Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA young couple searches for the cure for the girl's terminal illness.A young couple searches for the cure for the girl's terminal illness.A young couple searches for the cure for the girl's terminal illness.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Photos
Jennifer Kulik
- Sue Stern
- (as Jeni Kulik)
Diane Cary
- Newspaper Ad Girl
- (as Diane Civita)
Avis en vedette
The dialogue is hysterically bad. The direction inundated with early-70's-style montages. And the acting by both leads seem to alternate scene-by-scene between overwrought and stoic. In many ways, this is a time capsule of bad 1970's movies. But, on that level, it is always fascinating -- especially with superb supporting performances all around, and a magnificent original score including Croce's Time In a Bottle and Chapin's Circles. Some other goodies in the score also.
The plot of "She Lives!" is very, very similar to "Love Story" in that it's about college students who fall in love...and the lady comes down with a terminal illness. But, unlike "Love Story" there is hope in this film that she MIGHT not die.
I can barely remember seeing "Love Story" but can say that with "She Lives!" I had a hard time sticking with it because I didn't like the couple and really didn't care if she lived or died! The editing was terrible--with choppy bits of Jim Croce's "Time in a Bottle" clumsily dropped into the film. Some of the camera-work was blurry and looked cheap. And, the acting, at times, was silly--with some terrible overacting. A few scenes which show this was the screaming scene which was unintentionally funny as well as when she later said she felt fine and only seconds later she was on the ground...practically dying. So, aside from the writing, acting and filmmaking the film wasn't bad...though I guess that really doesn't leave much, does it? Oh, and I forgot to mention that the ending was VERY abrupt and incomplete.
In retrospect, with a title like "She Lives!", I wish it had been a horror movie.
I can barely remember seeing "Love Story" but can say that with "She Lives!" I had a hard time sticking with it because I didn't like the couple and really didn't care if she lived or died! The editing was terrible--with choppy bits of Jim Croce's "Time in a Bottle" clumsily dropped into the film. Some of the camera-work was blurry and looked cheap. And, the acting, at times, was silly--with some terrible overacting. A few scenes which show this was the screaming scene which was unintentionally funny as well as when she later said she felt fine and only seconds later she was on the ground...practically dying. So, aside from the writing, acting and filmmaking the film wasn't bad...though I guess that really doesn't leave much, does it? Oh, and I forgot to mention that the ending was VERY abrupt and incomplete.
In retrospect, with a title like "She Lives!", I wish it had been a horror movie.
I watched this movie when it first came on in 1973 (I was about 8 or 9 at the time) and I loved it! I finally managed to get a copy of it just a few months ago - thanks, Regina, wherever you are! - and I still think it's a pretty good movie. Season Hubley and Desi Arnaz, Jr. are very convincing as the young couple whose happiness is threatened when Pam (Season) gets cancer. It's not a Love Story ripoff, in that this movie centers around the illness itself and not how the characters are so different. Also, you can tell by the title how the movie ends.
Set at UCLA, with much less appealing leads, hysterical script, and relentless abuse of the Jim Croce song. I didn't detect any chemistry between Arnaz and Hubley. Hollywood's campaign to make Arnaz happen was in embarrassing evidence throughout the film. Also missing were any appreciable supporting characters. The sense of doom and tragedy in "Love Story" was lost, with the emphasis on the search for a cure, and made this one seem trivial.
The Seventies T.V. movie (A.B.C.'s "Movie Of The Week" here) left an
impression on many, from "Maybe I'll Come Home In The Spring" to the more
lightweight "But I Don't Want To Get Married", to the best known "Tribes."
This was an early "Cancer" movie before the subject would be done to
death. Probably remembered by most as the first time they heard the touching folk/pop of Jim Croce (If only HE had lived), these A.B.C. movies, in the tradition of shows like "Room 222", was T.V. jumping on the "Hip" train a little late(what the hell, some say the "sixties" were really 65 to 75. Lucy's troubled Son is not much of an actor, but otherwise this time capsule of a more hopeful time has it's heart in the right place, maybe it's head too.
impression on many, from "Maybe I'll Come Home In The Spring" to the more
lightweight "But I Don't Want To Get Married", to the best known "Tribes."
This was an early "Cancer" movie before the subject would be done to
death. Probably remembered by most as the first time they heard the touching folk/pop of Jim Croce (If only HE had lived), these A.B.C. movies, in the tradition of shows like "Room 222", was T.V. jumping on the "Hip" train a little late(what the hell, some say the "sixties" were really 65 to 75. Lucy's troubled Son is not much of an actor, but otherwise this time capsule of a more hopeful time has it's heart in the right place, maybe it's head too.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesJim Croce was killed in a plane crash eight days after this first aired. His song "Time in a Bottle" was a key highlight in this film.
- Bandes originalesTime in a Bottle
Written and Performed by Jim Croce
Meilleurs choix
Connectez-vous pour évaluer et surveiller les recommandations personnalisées
Détails
Contribuer à cette page
Suggérer une modification ou ajouter du contenu manquant