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IMDbPro

El gran Gatsby

Título original: The Great Gatsby
  • 2013
  • 12
  • 2h 23min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,2/10
633 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
728
134
Leonardo DiCaprio in El gran Gatsby (2013)
A Midwestern war veteran finds himself drawn to the past and lifestyle of his millionaire neighbor.
Reproducir trailer1:33
25 vídeos
99+ imágenes
Drama de épocaRomance trágicoTragediaDramaRomance

Un escritor y corredor de bolsa, Nick, se siente atraído por el pasado y el estilo de vida de su vecino millonario, Jay Gatsby.Un escritor y corredor de bolsa, Nick, se siente atraído por el pasado y el estilo de vida de su vecino millonario, Jay Gatsby.Un escritor y corredor de bolsa, Nick, se siente atraído por el pasado y el estilo de vida de su vecino millonario, Jay Gatsby.

  • Director/a
    • Baz Luhrmann
  • Guionistas
    • Baz Luhrmann
    • Craig Pearce
    • F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • Estrellas
    • Leonardo DiCaprio
    • Carey Mulligan
    • Joel Edgerton
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,2/10
    633 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    728
    134
    • Director/a
      • Baz Luhrmann
    • Guionistas
      • Baz Luhrmann
      • Craig Pearce
      • F. Scott Fitzgerald
    • Estrellas
      • Leonardo DiCaprio
      • Carey Mulligan
      • Joel Edgerton
    • 1.1KReseñas de usuarios
    • 376Reseñas de críticos
    • 55Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 2 premios Óscar
      • 51 premios y 86 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos25

    International Version #2
    Trailer 1:33
    International Version #2
    Main Trailer
    Trailer 2:44
    Main Trailer
    Main Trailer
    Trailer 2:44
    Main Trailer
    International Version
    Trailer 2:19
    International Version
    U.S. Version #1
    Trailer 2:28
    U.S. Version #1
    No. 1
    Trailer 2:28
    No. 1
    The Rise of Carey Mulligan
    Clip 3:30
    The Rise of Carey Mulligan

    Imágenes241

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    Reparto Principal99+

    Editar
    Leonardo DiCaprio
    Leonardo DiCaprio
    • Jay Gatsby
    Carey Mulligan
    Carey Mulligan
    • Daisy Buchanan
    Joel Edgerton
    Joel Edgerton
    • Tom Buchanan
    Lisa Adam
    Lisa Adam
    • Weeping…
    Frank Aldridge
    • Well Dressed Male Witness - Wilson's Garage
    Amitabh Bachchan
    Amitabh Bachchan
    • Meyer Wolfshiem
    Steve Bisley
    Steve Bisley
    • Dan Cody
    Richard Carter
    Richard Carter
    • Herzog
    Jason Clarke
    Jason Clarke
    • George Wilson
    Adelaide Clemens
    Adelaide Clemens
    • Catherine
    Vince Colosimo
    Vince Colosimo
    • Michaelis
    Max Cullen
    Max Cullen
    • Owl Eyes
    Mal Day
    • The Boss-Probity Trust
    Elizabeth Debicki
    Elizabeth Debicki
    • Jordan Baker
    Emmanuel Ekwensi
    • Jazz Player
    • (as Emmanuel Ekwenski)
    Eden Falk
    • Mr. McKee
    Isla Fisher
    Isla Fisher
    • Myrtle Wilson
    Emily Foreman
    • Pammy
    • Director/a
      • Baz Luhrmann
    • Guionistas
      • Baz Luhrmann
      • Craig Pearce
      • F. Scott Fitzgerald
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios1.1K

    7,2633K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    6jess-a-reviewer

    Film was good except the annoying music/soundtrack

    I like Luhrmann's take on films and soundtracks usually - but this film's strange annoying choice of music style was really off-putting. It was so mismatched like they were trying to MTV it with advertising Coke or something mainstream. Shame, would be great to see this with a soundtrack that suits the style of the storytelling/theme.
    7bkoganbing

