Joseph Kotcher begibt sich auf einen Roadtrip, auf dem er sich mit einer schwangeren Teenagerin anfreundet und den wahren Sinn des Lebens zu verstehen beginnt, als er dem Mädchen bei der Geb... Alles lesenJoseph Kotcher begibt sich auf einen Roadtrip, auf dem er sich mit einer schwangeren Teenagerin anfreundet und den wahren Sinn des Lebens zu verstehen beginnt, als er dem Mädchen bei der Geburt ihres Kindes hilft.Joseph Kotcher begibt sich auf einen Roadtrip, auf dem er sich mit einer schwangeren Teenagerin anfreundet und den wahren Sinn des Lebens zu verstehen beginnt, als er dem Mädchen bei der Geburt ihres Kindes hilft.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Für 4 Oscars nominiert
- 3 Gewinne & 8 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Mr. Weaver
- (as James E. Brodhead)
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This film is obviously a star-vehicle for Matthau. It is definitely his show. All popular actors in Hollywood, get film projects, that are movies about one central character. Films, that are cast with those popular actors, along with a bunch of other secondary, less-popular, character actors. Probably the next popular actor in Kotch (1971), is Charles Aidman, who plays Kotch's son, Gerald. Some viewers may know Aidman, but no one under the age of 35 would know him. Aidman didn't do many movies, but you may recognize him from his extensive television career. Kotch (1971), was an interesting departure for Walter Matthau, compared to the more, normal type-of roles he does. It is a very subtle story with very subtle performances. The film needed more energy. There are moments in the film, that could accidentally, put some viewers to sleep.
Kotch (1971), is a light-hearted comedy-drama, in the fact, that it isn't a brutal, knock-down, type-of story. It doesn't try to hit you with huge comedy moments and it doesn't try to give you a downer of a drama. It's just a film about, mostly normal people, doing mostly normal things in life. It is a fitting story for director Jack Lemmon, who has acted in dozens of films like this. The music by Marvin Hamlisch, was also nominated for an Oscar. You can clearly tell its his soundtrack too. The 1970s feel of Kotch (1971), is great, especially with that classic, gritty 1970s film-stock. It has that classic subtle feeling of old Hollywood, combined with the strength of modern cinema, which was what 1970s cinema was all about. The dawn of modern cinema. I only wish the film had a faster pace and more energy.
PMTM Grade: 6.5 (C-) = 7 IMDB.
I think I finally figured out who Walter Matthau modeled his Oscar nominated performance on, it's Casey Stengel. Casey without the double-talk, but the same non-stop garrulousness that I remember from my youth.
But Casey had his captive audience of baseball writers and fans. Poor Joseph Kotcher is a retired salesman who lives with his son and his family. Though he's an excellent babysitter for his young grandson, he's generally underfoot according to his daughter-in-law Felicia Farr. Son Charles Aidman gently persuades him he ought to move into a retirement home.
But Matthau is just a lonely old man, looking for someone to bond with. He finds someone quite unlikely in the person of Deborah Winters, the new babysitter who finds herself pregnant by her boyfriend Darrell Larson. She moves in with him and not in a retirement home and they have some interesting experiences.
Matthau lost the Best Actor Award to Gene Hackman and Kotch similarly lost as Best Picture to The French Connection. Still I think this one has stood the test of time a lot better.
Marvin Hamlisch and Johnny Mercer wrote the song Life Is What You Make It for Kotch and it lost for Best Song to the Theme from Shaft. That one was truly unfortunate.
Kotch is a picture about the person who's your grandfather, old and a bit crotchety and some times a pain in the posterior as Deborah Winters says. But he's also the one with enough life experience to come through in the clutch.
Come to think of it, one of the things that drove Deborah crazy was his insistence on a car with an old fashioned clutch as opposed to automatic transmission.
We're used to seeing Matthau play curmudgeons, but here his character gets a new outlook on life. There's a scene towards the end that's a shocker (let's just say that Walter Matthau is the last person whom you'd picture doing that). All in all, a good movie. Not a masterpiece, but I still recommend it.
What makes the movie so good is that it doesn't really stress the attempt of his son and daughter-in-law to put him in a home and then show the misery of homes. Rather,it deals with the coming of life anew for Matthau when he takes a profound interest in the very pregnant babysitter for his grandson. What an interesting idea and it is so well developed.
Deborah Winters gives a fantastic supporting performance as the pregnant girl,orphaned, raised by an uncaring brother who finds meaning in her life when she aided by Kotch.
There is a totally winning song dealing with what you do with your life.
This film was definitely an under-rated gem. Too bad.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesDirectorial debut for Jack Lemmon. Lemmon found direction duties both emotionally and physically draining and felt very uncomfortable behind the camera. This was his one and only film as a director.
- PatzerKotch collects old bowling pins to throw into his fireplace to keep warm. In reality, the thick plastic coatings would create smoke and noxious fumes.
- Zitate
Joseph P. Kotcher: [about his wife and baby son in the car] She covered all the windows every time she changed him. I don't know why, I don't know what harm it would do people seeing his little pink pecker at 25 miles an hour, but she covered the windows every time.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Legenden der Leinwand: Walter Matthau (2016)
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Details
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 1.334.165 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 53 Minuten
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1