers. The narrative from Cristina's point of view recalls I Remember Mama. And let us not forget the relationship of Deborah and her own mother (Cloris Leachman-a Brooks alumnus from The Mary Tyler Moore Show). The ending is a bit open ended for one storyline while the other is resolved quite nicely.
At times, the dialogue (a good portion is in Spanish and cleverly translated or communicated through context without subtitles) is crisp and sharp and other times, the story seems to tease without delivering and seemingly loses track until it gets reeled back by a brilliant line or two. Some of the situations seem a bit forced or going nowhere but Brooks has spoiled his audiences with his top flight writing over the years. It is remarkable that he can show lesser filmmakers how to write and construct a superior screenplay about people that an audience cares about. He makes stories about people that matter.
Tea Leoni is good in her role as the neurotic housewife who becomes self absorbed. At times her character downright grates on the nerves, and you wonder how a man like Sandler's compassionate, loving husband/father, puts up with her behavior. Sandler does fine with his down-to-earth, dramatic role which contrasts with his quirky romantic in Punch Drunk Love. One wonders what a stronger persona like Brooks alumnus Jack Nicholson or even Tom Hanks would have done with his role. All the supporting roles are effective as usual. Leachman registers as the mother who consoles her adult daughter and is the voice of reason despite being the family alcoholic. Even the family dog becomes a small but noteworthy supporting character. There is also an amusing cameo by Thomas Haden Church who plays a character not unlike his more substantial role in Sideways.
Production values are strong across the board particularly in the cinematography by John Seale. But it's really all about the writing and the acting. The film feels like it wants to be something more but settles for the quality of a moderate Brooks film like Broadcast News. The film will elicit laughs and some tears but it is consistently engaging. Wouldn't it be nice if more films could even reach that level of writing and acting? Is this a great film? No. It is merely a well written story, and that's pretty good on its own.
Deborah Clasky (Tea Leoni) hires a housekeeper/cook, Flor Moreno (Paz Vega), who doesn't speak English. Flor, a single mother, has a teenaged daughter, Cristina, and the two eventually move into a summer beach house with Leoni, her two kids, and husband, John Clasky (Adam Sandler), a world renowned chef. Deborah is a nervous, controlling type A personality, who has recently lost her job and begins to question her worth. Her subsequent actions such as lowering the self esteem of her overweight daughter, Bernice, and doting over Flor's daughter without mother's consent starts a sequence of events that pulls the two families apart and draw two frustrated, lonely people together, namely Sandler and Vega. They connect, of course, but what they do about it forms the focus of the storyline. At times this film thematically recalls classics like Roman Holiday or Brief Encounter.
The film begins in such a manner to make one think that it isn't anything special but builds its story and characters into solid foundations until you begin to care about what happens. This is almost two films thematically. There is the developing love story between Sandler and Vega, and there is also the story of Vega, the mother, and her daughter. This is not just a family torn apart or a budding, forbidden romance, it is also the core mother-daughter dynamic seen though the teenaged daughters and their respective mothers. The narrative from Cristina's point of view recalls I Remember Mama. And let us not forget the relationship of Deborah and her own mother (Cloris Leachman-a Brooks alumnus from The Mary Tyler Moore Show). The ending is a bit open ended for one storyline while the other is resolved quite nicely.
At times, the dialogue (a good portion is in Spanish and cleverly translated or communicated through context without subtitles) is crisp and sharp and other times, the story seems to tease without delivering and seemingly loses track until it gets reeled back by a brilliant line or two. Some of the situations seem a bit forced or going nowhere but Brooks has spoiled his audiences with his top flight writing over the years. It is remarkable that he can show lesser filmmakers how to write and construct a superior screenplay about people that an audience cares about. He makes stories about people that matter.
Tea Leoni is good in her role as the neurotic housewife who becomes self absorbed. At times her character downright grates on the nerves, and you wonder how a man like Sandler's compassionate, loving husband/father, puts up with her behavior. Sandler does fine with his down-to-earth, dramatic role which contrasts with his quirky romantic in Punch Drunk Love. One wonders what a stronger persona like Brooks alumnus Jack Nicholson or even Tom Hanks would have done with his role. All the supporting roles are effective as usual. Leachman registers as the mother who consoles her adult daughter and is the voice of reason despite being the family alcoholic. Even the family dog becomes a small but noteworthy supporting character. There is also an amusing cameo by Thomas Haden Church who plays a character not unlike his more substantial role in Sideways.
Production values are strong across the board particularly in the cinematography by John Seale. But it's really all about the writing and the acting. The film feels like it wants to be something more but settles for the quality of a moderate Brooks film like Broadcast News. The film will elicit laughs and some tears but it is consistently engaging. Wouldn't it be nice if more films could even reach that level of writing and acting? Is this a great film? No. It is merely a well written story, and that's pretty good on its own.
This is a story about an undocumented Mexican woman named Flor (Paz Vega) who moves to the U.S. with her daughter. The story is told via flashback, through voice over by the daughter Cristina (Shelbie Bruce), who wants to attend a prestigious university.
As one might expect, there is a culture clash between Flor and the white family that employs her services for household help--especially as personified by Deborah (Tea Leoni), the mother. It should be noted that Leoni and the entire cast give fantastic performances, even if some of the portrayals are written as caricatures. Adam Sandler, who plays the father, John, is particularly fun to watch, because he mostly plays his character straight, without his usual comedic embellishments. I was most impressed by Sarah Steele, who plays the teenage daughter of Leoni and Sandler.
