AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,2/10
1,3 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaLawyer Stephen Blume, specialized in divorces, lives a paradoxical situation when, having his own marriage break up, is still in love with his ex-wife.Lawyer Stephen Blume, specialized in divorces, lives a paradoxical situation when, having his own marriage break up, is still in love with his ex-wife.Lawyer Stephen Blume, specialized in divorces, lives a paradoxical situation when, having his own marriage break up, is still in love with his ex-wife.
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- 1 indicação no total
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe role which ultimately went to Marsha Mason was originally given to another actress that was going to shoot another film. She called to ask the director, who declined, to push production of the film back for a couple of months. Mazursky hung up the phone and contacted his casting director, asking about Mason who just so happened to be at the casting office. When the actress walked in, the director hired her on the spot.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen Cindy Chase is calling the swinging couple that she knows, a boom shadow moves along the lampshade.
- Citações
Nina Blume: Are you happy?
Stephen Blume: I'm just not miserable. What more could anybody ask for?
- ConexõesFeatured in De Olhos Bem Fechados (1999)
- Trilhas sonorasChester The Goat
Music & Lyrics by Kris Kristofferson
Avaliação em destaque
I really liked this movie but then I enjoy many of the romantic comedies from the late 1960's and early 1970's that sort of explore relationships and challenge sexual and social mores. This is one of those but very easy to watch and enjoy, until a particular scene that is. And I'm not sure I'd watch it again.
I especially enjoyed watch Kris Kristofferson play Elmo Cole, Nina's adorable love interest following her divorce from Blume. Blume attempts to triangulate himself with Elmo to gain access to his ex wife, a super gross move that is very real life and kind of scary, too.
For the viewer it's satisfying to see the triangulation because Kristofferson is just gorgeous and adorable as Cole, but it's also a bit ominous the way Cole is being used; I'm not sure viewers who haven't been through that personally would recognize it- I don't think Blume is so smitten by Cole in an innocent way; he's using him for access to Nina.
Maybe it's good that this wasn't just a "light-hearted" look at a couple post divorce; it transcends much other similar fare in that way. . .
Throughout the movie we may see Blume as lovelorn, remorseful, etc. we may see Elmo as just a cute guy who doesn't take anything too seriously, and see Nina as a woman whose independence is budding, until one scene which picks up on the ickyness of Blume's forced triangulation and reveals to the viewer, yeah; it's just not that Elmo Cole is so likable; Blume really is that controlling and predatory.
Following that scene we can see Elmo is more than just a pretty face and that he really loved and cared for Nina.
Don't want to give too much away, but I'd have preferred a different ending. I think this film successfully relays that: women's movement or not, women still don't really have power over our own lives in the way men do.
If you're a woman who has been abused or stalked by an ex lover, which really isn't "funny" at all, you may not find this to your liking- not that it focuses so much on that, but it's just a lot of the film is Blume trying to regain access to Nina through Cole and there is a point where it goes from light-hearted to something more dark.
I especially enjoyed watch Kris Kristofferson play Elmo Cole, Nina's adorable love interest following her divorce from Blume. Blume attempts to triangulate himself with Elmo to gain access to his ex wife, a super gross move that is very real life and kind of scary, too.
For the viewer it's satisfying to see the triangulation because Kristofferson is just gorgeous and adorable as Cole, but it's also a bit ominous the way Cole is being used; I'm not sure viewers who haven't been through that personally would recognize it- I don't think Blume is so smitten by Cole in an innocent way; he's using him for access to Nina.
Maybe it's good that this wasn't just a "light-hearted" look at a couple post divorce; it transcends much other similar fare in that way. . .
Throughout the movie we may see Blume as lovelorn, remorseful, etc. we may see Elmo as just a cute guy who doesn't take anything too seriously, and see Nina as a woman whose independence is budding, until one scene which picks up on the ickyness of Blume's forced triangulation and reveals to the viewer, yeah; it's just not that Elmo Cole is so likable; Blume really is that controlling and predatory.
Following that scene we can see Elmo is more than just a pretty face and that he really loved and cared for Nina.
Don't want to give too much away, but I'd have preferred a different ending. I think this film successfully relays that: women's movement or not, women still don't really have power over our own lives in the way men do.
If you're a woman who has been abused or stalked by an ex lover, which really isn't "funny" at all, you may not find this to your liking- not that it focuses so much on that, but it's just a lot of the film is Blume trying to regain access to Nina through Cole and there is a point where it goes from light-hearted to something more dark.
- timcurryisgod
- 17 de nov. de 2018
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- How long is Blume in Love?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 2.600.508
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