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Interiores

Título original: Interiors
  • 1978
  • 14
  • 1 h 32 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,3/10
22 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Diane Keaton, Mary Beth Hurt, and Kristin Griffith in Interiores (1978)
Assistir a Trailer [EN]
Reproduzir trailer2:49
1 vídeo
99+ fotos
Drama

Três irmãs descobrem que suas vidas estão saindo de controle após o divórcio repentino e inesperado de seus pais.Três irmãs descobrem que suas vidas estão saindo de controle após o divórcio repentino e inesperado de seus pais.Três irmãs descobrem que suas vidas estão saindo de controle após o divórcio repentino e inesperado de seus pais.

  • Direção
    • Woody Allen
  • Roteirista
    • Woody Allen
  • Artistas
    • Diane Keaton
    • Geraldine Page
    • Kristin Griffith
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,3/10
    22 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Woody Allen
    • Roteirista
      • Woody Allen
    • Artistas
      • Diane Keaton
      • Geraldine Page
      • Kristin Griffith
    • 134Avaliações de usuários
    • 63Avaliações da crítica
    • 67Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado a 5 Oscars
      • 9 vitórias e 17 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer [EN]
    Trailer 2:49
    Trailer [EN]

    Fotos126

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    Elenco principal14

    Editar
    Diane Keaton
    Diane Keaton
    • Renata
    Geraldine Page
    Geraldine Page
    • Eve
    Kristin Griffith
    Kristin Griffith
    • Flyn
    Mary Beth Hurt
    Mary Beth Hurt
    • Joey
    Richard Jordan
    Richard Jordan
    • Frederick
    E.G. Marshall
    E.G. Marshall
    • Arthur
    Maureen Stapleton
    Maureen Stapleton
    • Pearl
    Sam Waterston
    Sam Waterston
    • Mike
    Missy Hope
    • Young Joey
    Kerry Duffy
    • Young Renata
    Nancy Collins
    • Young Flyn
    Penny Gaston
    • Young Eve
    Roger Morden
    • Young Arthur
    Henderson Forsythe
    • Judge Bartel
    • Direção
      • Woody Allen
    • Roteirista
      • Woody Allen
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários134

    7,321.6K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    10secondtake

    A large ensemble cast, written, filmed, and directed with quiet force....

    Interiors (1978)

    This is one of those dark, serious, realistic personal dramas that critics shook their heads at in 1978. It wasn't because it wasn't good--it's frankly a brilliant combination of the big three: acting, writing, photography. It was because it was directed (and written) by Woody Allen. And Woody Allen is funny, right? Critics at the time, however, to their credit, gave the film a fair reading, and for three brilliant excerpt of period reviews, I recommend the Wikipedia entry on the movie.

    So watch this film thinking it's by someone else, if you have to. take it in on its own subtle terms as three sisters watch their own deficiencies bloom when their parents abruptly separate. There is some familiar territory here, actors Allen has turned to many times (including Diane Keaton, of course, who he was once, in 1970, involved with). The world is one that might actually be parallel to his own, not Jewish New York but rather a highly educated literary set with money and ambitions, but deeply steeped in the arts.

    In short, "Interiors" was and is appreciated but always with a feeling that it isn't quite complete, that it isn't what it could have been. It's easy to see that it is unremittingly dour, almost to perversion. And you might say that it plays the Bergman card too hard without overt appropriation (which makes it merely derivative, that worst of echoes). It is fair, I suppose, to say that Allen really has succeeded, but not in the remarkable ways he had succeeded so clearly in his earlier films, including his previous nugget, "Annie Hall," which is in my view his first true drama, but which has the benefit of also being funny.

