Alvy Singer, un comediante judío divorciado, reflexiona sobre su relación con su examante Annie Hall, una aspirante a cantante de club nocturno, que terminó abruptamente, al igual que sus an... Leer todoAlvy Singer, un comediante judío divorciado, reflexiona sobre su relación con su examante Annie Hall, una aspirante a cantante de club nocturno, que terminó abruptamente, al igual que sus anteriores matrimonios.Alvy Singer, un comediante judío divorciado, reflexiona sobre su relación con su examante Annie Hall, una aspirante a cantante de club nocturno, que terminó abruptamente, al igual que sus anteriores matrimonios.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Ganó 4 premios Óscar
- 32 premios y 9 nominaciones en total
- Duane Hall
- (as Christopher Wlaken)
- Alvy's Mom
- (as Joan Newman)
- Joey Nichols
- (as Hy Ansel)
Reseñas destacadas
Allen is playing himself in Annie Hall, a successful comedian who spends most of his time psychoanalyzing himself and all around him. He can't make any relationship permanent.
Along comes Keaton and it looks like this is the one, but there's always pitfalls when you deal with a walking neurosis like Allen.
Both Woody and Diane fit so naturally in their parts you think you are peeking in on a home movie. Annie Hall won for Best Picture, Best Actress for Diane Keaton, and Best Director and Best Original Screenplay for Woody Allen. Best in the supporting cast is Tony Roberts as Allen's sidekick actor buddy.
This really is a timeless classic. It's humor has no temporal limits. Annie Hall can be made today with the same script and you wouldn't lose a scintilla of humor.
Annie and Alvy's relationship is an unlikely one. She's a Midwestern girl, straight out of white-bread Wisconsin; he's a life-long New York Jew who grew up (literally) under the Coney Island roller coaster. He's been seeing a therapist for the past 16 years; she only `needs' one once she meets him. She's an extroverted aspiring singer; he's an introverted, world-despising imp. Yet Allen and Keaton are so perfect in their roles, they improbably make this couple one of the most memorable ever.
The plot revolves around Alvy's chronicles of loves lost and a retrospective on his relationship with Annie, with whom he has since parted ways. At the end of the film, we see Alvy try his hand at stage-writing-he writes a play about his relationship with Annie, but gives it a happy ending. Yes, Annie and Alvy don't have a fairy tale ending to their relationship, but Alvy certainly wishes they had, even though he learns to live with the acknowledgment it has failed.
The best part of Annie Hall is its incredible screenplay-the best ever to be written. Not a word is wasted nor a line unquotable. Except here, while Allen's early films had thrived on streams of one-liners, Allen doesn't go for cheap laughs-each line is simultaneously hilarious and poignant. Everything is part of a greater whole. We laugh because it's funny, but there's a greater dynamic at work in Annie Hall. This is a story not exclusively about a relationship between two people, but also a musing on 70's politics, drugs, East Coast/West Coast rivalry, narcissism, religion, celebrity, and several other topics with which Allen deals with extraordinary ease.
Yet Annie Hall would not be among my favorite films of all-time if it were just Woody Allen ranting and raving about what he likes and dislikes. There are other Allen films that serve that purpose, i.e. Deconstructing Harry, and they're not nearly as good. What separates Annie Hall is its grace, the believable chemistry between Keaton and Allen, the unique direction (ranging from split-screens to cartoon imagery to on-screen subtitles of what the actors are thinking), but mostly because it's the rare film to find a perfect balance between sheer entertainment, humor, and poignancy.
When the dust had settled, Diane Keaton deservedly won an Academy Award for her performance, Allen took home Oscars for direction and writing, and the film beat out Star Wars for Best Picture, which most people consider a complete sham. Evidently, those people didn't see Annie Hall, for if they had, they'd recognize that the acting, writing, and even the direction in Star Wars can't hold a candle to Annie Hall, one of the best films ever made.
10/10
Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked
Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesTruman Capote: The passerby Alvy refers to as "the winner of the Truman Capote look-alike contest" is, in fact, the real Truman Capote.
- PifiasIn the final credits, Christopher Walken's name is misspelled, reading as "Christopher Wlaken".
- Citas
Alvy Singer: Hey listen, gimme a kiss.
Annie Hall: Really?
Alvy Singer: Yeah, why not, because we're just gonna go home later, right, and then there's gonna be all that tension, we've never kissed before and I'll never know when to make the right move or anything. So we'll kiss now and get it over with, and then we'll go eat. We'll digest our food better.
- Versiones alternativasIn the beginning of the film, Alvy Singer paraphrases what is ostensibly a quote from comedian Groucho Marx. When the movie was dubbed in socialist Hungary, the quote was instead attributed to Buster Keaton at the strict insistence of the dubbing studio, for fear that audiences might confuse Groucho Marx with philosopher and socialist figure Karl Marx.
- ConexionesEdited into Intimate Portrait: Diane Keaton (2001)
- Banda sonoraSeems Like Old Times
Music by Carmen Lombardo
Lyrics by John Jacob Loeb
Sung by Diane Keaton (uncredited), accompanied by Artie Butler (uncredited)
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Anhedonia
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Beekman Cinema - 1254 2nd Avenue, Manhattan, Nueva York, Nueva York, Estados Unidos(Cinema showing Ingmar Bergman's Face to Face - Alvy waits for Annie and is recognised from television)
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 4.000.000 US$ (estimación)
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 38.251.425 US$
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 38.289.445 US$