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6,9/10
7090
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Una giovane ballerina continua ad avere fede nonostante infinite delusioni nelle sue mani, e spera che finalmente incontrerà l'uomo per farla innamorare lontano dalla sua vita squallida.Una giovane ballerina continua ad avere fede nonostante infinite delusioni nelle sue mani, e spera che finalmente incontrerà l'uomo per farla innamorare lontano dalla sua vita squallida.Una giovane ballerina continua ad avere fede nonostante infinite delusioni nelle sue mani, e spera che finalmente incontrerà l'uomo per farla innamorare lontano dalla sua vita squallida.
- Candidato a 3 Oscar
- 6 candidature totali
Dante DiPaolo
- Charlie
- (as Dante D'Paulo)
Leon Alton
- Dancer
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizAlthough uncredited, Gwen Verdon was assistant choreographer in the film version of Sweet Charity - Una ragazza che voleva essere amata (1969).
- BlooperIn the "Aloof" movement of "The Rich Man's Frug," two of the male principal dancers walk down the stairs to light a woman's cigarette, while the others dance behind them. The background choreography in this shot leads directly to the triangle formation of the next shot, and the two men are now in the middle of the group, although there was no time for them to reach that position.
- Citazioni
Charity Hope Valentine: Wow! This place sure is crawlin' with celebrities. I'm the only person here I never heard of.
- Versioni alternativeLaserdisc version contains an alternative ending. After Oscar leaves Charity, he starts to go crazy in his apartment. He then realizes that despite Charity's faults, he really can't live without her. He finds Charity on the bridge in Central Park and, thinking she's going to jump, falls into the river. Charity jumps in after Oscar and forgives him. The two then walk off together, soaking wet, through the park. Bob Fosse thought this ending was too corny, and decided to use the depressing, yet more inspirational, ending for the film's major release.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Sweet Charity: From the Stage to the Screen (1969)
- Colonne sonoreMy Personal Property
(uncredited)
Music by Cy Coleman
Lyrics by Dorothy Fields
Performed by Shirley MacLaine
Recensione in evidenza
Sure, Bob Fosse sometimes indulges in trendy late-60's stylistic touches like freeze-frames and crash-zooms. Some of the jokes by Neil Simon are corny, and Shirley MacLaine can be a little hard to take sometimes. The film also suffers from the bloated, over-produced quality that infected most 60's major studio musicals.
The dull non-musical scenes are a chore to sit through, but when one of Fosse's amazing production numbers begins, Sweet Charity soars into the sublime. Fosse was quite simply a genius, and the great showcase numbers such as "Hey Big Spender" and "Rich Man's Frug" are as brilliant as any dance numbers ever put on film.
Shifting configurations of dancers, contorted body poses, dance steps that are by turns awkward and graceful, a studied contrast between clustering dancers and separating dancers -- it is hard to describe the magic of the Pompeii Club sequence. I've always felt that Fosse's choreography has the same sense of space and volume as Cubist painting.
Fosse's camera placement and camera movement capture an ideal "in-the-round" feeling of choreographed numbers that one cannot experience in the theater. For a first-time film director, Fosse revealed an amazing facility for the form. Usually theater directors don't take to the medium of film as quickly as Fosse did. Usually, theater directors make visually unexciting films that feel stage-bound. Not Fosse -- Sweet Charity, despite some flaws, doesn't play like a filmed stage play, it has the visual panache of Fellini and Godard.
Sweet Charity was just a warm-up, Fosse's personal film school at Universal's expense, before he truly mastered the form of film-making with the classic Cabaret.
The dull non-musical scenes are a chore to sit through, but when one of Fosse's amazing production numbers begins, Sweet Charity soars into the sublime. Fosse was quite simply a genius, and the great showcase numbers such as "Hey Big Spender" and "Rich Man's Frug" are as brilliant as any dance numbers ever put on film.
Shifting configurations of dancers, contorted body poses, dance steps that are by turns awkward and graceful, a studied contrast between clustering dancers and separating dancers -- it is hard to describe the magic of the Pompeii Club sequence. I've always felt that Fosse's choreography has the same sense of space and volume as Cubist painting.
Fosse's camera placement and camera movement capture an ideal "in-the-round" feeling of choreographed numbers that one cannot experience in the theater. For a first-time film director, Fosse revealed an amazing facility for the form. Usually theater directors don't take to the medium of film as quickly as Fosse did. Usually, theater directors make visually unexciting films that feel stage-bound. Not Fosse -- Sweet Charity, despite some flaws, doesn't play like a filmed stage play, it has the visual panache of Fellini and Godard.
Sweet Charity was just a warm-up, Fosse's personal film school at Universal's expense, before he truly mastered the form of film-making with the classic Cabaret.
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 20.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Tempo di esecuzione2 ore 29 minuti
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Sweet Charity - Una ragazza che voleva essere amata (1969) officially released in India in English?
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