Much of the story is intended to be comedy, though it deals with social issues that go well beyond the disconnect caused by the fact that the two mothers do not speak a common language. The film has a definite perspective about the various cultural issues it addresses, but it is only partially convincing in its arguments.
I found the film to be disjointed, but that did not bother me. There is so much to appreciate in the story of the two families.
As one might expect, there is a culture clash between Flor and the white family that employs her services for household help--especially as personified by Deborah (Tea Leoni), the mother. It should be noted that Leoni and the entire cast give fantastic performances, even if some of the portrayals are written as caricatures. Adam Sandler, who plays the father, John, is particularly fun to watch, because he mostly plays his character straight, without his usual comedic embellishments. I was most impressed by Sarah Steele, who plays the teenage daughter of Leoni and Sandler.
Much of the story is intended to be comedy, though it deals with social issues that go well beyond the disconnect caused by the fact that the two mothers do not speak a common language. The film has a definite perspective about the various cultural issues it addresses, but it is only partially convincing in its arguments.
I found the film to be disjointed, but that did not bother me. There is so much to appreciate in the story of the two families.
Spanglish navigates between drama and comedy with a strong cast and moments that capture the complexity of human relationships. However, its narrative lacks a clear storyline, unfolding more like a mosaic of interactions and conflicts among its characters.
The story is narrated by Cristina, a 17-year-old girl, as a tender recollection of her mother, Flor. Through her Princeton admission essay, the film explores her family's immigration journey, adding layers of emotional manipulation to the narrative. Flor, who learns English to better connect with the family she works for, brings invaluable common sense to a household filled with chaos.
Deborah (Téa Leoni), meanwhile, is a neurotic woman going through an identity crisis after losing her job as a commercial designer. While her behavior often crosses the line-like when she buys her daughter Bernice smaller-sized clothes to "encourage" her to lose weight-Leoni manages to make Deborah humanly endearing, even when she constantly oversteps boundaries. Her lack of consideration gives Flor an opportunity to shine with her intelligence, while Bernice and John (Adam Sandler) eloquently express their indignation, allowing the audience to draw its own conclusions.
Adam Sandler delivers a surprisingly authentic performance as John, a chef hailed as the best in America by The New York Times. While one might expect his character to be a perfectionist tyrant with anger issues, John turns out to be a sweet and genuine man-reminiscent of the lovable characters Sandler is known for. His moments with his daughter Bernice, portrayed with freshness by Sarah Steele in her film debut, are heartfelt and stand out as some of the most memorable in the movie.
Though Flor is endearing as a mother and central figure in the story, Paz Vega's character occasionally feels unreal in her reactions. Some of her decisions seem overly idealized, which detracts slightly from the credibility of her role in such an intimate and human context.
Despite its gaps in plausibility, Spanglish remains compelling, mainly because of the emotional connection it fosters between its characters and the audience. While it's not always a cohesive story, its ability to depict the ups and downs of family life and cultural tensions makes it a worthwhile journey.
The story is narrated by Cristina, a 17-year-old girl, as a tender recollection of her mother, Flor. Through her Princeton admission essay, the film explores her family's immigration journey, adding layers of emotional manipulation to the narrative. Flor, who learns English to better connect with the family she works for, brings invaluable common sense to a household filled with chaos.
Deborah (Téa Leoni), meanwhile, is a neurotic woman going through an identity crisis after losing her job as a commercial designer. While her behavior often crosses the line-like when she buys her daughter Bernice smaller-sized clothes to "encourage" her to lose weight-Leoni manages to make Deborah humanly endearing, even when she constantly oversteps boundaries. Her lack of consideration gives Flor an opportunity to shine with her intelligence, while Bernice and John (Adam Sandler) eloquently express their indignation, allowing the audience to draw its own conclusions.
Adam Sandler delivers a surprisingly authentic performance as John, a chef hailed as the best in America by The New York Times. While one might expect his character to be a perfectionist tyrant with anger issues, John turns out to be a sweet and genuine man-reminiscent of the lovable characters Sandler is known for. His moments with his daughter Bernice, portrayed with freshness by Sarah Steele in her film debut, are heartfelt and stand out as some of the most memorable in the movie.
Though Flor is endearing as a mother and central figure in the story, Paz Vega's character occasionally feels unreal in her reactions. Some of her decisions seem overly idealized, which detracts slightly from the credibility of her role in such an intimate and human context.
Despite its gaps in plausibility, Spanglish remains compelling, mainly because of the emotional connection it fosters between its characters and the audience. While it's not always a cohesive story, its ability to depict the ups and downs of family life and cultural tensions makes it a worthwhile journey.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe chefs and cooks used in the kitchen scene are actual Le Cordon Bleu students from the nearby cooking school in Pasadena, California.
- GaffesWhen Deborah is picked up by Mike - The Realtor (played by Thomas Haden Church) and he backs his Audi out of the driveway, there is no license plate on the car. In the next shot, it suddenly has one.
- Citations
Flor Moreno: Is what you want for yourself to become someone very different than me?
- Générique farfeluNo actors were mistreated in the making of this film.
- ConnexionsFeatured in HBO First Look: The Making of 'Spanglish' (2004)
- Bandes originalesHistoria de un Amor
Music by Carlos Eleta Almaran
Lyrics by Carlos Eleta Almaran
Performed by Luis Miguel
Courtesy of Warner Music Latina
By arrangement with Warner Strategic Marketing
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 80 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 42 726 869 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 8 817 853 $ US
- 19 déc. 2004
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 55 470 154 $ US
- Durée2 heures 11 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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What was the official certification given to Spanglish: J'en perds mon latin! (2004) in India?
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