Um segurança durão é contratado para domar um bar barra pesada.Um segurança durão é contratado para domar um bar barra pesada.Um segurança durão é contratado para domar um bar barra pesada.
- Prêmios
- 5 indicações no total
Marshall R. Teague
- Jimmy
- (as Marshall Teague)
Sunshine Parker
- Emmet
- (as 'Sunshine' Parker)
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesPatrick Swayze hurt a knee during filming. He chose to make Ghost: Do Outro Lado da Vida (1990) next because it was less strenuous, turning down the roles of Gabriel Cash in Tango e Cash: Os Vingadores (1989) and Mike Harrigan in O Predador 2: A Caçada Continua (1990).
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen Red is reaching for the replacement antenna for Dalton, you can see a prop man handing the antenna to him.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosWhile the end credits are rolling, the house band does one more number.
- Versões alternativasThe UK cinema version was intact, although the video release was cut by 10 seconds by the BBFC to remove a knee kick, a double ear-clap and a groin punch. Dialogue about felling enemies by kicking them in the knee was also removed. The cuts were waived in 2001 for the DVD release.
- ConexõesEdited into Jeff Healey (1991)
- Trilhas sonorasDon't Throw Stones
Written by Tito Larriva
Produced by Waddy Wachtel
Performed by Cruzados
Courtesy of Arista Records
Avaliação em destaque
Patrick Swayze, a classically trained ballet dancer, plays Dalton, who is hired to be the head bouncer (the "cooler") of a wild bar down in the bayou called the Double Deuce. Things get a little out of hand when the local mob boss (played by Ben Gazzara, perhaps better known as The Big Lebowski's Jackie Treehorn) wants to fight. Luckily, Dalton has a friend... an old-time bouncer played by Sam Elliott.
This film is mentioned as Dawson Leery's (from "Dawson's Creek") favorite movie, which seems really odd for a character who emulates Spielberg. The film is non-stop fight scenes that extend into full bar brawls. Okay, wait, not non-stop... there's also a fair amount of sex. Sex and nudity (both male and female). You will see more of Sam Elliott than you ever thought you would. And then back to the fighting.
The bar brawls were enough to earn it the title of "Second Best Fight Movie Ever" (behind "They Live", though the choreography of "Clockwork Orange" is impressive) in my mind, but then the fights turn grotesquely violent. This is either a good thing or a bad thing depending on what you're looking for. I find this to be the selling point of the film, knowing that Dalton has the strength and training to rip a man's windpipe out through his neck. Yet, he has the cool calmness of a zen master (one wonders how his majoring in philosophy fits into his character... if at all).
There are a few things that seem strange if you're being picky. All stores and houses are packed wall to wall with propane tanks apparently, as explosions happen for no reason. Cops don't show up for fires, bar fights or the destruction of an entire car dealership (by a monster truck). They do show up once in the film without being called, when their presence no longer matters.
This is the kind of movie I can watch over and over and over again. Not because it's a great film (although it is pretty darn good)... but because its absurdity is, well, absurd. The film takes place in a universe I can only dream of. Which, being a late 1980s film, I guess makes it perfectly normal in some way. Well, whatever the case, I loved it and you should love it, too.
This film is mentioned as Dawson Leery's (from "Dawson's Creek") favorite movie, which seems really odd for a character who emulates Spielberg. The film is non-stop fight scenes that extend into full bar brawls. Okay, wait, not non-stop... there's also a fair amount of sex. Sex and nudity (both male and female). You will see more of Sam Elliott than you ever thought you would. And then back to the fighting.
The bar brawls were enough to earn it the title of "Second Best Fight Movie Ever" (behind "They Live", though the choreography of "Clockwork Orange" is impressive) in my mind, but then the fights turn grotesquely violent. This is either a good thing or a bad thing depending on what you're looking for. I find this to be the selling point of the film, knowing that Dalton has the strength and training to rip a man's windpipe out through his neck. Yet, he has the cool calmness of a zen master (one wonders how his majoring in philosophy fits into his character... if at all).
There are a few things that seem strange if you're being picky. All stores and houses are packed wall to wall with propane tanks apparently, as explosions happen for no reason. Cops don't show up for fires, bar fights or the destruction of an entire car dealership (by a monster truck). They do show up once in the film without being called, when their presence no longer matters.
This is the kind of movie I can watch over and over and over again. Not because it's a great film (although it is pretty darn good)... but because its absurdity is, well, absurd. The film takes place in a universe I can only dream of. Which, being a late 1980s film, I guess makes it perfectly normal in some way. Well, whatever the case, I loved it and you should love it, too.
- gavin6942
- 14 de mai. de 2006
- Link permanente
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- El duro
- Locações de filme
- 24650 Arch Street, Santa Clarita, Califórnia, EUA(Double Deuce and Red's Auto Parts - Demolished 2011)
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 17.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 30.050.028
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 5.957.656
- 21 de mai. de 1989
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 30.052.173
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What was the official certification given to Matador de Aluguel (1989) in Japan?
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