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IMDbPro

Joe - Rache für Amerika

Originaltitel: Joe
  • 1970
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 47 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,8/10
4877
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Joe - Rache für Amerika (1970)
Two men, Bill, a wealthy conservative, and Joe, a far-right factory worker, form a dangerous bond after Bill confesses to Joe about murdering his daughter's drug dealer boyfriend.
trailer wiedergeben3:09
2 Videos
54 Fotos
DramaThriller

Zwei Männer, Bill, ein wohlhabender Konservativer, und Joe, ein rechtsextremer Fabrikarbeiter, gehen eine gefährliche Verbindung ein, nachdem Bill Joe gestanden hat, den Freund seiner Tochte... Alles lesenZwei Männer, Bill, ein wohlhabender Konservativer, und Joe, ein rechtsextremer Fabrikarbeiter, gehen eine gefährliche Verbindung ein, nachdem Bill Joe gestanden hat, den Freund seiner Tochter, einen Drogendealer, ermordet zu haben.Zwei Männer, Bill, ein wohlhabender Konservativer, und Joe, ein rechtsextremer Fabrikarbeiter, gehen eine gefährliche Verbindung ein, nachdem Bill Joe gestanden hat, den Freund seiner Tochter, einen Drogendealer, ermordet zu haben.

  • Regie
    • John G. Avildsen
  • Drehbuch
    • Norman Wexler
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Peter Boyle
    • Dennis Patrick
    • Susan Sarandon
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,8/10
    4877
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • John G. Avildsen
    • Drehbuch
      • Norman Wexler
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Peter Boyle
      • Dennis Patrick
      • Susan Sarandon
    • 89Benutzerrezensionen
    • 41Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Oscar nominiert
      • 1 Nominierung insgesamt

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    Peter Boyle
    Peter Boyle
    • Joe Curran
    Dennis Patrick
    Dennis Patrick
    • Bill Compton
    Susan Sarandon
    Susan Sarandon
    • Melissa Compton
    Patrick McDermott
    Patrick McDermott
    • Frank Russo
    Tim Lewis
    • Kid in Soda Shop
    Estelle Omens
    • Woman in Bargain Store
    Bob O'Connell
    Bob O'Connell
    • Man in Bargain Store
    Marlene Warfield
    Marlene Warfield
    • Bellevue Nurse
    Audrey Caire
    • Joan Compton
    Mary Case
    • Teeny Bopper
    Jenny Paine
    • Teeny Bopper
    Reid Cruickshanks
    Reid Cruickshanks
    • American Bartender
    Rudy Churney
    • Man in Bar
    K Callan
    K Callan
    • Mary Lou Curran
    • (as K. Callan)
    Robert Emerick
    • TV Newscaster
    Gloria Hoye
    • Janine
    Bo Enivel
    • Sam in Bowling Alley
    Michael O'Neal
    • Bartender at Ginger Man
    • Regie
      • John G. Avildsen
    • Drehbuch
      • Norman Wexler
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen89

    6,84.8K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7AlsExGal

    A sleeper hit of the 1970s

    It's about a square ad executive (Dennis Patrick) who kills the drug dealer boyfriend of his junkie daughter (Susan Sarandon, her film debut). He strikes up a friendship with a bigoted factory worker (Peter Boyle) and the two decide to infiltrate the hippie world of lower East Side of New York.

    This is a gritty, sometimes funny look at hippie and drug culture. Peter Boyle is excellent as the loudmouth working stiff, being both funny and scary at the same time. The music is good too, an excellent song sung by Jerry Butler is played over the credits and there is a hilarious country tune dedicated to the Joe character. The film is not for everyone, if you are offended by foul language, racial slurs, nudity, drugs or violence, you should stay away. In fact, you should probably stay way from the 1970s if you are so offended.
    7reelreviewsandrecommendations

    The Blinding Veil of Political Dogmatism

    Bill Compton is a wealthy, conservative advertising executive who would be living the traditional American dream were it not for one thing: his daughter is a hippie. She and her boyfriend spend their days doing drugs and wasting time. After she overdoses, Compton accidentally kills the boyfriend in a fit of rage. Later he meets Joe, an ultra-right-wing blue-collar worker, and drunkenly tells the man his murderous secret. Joe believes he's found a kindred spirit in Compton and the two form an unlikely friendship. However, Joe's virulent hatred for anything and anyone liberal makes both men's lives increasingly complicated, violent and dangerous.