    Good film, bad musical score

    Only a poor soundtrack filled with contemporary music spoiled this latest version of The Great Gatsby for me. In a tradition of blond Gatsbys, Leonardo DiCaprio steps into the shoes of Alan Ladd and Robert Redford in essaying the part of the social climbing bootlegger from the Roaring Twenties. All that will make Jay Gatsby's life complete is the love of Daisy Buchanan whom he courted before his service in World War I. The problem is that she's slightly married to upper class Tom Buchanan. Daisy is played by Carey Mulligan and Buchanan is played by Australian player Joel Edgerton.

    In fact except for DiCaprio and Tobey Maguire as Nick Carraway the whole cast is mostly Australian which is to be expected since most of the production was shot there. I have to say that the Australian studio did a marvelous job in recreating New York of the Twenties and the ritzy and glamorous part of Long Island where most of the story takes place.

    As the book is written in the person of Nick Carraway it was also a good move to have Maguire narrate the story. Tobey's narration gives us the background of the story and Carraway's character functions as he should.

    Leonardo DiCaprio does a wonderful job playing the social climbing Gatsby who weaves his own legend as he gives fabled parties on Long Island where the illegal liquor flows freely. Beneath his self assurance there is a bit of a frightened edge like this is all going to be taken away from him so enjoy while you can.

    Perhaps the producers thought that no one would see a film with old music in it. There is some there, Gershwin's Rhapsody In Blue comes to mind. But the contemporary music on the soundtrack is jarring and out of place.

    But overall this is a good telling of F. Scott Fitzgerald's tale of the Roaring Twenties.
    9copyright908

    Nothing exceeds like excess

    THE GREAT GATSBY There is no movie I have been more prepared to dislike than this one. How dare some Aussie come over here and tell us about the meaning of one of the great works of American literature. Especially this Aussie, Baz Luhrmann, who is known to overload, over-hype and overcook his theatrical product into a glittery miasma of small meaning and little consequence. (i.e. Moulin Rouge)

    But I was wrong.

    Jay Gatsby has achieved success in a fashion beyond most imaginations, excepting his own. In true Horatio Alger tradition he has worked hard to improve himself, but when his past creeps up on him and threatens his well crafted self image, he suavely and effortlessly changes it, his past, and he inhabits the change until it becomes the reality. He is the self made American man in every way. He is the American success myth both personified and perverted.

    Unlike Alger's heroes, he has not followed the straight and narrow. He has acquired his fabulous wealth through bootlegging and stock swindles.

    This belief, that he can change his past, to correct it as it were, has given him a veneer of respectability that has put him in good stead with his underworld connections. But it is not for them that Gatsby has made this remarkable metamorphosis. No, he did everything, and I mean everything, for the love of a woman.

    Daisy was Gatsby's great love, but he lost her, and now in one final herculean effort he is going to correct his past this one last time. He is going to win her back and make things as they should have been.

    Leo DeCaprio is the only actor of this generation that could play Gatsby, just as Robert Redford could only play Gatsby the previous generation. Redford's Gatsby seemed reticent and insecure about his past; regretful that he must live a lie in order to accomplish his goal. DeCaprio's Gatsby is forceful, decisive; he is a determined man of significant accomplishment and great ability. He has a plan and he is going to execute it and as far as he is concerned, for all the right reasons. For myself, it is DeCaprio's best and most powerful performance.

    This decision (both DeCaprio's and Luhrmann's) to take Gatsby down from some ethereal literary icon into a flesh and blood human being gives the movie an intensity that the 1974 version and most of the literary criticism of the book that I have ever read, never perceived. This is not a shining white knight rescuing a damsel in distress; this is a bare knuckles brawl for the hand of Daisy, and she is going to have to choose.

