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L'uomo che cadde sulla Terra

Titolo originale: The Man Who Fell to Earth
  • 1976
  • VM14
  • 2h 19min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,6/10
30.283
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
POPOLARITÀ
4758
3037
L'uomo che cadde sulla Terra (1976)
Trailer for The Man Who Fell to Earth: 35th Anniversary
Riproduci trailer1: 45
1 video
99+ foto
DrammaFantascienza

Un alieno deve fingere di essere umano per salvare il suo pianeta morente, ma una donna e l'avidità di altri uomini creano complicazioni.Un alieno deve fingere di essere umano per salvare il suo pianeta morente, ma una donna e l'avidità di altri uomini creano complicazioni.Un alieno deve fingere di essere umano per salvare il suo pianeta morente, ma una donna e l'avidità di altri uomini creano complicazioni.

  • Regia
    • Nicolas Roeg
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Paul Mayersberg
    • Walter Tevis
  • Star
    • David Bowie
    • Rip Torn
    • Candy Clark
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,6/10
    30.283
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    POPOLARITÀ
    4758
    3037
    • Regia
      • Nicolas Roeg
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Paul Mayersberg
      • Walter Tevis
    • Star
      • David Bowie
      • Rip Torn
      • Candy Clark
    • 174Recensioni degli utenti
    • 148Recensioni della critica
    • 81Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 vittoria e 4 candidature totali

    Video1

    The Man Who Fell to Earth: 35th Anniversary
    Trailer 1:45
    The Man Who Fell to Earth: 35th Anniversary

    Foto114

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    Interpreti principali22

    Modifica
    David Bowie
    David Bowie
    • Thomas Jerome Newton
    Rip Torn
    Rip Torn
    • Nathan Bryce
    Candy Clark
    Candy Clark
    • Mary-Lou
    Buck Henry
    Buck Henry
    • Oliver Farnsworth
    Bernie Casey
    Bernie Casey
    • Peters
    Jackson D. Kane
    • Professor Canutti
    Rick Riccardo
    • Trevor
    Tony Mascia
    Tony Mascia
    • Arthur
    Linda Hutton
    • Elaine
    Hilary Holland
    • Jill
    Adrienne Larussa
    Adrienne Larussa
    • Helen
    Lilybelle Crawford
    • Jewellery Store Owner
    Richard Breeding
    • Receptionist
    Albert Nelson
    • Waiter
    Peter Prouse
    • Peters' Associate
    Jim Lovell
    Jim Lovell
    • Capt. James Lovell, Commander of Apollo 13
    • (as Capt. James Lovell)
    Preacher & Congregation of Presbyterian Church
    • Preacher & Congregation of Presbyterian Church Artesia NM
    Dort Clark
    Dort Clark
    • Waiter
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Nicolas Roeg
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Paul Mayersberg
      • Walter Tevis
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti174

    6,630.2K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    mdelvecchio

    creative, interesting, visual movie.

    so, it seems to me there have been a lot of negative reviews. they break down into two categories: 1) those that say its got "too much sex". blah. grow up. 2) those who say "it's a mess". okay...we can work with that.

    this really isnt a plot-based scifi like Star Wars. its not about linear events with obvious cause-and-effects, good guys and bad. its part scifi, part art film, and part trippy 70s movie. these movies dont speak with dialogue, they speak with images, and with mood (ie, "How does this sequence make you feel?" warm? uncomfortable? etc) thats just what this movie is. if you dont like these types of movies--movies in which you may have to do some interpretation--you wont like this one either. simple. its not Star Wars, people...Lucas isnt here to hold your hand.

    for instance, one of the "gratuitous" sex scenes near the end, after Mary Lou has aged, was not gratuitous but in fact grotesque. it made me uncomfortable. which i am certain is exactly what it was supposed to do--to show me what a sham Newton's relationship with Mary Lou had become. it had become merely a drunken-memory, for them both... and their sex-scene-revisited depicted that, perfectly.

    the whole movie is like that, speaking in general feelings and mood rather than black-and-white dialogue. and its more powerful because of it.

    so...put it in perspective as you critic it. dont like romantic comedies? then youre not gonna like the latest Hugh Grant film. but that doesnt mean it isnt good. capese? (btw, i think hugh grant movies suck).
    7carolynvargas

    Surreal galore in this sci-fi.

