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IMDbPro

Eles vão dar o que falar

Título original: They're a Weird Mob
  • 1966
  • 1 h 52 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,4/10
1,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Eles vão dar o que falar (1966)
AventuraComédiaRomance

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAn Italian sports journalist arrives in Australia but finds no work. The only employment he can find is as a builder's labourer. At first, he cannot comprehend the culture, but eventually he... Ler tudoAn Italian sports journalist arrives in Australia but finds no work. The only employment he can find is as a builder's labourer. At first, he cannot comprehend the culture, but eventually he finds mateship and romance.An Italian sports journalist arrives in Australia but finds no work. The only employment he can find is as a builder's labourer. At first, he cannot comprehend the culture, but eventually he finds mateship and romance.

  • Direção
    • Michael Powell
  • Roteiristas
    • John O'Grady
    • Emeric Pressburger
  • Artistas
    • Walter Chiari
    • Claire Dunne
    • Chips Rafferty
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,4/10
    1,2 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Michael Powell
    • Roteiristas
      • John O'Grady
      • Emeric Pressburger
    • Artistas
      • Walter Chiari
      • Claire Dunne
      • Chips Rafferty
    • 27Avaliações de usuários
    • 13Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos21

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    Elenco principal41

    Editar
    Walter Chiari
    Walter Chiari
    • Nino Culotta
    Claire Dunne
    • Kay Kelly
    Chips Rafferty
    Chips Rafferty
    • Harry Kelly
    Alida Chelli
    Alida Chelli
    • Giuliana
    Ed Devereaux
    Ed Devereaux
    • Joe Kennedy
    Slim DeGrey
    • Pat
    John Meillon
    John Meillon
    • Dennis
    Charles Little
    • Jimmy
    Anne Haddy
    • Barmaid
    Jack Allen
    • Fat Man in Bar
    Red Moore
    • Texture Man
    Ray Hartley
    • Newsboy
    Tony Bonner
    Tony Bonner
    • Lifesaver
    Alan Lander
    • Charlie
    Keith Peterson
    Keith Peterson
    • Drunk Man on Ferry
    Muriel Steinbeck
    • Mrs. Kelly
    Gloria Dawn
    • Mrs. Chapman
    Jeanie Drynan
    • Betty
    • Direção
      • Michael Powell
    • Roteiristas
      • John O'Grady
      • Emeric Pressburger
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários27

    6,41.2K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    9opsbooks

    An icon of Aussie culture!

    Recently restored and remastered (within a limited budget) for DVD release, this movie was a revelation in Aussie ways and customs, a near-to-totally honest portrayal of what it was like for immigrants arriving here back in the last half of the 20th Century (yes, it seems a long time ago).

    The house that Nino built occupied a block in Greenacre, NSW, less than half a mile from where I was living at the time. I must have driven by it thousands of times. Previous prints screened on TV have been abysmal with washed out colour and scratchy images and sound. To see this near-as pristine print (for the most part) was an eye-opener and the scenes of Greenacre, Bankstown and other Sydney locations brought memories flooding back.

    The cast of fine supporting actors makes the film worth watching, while the lead actor is simply perfect. One can't imagine anyone else in the part. The film flags towards the end but generally, it's great viewing.
    8ptb-8

    No we're not.

    This charming valentine to life in Australia in the 1960s and particularly in Sydney shows truly how good it is to live here.

    Fortunately we are still not too far away from some of the Anglo working class types shown. It is only because the population has grown so much, particularly in Sydney since this time that 2004 is a difference in society. It was filmed just before the Vietnam War and recreational drug influx by US soldiers polluted Sydney morals and living standards, and on the verge of a huge American influence in advertising and consumer goods. Australia's immigrants were British and European up until that point. In the 80s there was a big rise in Arabic and Asian immigrants which has changed the face of Sydney literally.....but somehow the "Australian" sense of humor and egalitarian attitudes seen on this lovely film sort everyone out even today. The 2001 film DIRTY DEEDS is a good chaser to WEIRD MOB because it is set in 1969, and at the height of the American changes in Sydney.
    7robertemerald

    Great look at Sydney in the 1960s

    I have only just seen They're a Weird Mob and I have to say it was a great trip back to the 1960s in Australia. It's very cheesy of course, but then just about everything made in the 1960s was cheesy. It's a good story with some very good characters and actors, based on a book. These days the humour falls a bit flat, but even so there are moments, and the script is engaging, and certainly the homage to Aussie culture of the time is right on the money, sharp, and well written. This is an important contribution in terms of Australian film.
    matthewloone4

    Keith Loone - My Father

    My late Father filmed this very funny movie and as a boy we heard many stories about the fun times both cast and crew had together whilst filming.

    If any one out there knows more stories about Keith Bryan Loone, please feel free to email me. Dad died in 1988 and would love to hear more stories about himand his work. Dad used to work for Ajax films in Balmain then from memory went freelance and filmed quite a few movies over the years working with Australia's top directors, actors, writers and crew. They're weird mob is one of the original funny movies Australia produced with an international cast complete with local actors who later in life also filled our screens in memorable movies. I would like to hear more what people think of this classic.
    bamptonj

    "Great Big Country, won't you come and play..."

    'THEY'RE A WEIRD MOB' tells the story of an Italian's migration to Australia during the 1960's and his effort to adapt to this unusual breed of Englishmen living on the opposite side of the world that he soon comes to love.

