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IMDbPro

Times Square

  • 1980
  • R
  • 1h 51min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,6/10
2,2 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Times Square (1980)
Two ill-matched teenage girls form a punk band and soon have New York City by its ears.
Reproducir trailer3:00
1 vídeo
60 imágenes
DramaMúsica

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaTwo ill-matched teenage girls form a punk band and soon have New York City by its ears.Two ill-matched teenage girls form a punk band and soon have New York City by its ears.Two ill-matched teenage girls form a punk band and soon have New York City by its ears.

  • Dirección
    • Allan Moyle
  • Guión
    • Jacob Brackman
    • Allan Moyle
    • Leanne Ungar
  • Reparto principal
    • Tim Curry
    • Trini Alvarado
    • Robin Johnson
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,6/10
    2,2 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Allan Moyle
    • Guión
      • Jacob Brackman
      • Allan Moyle
      • Leanne Ungar
    • Reparto principal
      • Tim Curry
      • Trini Alvarado
      • Robin Johnson
    • 55Reseñas de usuarios
    • 42Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:00
    Trailer

    Imágenes60

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    Reparto principal62

    Editar
    Tim Curry
    Tim Curry
    • Johnny LaGuardia
    Trini Alvarado
    Trini Alvarado
    • Pamela Pearl
    Robin Johnson
    Robin Johnson
    • Nicky Marotta
    Peter Coffield
    Peter Coffield
    • David Pearl
    Herbert Berghof
    Herbert Berghof
    • Dr. Huber
    David Margulies
    David Margulies
    • Dr. Zymansky
    Anna Maria Horsford
    Anna Maria Horsford
    • Rosie Washington
    Michael Margotta
    Michael Margotta
    • JoJo
    J.C. Quinn
    J.C. Quinn
    • Simon
    Miguel Pinero
    • Roberto
    Ronald 'Smokey' Stevens
    • Heavy
    Billy Mernit
    • Blondell
    Paul Sass
    • Blondell
    Artie Weinstein
    • Blondell
    Tim Choate
    Tim Choate
    • Eastman
    Elizabeth Peña
    Elizabeth Peña
    • Disco Hostess
    • (as Elizabeth Pena)
    Kathy Lojac
    • Nurse Joan
    Susan Merson
    Susan Merson
    • Nurse May
    • Dirección
      • Allan Moyle
    • Guión
      • Jacob Brackman
      • Allan Moyle
      • Leanne Ungar
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios55

    6,62.2K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    7littleshelagh

    If only they hadn't ruined Times Square

    People who love:

    • depictions of New York City's Times Square (and New York City, for that matter) as gritty-as-you please and before it was remade as a family theme park


    • Tim Curry (see him here as a late-night radio DJ speaking to nocturnal urban denizens in verse from the center of Times Square)


    • movies about youthful rebellion that are half tongue-in-cheek


    will get a kick out of this movie. I recommend it, especially if you don't require that you grow spiritually or expand your vocabulary every time you invest 90 minutes in a movie.
    10Kitale

    Truly A Classic!

    First of all, I saw the preview of the movie before it came out and it had the scene where Nicky silently urges Pammy to run away with her from the hospital, to The Ramones' "I Wanna Be Sedated". That alone blew me away. Then I bought the 2 LP soundtrack before the movie came out and listened to it over and over. By the time the movie premiered, I was more than ready for it. It showed for two weeks at a local theater and I saw it once a day every day for two weeks. I really had no life! I ordered the VHS tape sometime in the 80's and paid $60 for it. Now I own the DVD and enjoyed the commentary. I don't have the CD and wonder if The Cars' Dangerous Type is on it.

    Anyway, I don't have to tell you I loved it very much.

    I know the editing was clumsy and they cut out so many scenes that sometimes it didn't make any sense, but it is such a fun movie. the soundtrack is the best ever. The Ramones, Suzi Quatro, Patti Smith, Pretenders, Robin Johnson, Roxy Music, XTC, Desmond Child & Rouge, The Cars (not included on the soundtrack), etc. This movie introduced me to New Wave and punk. There are so many neat scenes in the movie: - The seduction - non-verbal with only Ramones singing "I Wanna Be Sedated - of Pammy by Nicky to leave the hospital. - The card game on the street "You snooze you lose" - Running through the adult theater. - The hilarious hold-up - Dropping TVs to The Cars' "Dangerous Type" - "Your Daughter Is One" - Any scene with Tim Curry - "Life, more than Television."

    • Both performances of "Damn Dog" - "Hit me again, you're a big man" - Pammy dancing to Lou Reed's Take A Walk On The Wild Side.