    Or you can just sit back and take it in for what it does do so well, letting the interior lives of these people seem as shattered and pathetic as they really seem. The photography by Gordon Willis is admirable for being beautiful and inventive without being distracting. Allen and Willis make clear this intention with opening shots, a series of fixed camera views of rooms, and then views out windows, all framed with classic proportions, but sequenced to pull you in. But look how often the camera follows two people as they walk and talk, either up close in front of them, or along the beach through an irregular snow fence. Its pace and "tastefulness" of the photography almost seems designed by one of the main characters, the troubled interior decorator mother played with uncanny effectiveness by Geraldine Page.

    Expect nothing in particular here except a tour-de-force that works on its own depressing terms.
    7gavin6942

    A Turn For The Serious

    Three sisters find their lives spinning out of control in the wake of their parents' sudden, unexpected divorce.

    What do we have here? A Woody Allen film with no comedy, and no Woody. We have Joel Schumacher as the costume designer (before his years as director) and something that amounts to a Bergmanesque family drama, though without the full Scandinavian despair.

    Vincent Canby wrote, "My problem with Interiors is that although I admire the performances and isolated moments, as well as the techniques and the sheer, headlong courage of this great, comic, film-making philosopher, I haven't any real idea what the film is up to."

    The criticism aside, Canby calls Allen out for being heavy on the philosophy references, with the dense writing of Allen that he is known for and makes his films his own. Is this Bergman? No. Is it Allen trying to be Bergman? Maybe. But it has Allen all over it, in the dialogue, and that has some value in and of itself.
    drosse67

    Charts new territory

    Interiors is Woody Allen's first straight drama, and while most compare the film to Ingmar Bergman (one of Allen's favorite directors), the film's examination of a dysfunctional family struggling for normalcy is a forerunner to such '80s films as Ordinary People and Shoot the Moon, and acclaimed '90s films The Ice Storm, Happiness and American Beauty. The film focuses on three sisters (not the first time Woody Allen would do this), and their reaction to their parents' sudden divorce and then their father's affair with a less glamorous, but very REAL, woman.

    Maureen Stapleton plays the new woman and has what I feel is the most heartbreaking scene in the movie. One of the sisters (played by Mary Beth Hurt) inexplicably lashes out at Stapleton after she accidentally breaks a vase. Stapleton's reaction to this is so touching that I remembered it long after the other events faded away. The film is good but stagy; I prefer Woody Allen's later serious dramas because they seem less confined or more stylish (the various Manhattan settings in "Another Woman" and the sudden blackout in the Vermont house in "September"). Still, fans of the '90s films should seek this one out, and since Woody Allen doesn't appear, movie fans should invite Woody bashers over to their homes and start the movie right after the opening credits. The reactions may be interesting.
    7EUyeshima

    A Dysfunctional Family Wrapped in Frigid Austerity Makes for Allen's So-Serious Drama

    It's pretty obvious that Woody Allen was so resistant in being confined as a comedy filmmaker that in the throes of his success with the wondrous "Annie Hall", he felt a need to make an über-serious drama in the Ingmar Bergman mode. This 1978 Chekhovian family drama is the result, and it is alternately affecting and exasperating. The key problem is that Allen presents such a hermetically sealed world of intellectuals and artistic souls that the interactions among the characters feel pointed and self-conscious. He has obviously since learned that his best films ("Manhattan", "Hannah and Her Sisters") are served most by his particular balance between comedy and drama.

    The story concerns an upscale New York family reacting to the news that patriarch Arthur wants to leave his psychologically unstable wife Eve just released from a sanitarium. They have three daughters, all of whom are grappling with their own problems. Eldest sister Renata is a successful poet stuck in a volatile marriage to Frederick, a fellow writer whose lack of commercial success has merely heightened his jealousy and paranoia. Middle daughter Joey is Arthur's favorite, but she is unable to figure out what to do with her life, and her constant flailing frustrates everyone around her in spite of the patience of her boyfriend Michael. Youngest daughter Flyn is the beautiful, emotionally isolated one who moved to Hollywood to become a semi-successful actress.