    Directed by John G. Avildsen, 'Joe' is a character study and a drama about evolving cultural mores, highlighting the ideological schism that emerged between generations following the counter-culture revolution of the 60's. Norman Wexler's screenplay is sharp and full of fantastic, grittily realistic dialogue. It is unhampered by bias, scathing of both old school conservatism and the 'free love' attitude of the hippie movement alike- not to mention political extremism and classism. While the story contains moments of violence and can be a tad melodramatic from time to time, at its' heart it's a clever, subtle examination of two multi-faceted, realistic characters.

    Compton and Joe are disillusioned by a society in which they no longer feel comfortable. As many were at the time, they are threatened by the hedonistic lifestyle the youth of the film embody. However, they are also strangely attracted to it. Compton and Joe want to partake in the 'free love' but can't allow themselves to because of their deeply held conservative beliefs. Thus, they are left out in the cold so to speak, and their violent reaction to their uncertain place in the 'modern' world seems like a foregone conclusion from the beginning of the film because of the strength of Wexler's characterization.

    Having said that, the supporting characters are all a little hollow and underwritten in comparison to Compton and Joe, most notably Compton's daughter, played by Susan Sarandon in her big screen debut. She comes across like a parody of a hippie, the kind you'd see dancing in the background of a Peter Sellers' farce from the 60's- or perhaps even one of the 'Austin Powers' films. What makes it all the worse is the fact that Sarandon is completely stilted, wooden and lacking in charisma. Though in a few years she'd start giving the powerful, nuanced performances she's known for today, it's a wonder her awfully mediocre work in 'Joe' didn't derail her career just as it was beginning.

    On the positive side of things, 'Joe' features an atmospheric original soundtrack from Bobby Scott that makes good use of songs from the likes of Exuma and Dean Michaels. Michaels 'Hey Joe' is particularly memorable, with lyrics reflecting the narrative beats of the film, as well as the ideology of the titular character. Besides directing, Avildsen also acted as cinematographer and his work has a naturalistic quality that is most affecting. The film is also very well-edited, having a brisk pace that makes Compton and Joe's journey to the dark side all the more exhilarating and frantic.

    Dennis Patrick stars as Compton, delivering a performance of style and subtlety. Not as colorful or as openly bigoted as the titular character, Compton is nevertheless a complicated person with darkness in his soul, a man capable of extreme violence. Patrick couldn't have been better in the role, bringing to it much depth and intelligence. He makes Compton sympathetic- which is no mean feat considering the actions the character takes in the film- and he and co-star Peter Boyle work together marvelously.

    Always a reliable actor, Boyle is brilliant as the bigoted blue-collar worker Joe. While not a likable character by any means, Boyle imbues Joe with a certain seedy charm and complexity that is intensely interesting and effective. He plays Joe as a regular man whose perception of reality is skewed by his political inclination, as one who can't see the truth from behind a blinding veil of conservative dogmatism. Boyle's assured performance is a joy to behold, and one can tell that he understood the character's motivations perfectly.

    In short, John G. Avildsen's 'Joe' is a powerful and clever parable about bigotry, principles and violence boasting a fine Norman Wexler screenplay and a great soundtrack from Bobby Scott. Dennis Patrick and Peter Boyle deliver two fascinating, impactful performances of great depth and complexity that are highlights in both men's filmographies. Although the supporting characters are a little underwritten- and some questionably acted- 'Joe' is a terrific movie that has only gotten more relevant and entertaining with time.
    peter-m-koch

    Perhaps the ultimate 60's generation gap exploitation film ...