    • Waking up to Suzi Quatro's "Rock Hard". - Tim Curry dancing to "Rock Hard" - "I may be brave but you're the pretty one. I'm a freak of f**king nature"


    • Pammy dancing to Desmond Child & Rouge's "The Night Was Not". - Tim Curry's poetry. - The Sleaze Sisters and their imitators wearing trash bags.


    • The opening credits to Roxy Music's "Same Old Scene"


    • Stealing the ambulance and getting away with it. - "M-e-t-h-o-d-i-s-t- e-p-i-s-c-o-p-a-l" "Take a p*** you a**hole"


    Do I love this movie or what?
    7thao

    A flawed but good film with a rich soul and a desire for sincerity

    This was a huge favorite of mine as a teenager. I have been looking for a copy of the film for the longest time and finally found one in Germany. It's strange that it's so hard to get a copy of a big cult film like this one.

    The film captures well the essence of punk. It is about Nicky and Pamela, two teenage NYC girls. Nicky is from the streets with a dark past and from a broken home. She has serious anger issues but is street smart and has artistic talents. Pamela is from a rich (political) family, with the security that Nicky never had but suffers because her father does not understand her. She is a great poet and full of empathy but has never dared to live her life or take a chance. They meet at a hospital and run away. Together they start a mini punk renaissance in New York CIty.

    Into this mix comes a radio host called Johnny LaGuardia (played by Tim Curry) who got a letter from Pamela before she ran away. When he finds out that Pamela is living on the streets he decides to use it to get a small scoop but also to fight against the politics Pamela's father stands for. Johnny LaGuardia wants NYC to stay as it is while Pamela's father wants to clean up the streets. Tim Curry is the weakest link in this film. It's hard to tell if it is because of the script or because he or the director did not understand Johnny LaGuardiahe. Tim Curry plays him as some kind of prophet while everything points to him being a self serving, fame seeking egocentric megalomaniac. Tim Curry is at least never a convincing prophet and we never get the feeling that Tim Curry is playing him sarcastically either.

    Not every scene works in this film and it does not hold perfectly together but it has a very rich soul and a desire for sincerity which is very contagious. It also captures well the culture of NYC in the late 70s/early 80s and the reason why punk spoke to the youths. And it has one of the best sound track ever (including The Ramones, The Cure, XTC, Lou Reed, Gary Numan, Talking Heads, Garland Jeffreys, Joe Jackson, Suzi Quatro, Roxy Music, Patti Smith and The Pretenders.) and a lot of wonderful poetry, like this one:

    "Dear Daddy, I am not kidnapped. I am me-napped, I am soul-napped, I am Nicky-napped, I am happy-napped.

    We are having our own renaissance."
    8aimless-46

    I Love This Film

    I must confess up front to a favorable bias toward "Times Square". Just before its release I recall seeing the trailer and being won over by the scene in the hospital where Nikki begins eating the flowers. Since this was only about 10 seconds into the trailer it is fair to say that I immediately connected with the film. The same trailer is included with the DVD and I was happy to see that my memory of the event was accurate. After seeing the actual feature I went out and bought the double album, which I still own.

    I know more about films now than I did 25 years ago and thanks to the DVD commentary (by Director Allen Moyle and Robin Johnson-who played Nikki) I now know a lot about what went into the making of "Times Square". Unfortunately Robin's co-star Trini Alvarado (Pammy) was not available for the commentary. Although most viewers consider Nikki the central character, Nikki really needs Pammy to play off (much like Charlize Theron needs Christina Ricci's reaction shots in "Monster"), plus Pammy's scenes without Nikki are some of the best in the film and Pammy is the character who undergoes all the changes in the story, so you can't really say that one of them is more important than the other.

    "Times Square" suffered the same fate that Orson Welles' "The Magnificent Ambersons" did 40 years earlier. The producers took control of the final cut, re-shot some scenes, deleted others, and released a version that did not reflect the director's vision. Apparently no one has ever been able to find the deleted footage for either film. Although "Times Square" was butchered even more than "Ambersons", it seems to have been less damaged. In part that is because the originally intended version would never have approached the perfection of the original "Amberson's". Perhaps more importantly, "Times Square" has a Haskel Wexler gritty documentary style that simply transcends the narrative elements of the story. So changes to the storyline could not take away from its basic ambiance nor from its preservation of the look of 1979 Times Square-something that was even then a ghost world.

