Un uomo tormentato si confida con la psichiatra che ha in cura la sorella con tendenze suicide. Racconta la loro storia familiare e nel mentre si innamora di lei.Un uomo tormentato si confida con la psichiatra che ha in cura la sorella con tendenze suicide. Racconta la loro storia familiare e nel mentre si innamora di lei.Un uomo tormentato si confida con la psichiatra che ha in cura la sorella con tendenze suicide. Racconta la loro storia familiare e nel mentre si innamora di lei.
- Candidato a 7 Oscar
- 3 vittorie e 18 candidature totali
- Savannah Wingo (age 10)
- (as Nancy Atchison)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizWhen NBC broadcast the movie in 1995, Barbra Streisand called the network mid-movie to request they lower the volume on the commercials, which were loud compared to the relatively quiet movie. The weekend operations manager obliged, reducing them 2 decibels.
- BlooperSally's Southern accent appears and disappears as the film progresses.
- Citazioni
Herbert Woodruff: That Stradivarius is worth over a million dollars!
Tom Wingo: Well, if I drop it, it won't be worth shit.
Susan Lowenstein: Don't do it, Tom.
Tom Wingo: Apologize to your wife, Herbert.
Herbert Woodruff: You're bluffing.
Tom Wingo: I may be, but its a powerful bluff, isn't it, asshole?
[Tom throws fiddle high in the air]
Herbert Woodruff: [screaming] I'm sorry, Susan!
[Tom catches fiddle]
Tom Wingo: Sincerity becomes you, Herbie. Now apologize to me for your unforgivable breach of etiquette at the dinner table tonight, you possum-bred cocksucker.
Herbert Woodruff: I'm very sorry, Tom.
- Versioni alternativeLaserdisc version contains an alternate end credits sequence with Barbra Streisand's vocal performance of "Places That Belong To You" (which was replaced in the final film by new end title music by James Newton Howard after Streisand felt that to include the song would bring back the Dr. Lowenstein character and destroy the focal point of the story, which would be the Tom Wingo character). Also, alternate versions of the Tom and Susan affair scenes, and the following deleted scenes (presented in a separate supplementary section at the end of the film):
- Tom remembering his late brother Luke;
- Tom visiting Savannah in the hospital early in the film;
- Tom confronting his father Henry;
- Tom sending flowers to Dr. Lowenstein;
- Lila being ridiculed as "white trash";
- and a love affair montage.
Tom Wingo, played by Nolte in an all-time best for him, has to go to New York to help his twin sister, Savannah Wingo, played by Melinda Dillon who has attempted suicide for the umpteenth time. Tom is aware there are ghosts in the family but wants to keep them submerged. However with the love for his sister and the encouragement of her psychiatrist, Lowenstein, played by Streisand, the truth begins to unfold along with a love between Lowenstein and Tom who are both in unhappy marriages.
There are no easy solutions here to the many issues that are raised, suffice is to say that Streisand, who also directs, keeps a gentle hand in and does not wham home any major emotional points. George Carlin is deft in a minor role, as is Blythe Danner as Tom's wife. The film never fails to pack a punch for me.
9 out of 10. Kudos to all, not a false note.
- wisewebwoman
- 16 nov 2002
- Permalink
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 30.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 74.787.599 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 10.035.412 USD
- 29 dic 1991
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 74.787.599 USD