    ... "Joe" captures the spirit, fears, angers, and prejudices of the time as perhaps no other film does. Joe Curran, as played by Peter Boyle, is a super-malevolent Archie Bunker to the n-th degree. He makes the Carroll O'Connor - Norman Lear TV character seem as lovable and cuddly as Tickle Me Elmo by comparison. In contrast to Bunker, Joe Curran most definitely would burn a cross on your front lawn, instead of just toasting a marshmallow on one he found already burning there, to borrow the words of young Lionel Jefferson, spoken to Sammy Davis Jr. about Archie Bunker. Released hard on the heels of the Kent State University "massacre", and the CSNY track "Ohio", and the Isley Bros. medley of "Ohio" and Jimi Hendrix's "Machine Gun", it's as hard-hitting as the probably by now mostly forgotten fall 1968 CBS TV play, "The People Next Door". Bill Compton's ironic comment about the vacuity of much upper-echelon white-collar work, "All we do is sit around all day making little paper airplanes and sail them up people's asses !" is as relevant today as it was then. Equally memorable is the retort of the hippie girl Joe has just had sex with, "How could I lie to you ? You just balled me !" Free love as a hippie litmus of truth ? The film is as much a part, and sign of, its times, as Altamont, "Gimme Shelter", "Putney Swope", and "M.A.S.H." and "Patton" playing on the same bill in many theaters in 1971. Joe Curran's "42 % of all liberals are queer !" is a worthy companion prejudice to Archie Bunker's "England is a fag country !"
    7berry-michael61

    That's the way it was

    This was the first movie I viewed, just by chance, after my discharge from active duty in the Army in 1970. Forty-two years later, remembering nothing of the plot, only that I left the theater very emotional (rare for me), I found a DVD copy at a local library.

    I now realize why I have since not been able to regard Peter Boyle as anything but a frightening character, even in his comic role on the TV series "Everybody Loves Raymond." To be fair, his 1976 role in "Taxi Driver" didn't help, but his face, as seen in "Joe", is still the stuff of nightmares for me.

    That said, I learned that it was the now long-forgotten hostility between sectors of our society, so brutally represented in the film, created by the debacle in Vietnam that affected me so deeply in 1970. Today, even to one who was there, the experience of living in an America so torn, so close to open rebellion, is hard to conceive - even harder to explain. But fresh off the plane, still somewhat glum from the cold stares at the airport caused by my uniform, this film hit me like a hammer. And guessing from the huge profit it made, it did the same to many.

    It shocked me that I hadn't remembered Susan Sarandon was in this film - she has been one of my favorites - and, as a bonus, the then 24 year-old Ms. Sarandon appears nude. How could I have possibly forgotten that?
    7lee_eisenberg

    Some people shouldn't try to cross paths; unfortunately, they do.

    "Joe" is one of those movies where, although you think that it might go along smoothly, ends up hitting you like...I can't come up with an analogy. It showed not only that America's long-standing idea of unity was moot, but also the various aspects within our society. Melissa Compton (Susan Sarandon) is the ultimate flower child, while her father Bill (Dennis Patrick) is a clean-cut executive. One day, Bill accidentally kills Melissa's boyfriend. In the immediate aftermath, Bill gets acquainted with Joe Curran (Peter Boyle), an ultra-right-wing, rabidly racist working stiff. As a result, the two of them end up associating more and more with the hippies, whom Bill finds unpleasant and Joe outright hates. But in the end, everything has dead serious consequences.

    True, some parts of the movie are a little bit dated, but it's a good juxtaposition of America's two sides during the Vietnam War. And rest assured, the residual effects of all that will probably never go away.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Film debut of Susan Sarandon.
    • Patzer
      Microphone briefly visible over Joe's head in phone booth.
    • Zitate

      Joe: Forty-two percent of all liberals are queer, that's a fact. The Wallace people did a poll.

    • Alternative Versionen
      The original UK cinema version was cut by the BBFC to heavily edit the sequence where Frank prepares and injects heroin. The 1986 Stablecane video was 15 rated and featured an edited print which ran around 10 minutes shorter and missed the scene out completely. The 2008 Optimum DVD is 18 rated and features the full uncut version.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Precious Images (1986)
    • Soundtracks
      Where Are You Going
      Written by Bobby Scott & Danny Meehan

      Sung by Jerry Butler

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 22. April 1971 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Joe
    • Drehorte
      • New York City, New York, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Cannon Productions
      • The Cannon Group
      • D.C. Company
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 106.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 19.319.254 $
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 19.319.254 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 47 Min.(107 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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