    Nicholas Roeg is a maverick filmmaker and The man who fell to Earth is one of the many reasons why. Bowie is an alien who lands on earth in search of water. This was the legendary singer's first starring role and he more than owns the role of a strange human trying to mix with humans. The surreal imagery by noted director Nicholas Roeg is a highlight and although the film wasn't a big hit either critically or commercially back when it was released, it has a huge following today. If you are a fan of science fiction you should check this out. 7/10 (Surreal galore in this sci-fi).
    6Prismark10

    Scary monsters

    Maybe Starman David Bowie was born to play the title role in The Man Who Fell To Earth, an avant-garde disjointed sci fi film from director Nicolas Roeg.

    Thomas Jerome Newton (David Bowie) is an alien who lands in New Mexico with some precious rings, a British passport and some rudimentary knowledge of patents. He needs to make money so he can build a rocket ship that can transport water to his dying planet.

    Newton quickly makes money through his advanced business patents, he recruits a chief scientist (Rip Torn) who discovers that he is not what he appears to be and falls in love with hotel maid (Candy Clark) who also introduces him to the delights of gin & tonic.

    The government intelligence service and rival businesses decide to look closely into his activities. They throw his patent lawyer and business associate (Buck Henry) out of the window and then hold Newton captive in a hotel plying him with gin.

    The film plays with time as years go by and other characters age. We have flashbacks of Newton in his home planet with his family. The most memorable scenes is that of an alien with a British passport and the famous scene of Clark urinating her underwear when Newton reveals himself as an alien.

    The film has a cult following but it is not a great film. It is too trippy and unstructured leading you to ask more questions than get any answers from it. Still I cannot think of anyone else who could had played the title role in that era and Bowie goes for it full frontal.

    However the combination of Bowie and Roeg makes this a landmark science fiction film of the 1970s just as worthy as Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
    8yucel81x

    Is it art, or is it pornography?

    I have just watched "The Man Who Fell to Earth" from beginning to end after seeing several scenes here and there from years of flipping past the sci-fi channel or whatever other channel this film might've been shown on. I must say that I think it is one of the most interesting films I've ever seen. Now before you start thinking this is going to be a review of blind worship, stop for a moment and remember that just because something is interesting doesn't mean it's likeable. Art is not meant to be appealing. It's meant to cause a reaction, it's meant to make you think, it's meant to make you uncomfortable. Art forces feelings upon you that you might rather not experience, so whether you like it or not, this film is a work of art. But some art...in fact a lot of art...is trash. Is this movie trash? Some say yes, some say not. Some think it's brilliant, others think it a waste of time. Some think the narrative's dependence on visual stimulus as opposed to linear storytelling is a touch of cinematic beauty, while others dismiss it as experimental tripe.

    Somebody wrote a scathing review saying that if you like junk like "Lost Highway," you might enjoy this movie. Well, no offense meant, but I'd like to say that this person has made clear that he can't see past what's appealing. Why watch something that's unappealing you might ask? Because that's what art's supposed to do...it challenges you and your values. Sometimes it reinforces them, and sometimes it will blatantly attack them. You have to draw your own conclusions and interpretations. "The Man Who Fell to Earth" is no different. Yes, the film seems to jump from time to time, one scene juxtaposed with a scene that takes place 20 years later, a flashback that may or may not be a flashback, it is confusing. I know I was confused. It's not a linear narrative...it's telling a story through pictures, with occasional words just to make sure you have a little more than an inkling as to what you're supposed to be seeing. Personally, I would be interested to see the movie without dialogue...like "Aeon Flux," a story can be told philosophically and artistically without words.

    What is the story? Well...quite simply, David Bowie, in his first and probably one of his best on-screen performances, is an alien on Earth trying to find a way to get water back to his world. Is it as simple as it sounds? Not by any means. But you have to believe it to see it. You will be confused, you might even be offended (there's a lot of sexually explicit scenes that border on pornography), but one way or the other, this film is meant to be visually stimulating. What you see will make you think...if you're repulsed by it and feel the urge to turn it off, then it's simply not your kind of movie.

    On the whole, I like this movie, though I must be in a certain mood to watch it. It is not easy to watch, there are long stretches without dialogue, and when there is dialogue, it's often confusing. But no matter what, I like what I was seeing on the screen. I do feel like watching it again because I know there is more to absorb and take in, there's more to think about that I missed before. But that's the kind of person I am...I want to think, and I want that discomfort this movie gives me because I am alleviated by the need to solve it, not dismiss it. Bowie is in fine form, probably used to alienation being a Brit in America, and having played his own Ziggy Stardust character in the past. The rest of the cast performs rather competently, although nobody's performance shines as much as Bowie's (although Candy Clarke is pretty good in some scenes, and Rip Torn's deadpan performance is a bit of dry humor).

