VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,6/10
5104
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Due membri di un circolo sociale nella Brooklyn degli anni '50 sono più interessati al romanticismo che ai brontolii.Due membri di un circolo sociale nella Brooklyn degli anni '50 sono più interessati al romanticismo che ai brontolii.Due membri di un circolo sociale nella Brooklyn degli anni '50 sono più interessati al romanticismo che ai brontolii.
Renee Paris
- Annie Yuckamanelli
- (as Reneé Paris)
Joseph Stern
- Eddie
- (as Joe Stern)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizHenry Winkler stated that when he was creating the character of The Fonz in Happy Days (1974), he based his performance on Sylvester Stallone's portrayal of Stanley.
- BlooperIn the opening credits the camera pans the skyline of NY, and shows the construction of the Twin Towers in the background. The movie is set in the late 1950s and the Twin Towers were not constructed until the 1970s.
- Citazioni
Mr. Birnbaum: It's a beautiful ring.
Stanley Rosiello: Listen to me. Listen to me, Daddy-O. See that girl that just walked out of there. If you ever show her a $1600 ring again, you know what's going to be written on your tombstone? Do you know what's going to be written on your tombstone? "I was dumb enough to show Frannie Malincanico a $1600 ring." You know what I mean? Do you?
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Lady with the Torch (1999)
- Colonne sonoreChico's Song (You and Me)
Lead Vocal by Jamie Carr
Recensione in evidenza
A good, decent film about leaving adolescence behind, and the threshold to adulthood.
Sylvester Stallone is very good as Stanley, the pug of the gang, who is facing fatherhood and marriage, and tries to amiably go along. He's not too bright, but he understands there is much more out there. His scene on the roof with Perry King is his way of trying to communicate that the world they have been living in is coming to an end, but, through their dreams and imagination, they can go places and experience other things. Things are changing for him, and he instinctively realizes there is much more to the world than their little corner of Brooklyn.
Perry King's Chico, on the other hand, is brighter than he lets on, and he understands all too well what is out there and is waiting for them. The trouble is, in the adult world, he will never again have the freedom and power that he has running the streets with the Lords. Growing up is not something he looks forward to. He resents what he sees as the end of the road. He wouldn't mind living out the rest of his life with the Lords, prowling the streets, knocking up girls, fighting with the clean cut kids. In this world, he is powerful and respected, but he senses it coming to an end. His argument on the roof with Stanley is his rejection of dreaming or imagining something, or somewhere, else. His unfortunate episode with Susan Blakely is his inability to relate to her as another human being. To him, she is still just a chick to be laid, not someone he may have to relate to. Everyone around him is growing up and passing him by, and Chico resents it. He basically wants things to stay just as they are.
The final rumble at the football field is an example of the Lords in their element, when they are at their happiest. The aftermath of the fight (the accident) is a further reminder that this life is at an end, and adulthood awaits, whether they are ready for it or not.
A decent, entertaining movie. Quite an interesting character study, well-acted, especially by King and Stallone.
Sylvester Stallone is very good as Stanley, the pug of the gang, who is facing fatherhood and marriage, and tries to amiably go along. He's not too bright, but he understands there is much more out there. His scene on the roof with Perry King is his way of trying to communicate that the world they have been living in is coming to an end, but, through their dreams and imagination, they can go places and experience other things. Things are changing for him, and he instinctively realizes there is much more to the world than their little corner of Brooklyn.
Perry King's Chico, on the other hand, is brighter than he lets on, and he understands all too well what is out there and is waiting for them. The trouble is, in the adult world, he will never again have the freedom and power that he has running the streets with the Lords. Growing up is not something he looks forward to. He resents what he sees as the end of the road. He wouldn't mind living out the rest of his life with the Lords, prowling the streets, knocking up girls, fighting with the clean cut kids. In this world, he is powerful and respected, but he senses it coming to an end. His argument on the roof with Stanley is his rejection of dreaming or imagining something, or somewhere, else. His unfortunate episode with Susan Blakely is his inability to relate to her as another human being. To him, she is still just a chick to be laid, not someone he may have to relate to. Everyone around him is growing up and passing him by, and Chico resents it. He basically wants things to stay just as they are.
The final rumble at the football field is an example of the Lords in their element, when they are at their happiest. The aftermath of the fight (the accident) is a further reminder that this life is at an end, and adulthood awaits, whether they are ready for it or not.
A decent, entertaining movie. Quite an interesting character study, well-acted, especially by King and Stallone.
- jmorrison-2
- 23 giu 2005
- Permalink
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Brooklyn Graffiti
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Sunrise Drive-In 750 W. Sunrise Hwy, Valley Stream, New York, Stati Uniti(drive-in theatre - now demolished)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 160.000 USD (previsto)
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By what name was Happy Days - La banda dei fiori di pesco (1974) officially released in India in English?
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