    Moyle now wishes he had not left the production after a dispute over including additional songs (so they could have a double album) because his continued presence would at least have had some damage control value. Producer Robert Stigwood ("Saturday Night Fever", "Saying Alive", "Jesus Christ Superstar", Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" ) was determined to release yet another of his musical exploitation films designed to make a lot of money on the soundtrack. This accounts for the inclusion of the completely inappropriate "Help Me" (The Bee Gees), the movie actually goes out on that song although they switch to something more appropriate midway through the credits.

    The commercialization of the film also included dropping all obvious hints of a lesbian relationship between the two girls. This was probably a commercial mistake because a public controversy might have actually increased attendance. Ironically, if the lesbian angle had remained Moyle would have been accused of exploitation because it is really unnecessary for the storyline. Likewise the script changes needed when Alvarado refused to dance topless saved Moyle from looking like an exploiter.

    While what survives has major continuity and character development issues, the core of the story may actually work better. Two emotionally damaged girls-polar opposites- bond and help each other. It ends with Altman's cool "Kansas City" twist where the seemingly weaker girl becomes protective of the tough girl.

    I like the way that Pamela's father finally gets it and backs away, letting her continue to help Nikki until she feels that Nikki can continue without her. You first realize how strong and together Nikki has made Pammy by the end of my favorite montage sequence. After ordering her out, Nikki trashes their room, tries unsuccessfully to commit suicide, and completely breaks down at the radio station. Inter-cut with this is a shot of Pammy standing outside her father's home. At the station Nikki is screaming "Pammy" over and over as they agreed to do earlier in the film in moments of total despair. The audio of these screams is extended into the morning after establishing shot of their dock building. Johnny comes into the seemingly empty room and lifts the blanket revealing a peacefully sleeping Pammy sucking her thumb-she has returned to help Nikki.

    Another highlight is the scene I already mentioned of Nikki eating the flowers in their hospital room. What makes this work is its point-of-view dynamic. Moyle artfully connects us to Pammy for the first time by allowing us to see Nikki from her POV. Later he places us back into Pammy's POV as Nikki non-verbally convinces Pammy to leave the hospital with her. The hospital exit scene only works credibility-wise because the first scene set us up for it.

    Finally there is Nikki's "people dig dyin on me" line.
    7TheLittleSongbird

    Surprisingly entertaining!

    I watched the whole movie on YouTube and thought this is actually really entertaining. The critics complained about it being overblown. I disagree... The script is a bit patchy in places, same with the direction, but I've seen a lot worse, believe me. The soundtrack was what made this movie, it was fantastic. I prefer classical music, but this music was good because of the content and it was catchy.

    The performances were really good also. Tim Curry is really cool as Johnny LaGuardia, who sort of succumbs to a change of heart. One minute he is all wild, then he is comforting Pamela. The girl who played Pamela was also convincing, though not as good as her co-star Robin Johnson, who was easily the best actress in the movie. Their scenes while corny at times were on the most part touching. When Nicki suffers a breakdown, I had tears in her eyes, because she was so convincing. Why is she no longer acting?

    One thing that gets me mad, Why is the rating so low? It isn't actually that bad. Sure it mayn't be to everyone's taste but it is definitely the most underrated of the 1980s movies.

    7/10 in respect to the players. Bethany Cox (I wish I could give it higher but I've only seen it once)

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      This movie was inspired by a diary that Writer and Director Allan Moyle found in a secondhand couch that he bought. The diary was from a young mentally disturbed woman that featured words and drawings about her life on the streets.
    • Pifias
      In the ambulance, Pamela Pearl turns the volume knob but the volume of the music does not change.
    • Citas

      Dr. Zymansky: Meth-o-dist Epis-co-pal.

      Nicky Marotta: Take... a... piss... you... ass-hole!

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Vintage Video: Times Square (2020)
    • Banda sonora
      You Can't Hurry Love
      Composed by Brian Holland (as Holland), Lamont Dozier (as Dozier), Eddie Holland (as Holland)

      Performed by D.L. Byron

      Courtey of Arista Records, Inc. and Stone Agate Music Division

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    Preguntas frecuentes

    • How long is Times Square?
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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 17 de octubre de 1980 (Estados Unidos)
    • Países de origen
      • Estados Unidos
      • Reino Unido
    • Sitio oficial
      • Network DVD
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • She's Got the Shakes
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Times Square, Manhattan, Nueva York, Nueva York, Estados Unidos(main location)
    • Empresas productoras
      • Butterfly Valley N.Y.
      • EMI Films
      • Robert Stigwood Organization (RSO)
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • 5.000.000 US$ (estimación)
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      1 hora 51 minutos
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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