    Tom Buchanan (Joel Edgerton) is Gatsby's antagonist. He and Daisy were married when Daisy could no longer wait for Gatsby to prove himself worthy of her. Tom is as rich, maybe even richer than Gatsby, but his money is old, he is an aristocrat with a deep sense of entitlement. He has status and wealth because he's supposed to have status and wealth, and he's not about to give up all that, and certainly not his wife, to this new money usurper Gatsby, without a fight.

    Bruce Dern played Tom as a kind of loopy (Dern's specialty) racial conspiracy nut, but Edgerton gives Tom a much harder edge. When Tom espouses his vile racial philosophies one might think that someday he might actually do something about it.

    Daisy (Carey Mulligan) is a tough role. For all the time that Gatsby spends trying to prove he is good enough for Daisy, the audience, for the book or the film, is led down the path that she is not good enough for him. Mia Farrow played Daisy as an airhead and a dingbat, but Mulligan gives Daisy a bit more spine, and fashions a character that has a pretty good idea where her self-interests lay.

    Luhrmann and co-writer Craig Pearse stay pretty close to the text with a few additions and devices, most notably, to those of us who read the book, know that it is Nick Caraway (Tobey Maguire) who tells the story, and is a firsthand witness to all the events, but we never knew from where he tells the story. Luhrmann tells us it is from a sanitarium where Nick is drying out from excessive alcoholism.

    As for Luhrmann's reputation for excess: Well, he certainly visualizes Gatsby's parties as excess, but they are supposed to be excessive, excessive materialism is part of the point of the story. There are times when Luhrmann can't resist himself and feels the compulsion to punctuate matters with some visual flourish, but I did not find it too distracting. His decision to go 3D however, I think was wise. The characters seem to come out of the screen and get next to you. You get to know them personally, and after all this is a very personal story.

    I think this story has survived the test of time so well because it is basically a love story. Whatever the viewers or readers opinion of the characters are, Gatsby and Daisy do love each other, but Fitzgerald was not interested in boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy gets girl and they all live happily ever after. Where Fitzgerald reached his own aspiration of creating high art is in wondering if living happily ever after is even possible in an age of class consciousness, even class warfare, that is driven by a compulsive materialism in a world changing so fast that we can't even formulate the question before we have to come up with an answer. Luhrmann stays true to these themes and displays an avid curiosity about them himself.

    What he has created is a work of art that stands very well on its own.

    check out http://blognmovies.tumblr.com/
    6chris-5950

    The Modern Music Ruined it

    OK, when I read this book, I hated the Gatsby Story. But I loved that Fitzgerald made me feel like I was in New York in the summer of 1922- the heat, the droning of fans, the smells, the ashes...

    Knowing that I didn't care for the story, THAT was what I wanted, to feel like I was there. I wanted to see 1922 New York, to be a part of a party in the Roaring 20's, to sweat with the characters, to feel the wind in my face during a ride in an open 20's era car...

    It almost did it for me... except the music. The pounding bass and the rap just ruined it for me. I wanted some amazing jazz. I wanted a real Roaring 20's party. The Rhapsody in Blue was cool, but I was already disappointed.

    The cast was great and the acting superb.

    Leonardo was impressive, maybe one of his best roles. Mulligan, breath-taking, she looked like an angel. Toby McGuire was a great choice for Carraway- who else could pull off an awkward mixture of likable guy, wallflower, and main character? They did a great job of sticking to the plot and emphasizing famous lines of the book.

    Overall, everything was done really well... but why couldn't we get era-appropriate music?
    8naregian

    An intriguing story re-told again with attention to mystery. 8/10

    8/10.

    I know a lot of the other reviewers will compare this film to the older one and also the book, so if you're interested in a comparison, stop reading here. I want to review this film as a movie that tells a story, like every other film. I don't want to review this as a film that tried to beat its preceding film adaptation.

    I myself have read the book and have always been so intrigued with the character of Gatsby, and when I heard a few years back that he would be portrayed on the big screen by DiCaprio, I couldn't wait. The character carries such a mystery about him that was delivered so excellently by Leonardo DiCaprio, and made it so fun to watch. It was almost like I didn't know what the ending was because I was so immersed in 1920s New York, and in the lifestyle of The Great Gatsby.