    They all respond to their mother Eve's neediness in different ways, and the inevitable turning point comes when Arthur finalizes the divorce and remarries, this time to a passionate, fun-loving widow named Pearl. Even though Gordon Willis' beige-dominated cinematography and the frigid, almost-too-perfect art direction by Mel Bourne and Daniel Robert lend the extreme austerity for which Allen seems to be striving, the acting is what makes this film dramatically effective. Mary Beth Hurt gives a brave performance as Joey, capturing all the inadequacy and wounded rejection her character feels. Maureen Stapleton is a breath of fresh air as Pearl, lending an amusing earthiness and colorful indifference when she arrives late in the story.

    With her severe look, Geraldine Page effectively lends unrelenting, humorless intensity to her heavily mannered portrayal of Eve and turns her character into a hopelessly desperate victim as the story moves toward its conclusion. As Renata, Diane Keaton removes all traces of the lovable Annie Hall but unfortunately comes across as the most contrived, especially when her character cannot help but be patronizing to Frederick and Joey. Richard Jordan plays Frederick in broad strokes that make it difficult to empathize with his plight. Making lesser impressions are Sam Waterson as Michael, Kristin Griffith as Flyn and a surprisingly understated E.G. Marshall as Arthur. Just the original trailer is included as an extra on the 2000 DVD.
    8moonspinner55

    Sick psyches

    The three adult daughters of a quiet attorney and an imperious matriarch are alternately offended and benumbed by their parents' divorce and their father's "hasty" decision to remarry (leaving mama to fend for herself, probably something she needs but does not enjoy--there's no one to boss around). Bergmanesque drama from writer-director Woody Allen, who does not appear or even feel present (Pauline Kael of the New Yorker claims his neuroses have been transposed to the mother-character, but I never felt like I was watching something created by Woody Allen). All the actors are quite fine playing characters who are high-strung, uptight, woebegone (yet oddly, never intentionally comical), yet the flatness of the dialogue and the listlessness of Mary Beth Hurt's frequent narration may strain some viewers' patience. Some of the wordy sequences tend to ramble, and what words! Allen has a fixation with non-textbook terms for multiple abnormal psychoses; and no matter how educated Hurt's character is supposed to be, I had trouble swallowing some of the high-brow talk in her third-act put-down of Geraldine Page. The movie--seriously well-scrubbed, sterile and somber--has many conflicts and personality quirks which feel real and intricate, and Page's high society dementia is riveting (alternately, Maureen Stapleton's gaudy low-class is also superb). The three sisters remain enigmas that confound and confuse (each other and the viewer) but Diane Keaton's gritty reserve as the eldest daughter is the one I gravitated towards. Not a masterpiece (as some critics claimed), but certainly not a dud. It's Woody's art-house gambol, a dark one, and it leaves behind a fascinating imprint. *** from ****

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    • Curiosidades
      First dramatic film of Woody Allen. Allen was known for comedy, and wanted to break the mold by having no humor at all in this movie. At one point, the family is gathered around the table laughing at a joke which Arthur has just told, but we never hear the joke.
    • Erros de gravação
      During the ending credits when the producers' acknowledgments are given, it is misspelled as "ackowledge."
    • Citações

      Pearl: You only live once, and once is enough if you play your cards right.

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      Casting director Juliet Taylor's name is spelled Juilet Taylor in the credits.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Sneak Previews: Death on the Nile/Somebody Killed Her Husband/Interiors/The Boys From Brazil/A Wedding/Piranha/Up in Smoke (1978)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Keepin' Out of Mischief Now
      (1932)

      Written by Fats Waller (uncredited) & Andy Razaf (uncredited)

      Performed by Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra

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    Perguntas frequentes19

    • How long is Interiors?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 6 de outubro de 1978 (Canadá)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • MGM
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Interiors
    • Locações de filme
      • Church of St. Ignatius Loyola, Nova Iorque, Nova Iorque, EUA
    • Empresas de produção
      • Jack Rollins & Charles H. Joffe Productions
      • Rollins-Joffe Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 10.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 10.432.366
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 10.432.366
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 32 min(92 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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