    Dispute me if you must, I give this movie ***1/2 out of ****.
    7Quinoa1984

    visually a real trip. emotionally something else

    Nicholas Roeg is a little tricky at times when it comes to narrative. Sometimes he experiments with it excellently (Bad Timing), and other times he slightly dulls the senses in an experimental kind of way (Dont Look Now). The Man Who Fell to Earth seems to be told mostly in a linear fashion, and there seems to be something of a story going on, but... I never felt it completely click. Maybe that is part of Roeg's point with the material, to create a kind of alienation that the alien, no pun intended, feels whilst gathering up the billions he needs to get supplies back to his home planet. But something just doesn't feel like it goes the way it should, even when things are fascinating in a scene, maybe even brilliant, and the actors do end up trying their best along with Roeg's knack at capturing a mood in a specific, strange but bewildering way.

    It isn't totally clear where the plot could be headed, aside from the usual oblivion of the protagonist to the wretched TV, excess of alcohol, and some drugs to boot. Which is fine as a route of a plot. But it's perhaps that there doesn't seem to be a sharper satirical stabbing motion being made in the context of the story, of what Bowie's "man" is doing on Earth, except in bits and pieces. Perhaps he's a reflection of how some of us act right here on our planet, or that there's even a sorrow to the state of affairs with Thomas Newton, who is sensitive, sometimes weak, and at least a little unnerving in his detachment via the almighty dollar. Maybe there are some valid points made in connection with the suffering of a human being, in what it does to his soul the longer they're on some strange planet, by way of a horrible and dehumanizing marketplace. But the way it's presented, to once again pop up a word that gets tossed like a beach ball at a concert, in a pretentious manner.

    Or, to amend that with another tired cliché: the parts are better than the sum or the whole. I did enjoy very much just looking at the Man Who Fell to Earth, with some scenes, some shots, some transitions, some jabs at "real" cinema, displaying Roeg's natural gifts as an auteur at the peak of his powers. Just seeing that New York skyline, for instance, is a minor thrill, or in the cutbacks Newton has to his old world. Hell, even the sex scenes, much lauded in some of the more negative reviews, have a certain messy charm to them. And who doesn't love seeing Rip Torn as some smart but dangerous scientist who moves on from a penchant for young students in the sack to Newton's possible rocket-ship? Seeing scenes with Bowie and Rip Torn are, indeed, exciting in their indescribable link (Bowie, of course, so fits into Newton it's hard to figure anyone else in the part). I even loved the quirky, old rock and roll/jazz type of music Roeg used, when the first assumption would be Bowie would glam-rock the whole place up.

    If there's anything that keeps the Man Who Fell to Earth from being a truly spectacular cult item though, if only for this reviewer, it's a certain mood overall to the piece, an uncertainty as to what to do with everything in the book and how to make it so unusual a piece of science fiction that its own alienation could potentially affect the viewer in unexpected ways. It's got guts to go where it does, to be sure, but it's a tough journey along the way, with romance, wonderment of the unknown, mental deconstruction, and corporate fables all entwined. Whatever you have to say about it there's nothing else like it.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      The picture was temporarily scored with music from Pink Floyd's album "The Dark Side of the Moon".
    • Blooper
      When Mary-Lou takes Thomas to the hotel's fifth floor in the elevator instead of allowing him to use the stairs, she says, "It's five flights." This would be correct in the UK, but not in America; from the ground floor to the fifth floor of an American building is four flights.
    • Citazioni

      Thomas Jerome Newton: Ask me...

      Nathan Bryce: What?

      Thomas Jerome Newton: The question you've been wanting to ask ever since we met.

      Nathan Bryce: Are you Lithuanian?

      Thomas Jerome Newton: [grins] I come from England.

      Nathan Bryce: Ah, that's not so terrible.

    • Versioni alternative
      The US theatrical release of the film was drastically altered. Not only were 20 minutes cut (including the gun sequence) but some scenes were rearranged and a few scenes had different camera angles.
    • Connessioni
      Edited into We are the Robots (2010)
    • Colonne sonore
      Poker Dice
      Written by Stomu Yamashta

      Recorded by Stomu Yamashta

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 8 aprile 1976 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Regno Unito
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • El hombre que cayó a la Tierra
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • White Sands National Monument, New Mexico, Stati Uniti(rocket)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • British Lion Film Corporation
      • Houtsnede Maatschappij N.V.
      • Cinema 5
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 1.500.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 100.072 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 5922 USD
      • 26 giu 2011
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 167.072 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      2 ore 19 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • 4-Track Stereo
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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