    The film itself, as a film, was awesome! The visuals and soundtrack were captivating and lavish. The acting was great overall, as you can trust these actors to deliver.

    I read somewhere on IMDb (message board or another reviewer, I can't remember) that Leonardo wasn't a good fit for the role of Gatsby. I think this statement couldn't be more wrong. If you have read the book, you must have some idea about the depth of Gatsby's character, the depth of his mind, his desires. The false smiles, the phony handshakes, the uneasiness in being in public, the way Jay Gatsby conducts himself in front of Daisy, and in pursuit of her. All these things are delivered so well by DiCaprio. His nerve, his frustration, his determination...all so eloquently portrayed. But most of all, his passion, and as Nick Carraway, our narrator so emphatically reminds us, his hope. The character development of Jay Gatsby, and the development of all those surrounding him gives us such a deep look at the relationships of such a diverse category of people.

    The storyline is obviously interesting: A man realizes his new neighbor is a mysterious, and incredibly wealthy man. Like how awesome is that? Throughout the whole film, as the relationships between all the few main characters become deeper and deeper, and the questions become answered, you just can't help but feel so into the characters' lives. Great writing for the characters, great directing, great great great acting.

    Overall, this is just a great film. If you go into the theater thinking "oh this'll suck compared to Robert Redford" or "I bet the book is way better", you're setting yourself up for a bad 143 minutes. Don't be so close minded and try to view it as just another film that tells a fictional story, and a great one at that.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Actors Leonardo DiCaprio and Tobey Maguire have been friends since childhood. This marks the first time they have appeared in a film together since Don's Plum (2001). Before this, they appeared together in Vida de este chico (1993).
    • Pifias
      When Daisy is about to marry Tom, she pulls off the $350,000 pearls he bought her and they scatter all over the floor. An expensive pearl necklace like that would have individually knotted pearls, to minimize lost pearls if the silk were to break.
    • Citas

      Nick Carraway: You can't repeat the past.

      Jay Gatsby: Can't repeat the past?

      Nick Carraway: No...

      Jay Gatsby: Why, of course you can... of course you can.

    • Créditos adicionales
      Jay Gatsby's flower symbol is shown throughout the credits with different letters in place of the 'JG'. The third-to-last flower, preceding the music section, has 'JZ' in it (an homage to the film's soundtrack producer Jay-Z. The last flower has the movie's traditional 'JG' in it.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Bad Movie Beatdown: Review of 2012 (2013)
    • Banda sonora
      Together
      Written by Romy Madley-Croft (as Romy Madley Croft), Oliver Sim and Jamie XX

      Licensed by Universal Music Publishing Group Pty Limited

      By arrangement with Beggars Group Media Limited

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    Preguntas frecuentes25

    • How long is The Great Gatsby?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Daisy tells Gatsby she can't tell James she never loved him because that wouldn't be true, as she speaks, smoke comes from her mouth the whole line. This does not happen during any other part of the movie. Is there some significance to this or just what happened?
    • Is 'The Great Gatsby' based on a book?
    • How many of the songs are omitted from the soundtrack?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 17 de mayo de 2013 (España)
    • Países de origen
      • Australia
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitios oficiales
      • Official Blog
      • Official Facebook
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • The Great Gatsby
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Centennial Park, Sídney, Nueva Gales del Sur, Australia(Gatsby's Estate and Nick Carraway's house set)
    • Empresas productoras
      • Warner Bros.
      • Village Roadshow Pictures
      • A+E Networks
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • 105.000.000 US$ (estimación)
    • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
      • 144.857.996 US$
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • 50.085.185 US$
      • 12 may 2013
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 353.660.028 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      • 2h 23min(143 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • SDDS
      • Datasat
      • Dolby Digital
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.39 : 1

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