    The film is one of few Australian films made in the 1960's, and therefore given its subject matter, one of the most important time capsules of that era. 'THEY'RE A WEIRD MOB' was also probably the first Australian film made with a realistic eye to international distribution, not only because much of the movie seems to delight in explaining and translating many examples of Aussie lingo, but because it takes delight in simply showing Australians being Australians – and "them being a weird bloody bunch!" Technically, it is well-made movie and the acting quite decent. I was actually surprised by the number of shots achieved with hand-held cameras and steady-cams. Perhaps for what it is, it is a little too long, but no matter.

    The movie paints an extraordinarily funny picture of how the ordinary Australian viewed himself in the 1960's: optimistic and belonging to an overwhelmingly cheery, egalitarian community. The working-male is presented not as a bludger, but as a generally reliable worker who enjoys nothing more than indulging in leisure activities with either his family or his mates. Upon finding work on a construction site in suburbia, Nino works diligently under the sun oblivious to his colleague's slower pace. He is told by his "mates" in a sympathetic tone to take a break: "there's plenty of time mate, she'll keep...roll yourself a smoke, mate / come and have a cuppa".

    The movie almost seems like a propaganda movie for prospective immigrants, as Australia paints itself a destination inexhaustive of employment opportunities and as the land of opportunity, which in all truth it was. For instance, not only does our Italian protagonist find a job on his first day in the country, but even his future father-in-law - a prosperous building company magnate - started out from humble beginnings as a bricklayer upon his family's migration to Australia the generation before. For a learned critique of how Australia enjoyed "such a good lot" in the 1950s and 1960s, read the book 'The Lucky Country' (1964) by Donald Horne. 'THEY'RE A WEIRD MOB' paints ordinary Australian's as being overwhelmingly receptive of `New Australians' to such a point that they delight in submersing immigrants in the full extent of their customs and traditions which they relish as the best in the world.

    More than anything else, the movie is a testament to the policy of assimilation during the post-war boom. As Nino makes a sturdy effort to adapt himself to the customs of the new country, most of the people he comes across display nothing if not their utmost admiration and respect for him becoming an Australian. On a ferry in the Sydney harbor, however, Nino comes across a drunkard who, after witnessing another group of ‘New Australians' having a lengthy exchange in their mother tongue exclaims "Bloody dagoes, why don't you go back to your own country?!" Sitting down, he asks Nino for a light of his smoke, to which Nino reluctantly but politely obliges in almost natural English. When he subsequently affords more hostility to the family, Nino consoles them in Italian to which the drunkard demonstrates his utmost surprise. This latent premonition of multiculturism – that is, that a New Australian could maintain links with his native country and its culture, yet still behave in all manners like an 'Australian' - was, for then, too much to ask of a previously insular, overwhelmingly Anglo society. Surprisingly, the drunkard is the only person in the move to adopt an outwardly racist tone, the movie generating the feeling that Australia is accepting of all immigrants who take a dedicated effort to assimilate.

    Predating Bazza McKenzie and Paul Hogan by some years, the movie could legitimately be described as a document of propaganda, though this definition should not detract from its historical or artistic merits. Most Australian's would enjoy watching this movie for the parodies of Australian speech and lifestyle. For instance, a national in-joke is realized with Graham Kennedy playing himself in a hilarious cameo that serves to reveal the traditional Sydney-Melbourne rivalry. Asking for directions, he is given the cold shoulder by a loyal Sydney-sider to which he responds: "You're a Sydneyite?...I thought so. You're a weird mob up here, you don't appreciate art" to which he is told that it "must be a bloody weird mob in Melbourne if they keep watching you on TV." In any event, Australians would no more cringe at this film than they would at their parents' or grandparents' generation who actually had the privilege or misfortune - depending on how critical you are of the times and its achievements - of living in the time we see on the screen.

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    Enredo

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    • Curiosidades
      "The House That Nino Built" was in Greenacre, a suburb of Sydney, Australia. Actors dug trenches, poured concrete, laid bricks, etc. The house was finished by George Wimpey & Co. Ltd. and then sold to raise funds for The Royal Life Saving Society. The stars footprints were set in concrete slabs in the pathway.
    • Citações

      Pat: You look a bit la-di-da to me for this kind of game. Where do you come from?

      Nino Culotta: Italy.

      Pat: You don't look like an Eyetie to me. More like a Jerry.

      Nino Culotta: What is a Jerry please?

      Pat: A Hun. A German. Or something that goes under a bed. Eyeties are not much better.

      Nino Culotta: Do you know Italians?

      Pat: I do. I was a prisoner of war over there.

      Nino Culotta: Oh. You were captured by our soldiers in North Africa? Because my father was captain in North Africa.

      Pat: Captured by your mob? Don't give me the tom tits. You Eyeties couldn't catch a bloody grasshopper. No - Jerries got me mate coming out of Greece - sunk the destroyer I was on.

    • Conexões
      Featured in The Story of Making the Film They're a Weird Mob (1966)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Big Country
      Words and Music by Rene Devereaux

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    Perguntas frequentes13

    • How long is They're a Weird Mob?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 13 de outubro de 1966 (Austrália)
    • Países de origem
      • Austrália
      • Reino Unido
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Umbrella Entertainment (Australia)
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Italiano
    • Também conhecido como
      • They're a Weird Mob
    • Locações de filme
      • 128 Greenacre Road, Greenacre, Sydney, Nova Gales do Sul, Austrália(the house that Nino built)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Williamson/Powell
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • AU$ 600.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 437
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 52 min(112 min)
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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