IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,5/10
2980
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThree vignettes, each set in room 719 of New York's Plaza Hotel, make up this comedy.Three vignettes, each set in room 719 of New York's Plaza Hotel, make up this comedy.Three vignettes, each set in room 719 of New York's Plaza Hotel, make up this comedy.
- Auszeichnungen
- 2 Nominierungen insgesamt
José Ocasio
- Room Service Waiter
- (as Jose Ocasio)
Frank Albanese
- Parking Lot Attendant
- (Nicht genannt)
Raina Barrett
- Girl in Lobby
- (Nicht genannt)
Jack Beers
- Man in Hotel
- (Nicht genannt)
James Bryson
- Doorman
- (Nicht genannt)
Jordan Charney
- Jesse's Aide
- (Nicht genannt)
Gordon B. Clarke
- Hotel Manager
- (Nicht genannt)
Alan DeWitt
- Man in Lobby
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
I swear, Neil Simon was window peeping on my life. At least, in the 1st vignette. I had that conversation, and I had/have that memory. Amazing. Simon is a master. I saw this the 1st at a much younger age and couldn't relate but I can now. I haven't been the wedding character yet, but it's coming. I've met the guy in vignette #2, but I'm smarter and left his dumba$$ at the bar.
Neil Simon's Broadway success, brought to the screen in a dung-colored transfer. Walter Matthau plays three different men who check into suite 719 at the Plaza Hotel in New York City at different times. In the opener, he's a neglectful husband to needy, chatty Maureen Stapleton; in the second, he's a movie producer from Hollywood who phones up old flame Barbara Harris for a tryst; and for the finale, Matthau is married to Lee Grant and suffering the wedding catastrophe blues after his daughter gets cold feet before her ceremony. Simon, despite having penned the adaptation himself, was reportedly not happy with the picture; George C. Scott and Maureen Stapleton had played all the central parts on stage, though Simon felt Matthau's take on the three male characters didn't work on film. He was partly right (Matthau is most ill-at-ease in the second episode), but the main problem with the film is the first installment. Portraying a long-suffering married couple on the brink of imploding, Matthau and Stapleton are busily beleaguered and convincingly antagonistic...it might have helped if they were funnier. Matthau's incarnation of the callous (and cheating) hubby is, unfortunately, so unfeeling towards his spouse--in a story which is not satisfactorily resolved--that it leaves a sour residue from which the rest of "Plaza Suite" never recovers. Some of the flip talk is cheeky and amusing, Lee Grant gets some colorful bits of business, but this is still a depressing experience. The Plaza Hotel must have been infuriated with the art direction: this picture makes the posh resort look like a Burger King. ** from ****
Walter Matthau plays 3 different characters,each convincing it's a different person. My favorite segment is the one with Barbara Harris though. Great chemistry those two had in that scene! Maureen Stapleton was kinda funny too,but by the third act I got bored and turned it off. Maybe I'll finish it soon.
Matthau scores in all three vignettes from Neil Simon's long running triumph about different people who stay at a particular room in the posh New York hotel. His three ladies Stapelton, Harris and Grant are also wonderful. This is among the best of Simon's works to be adapted for the screen.
Not very funny or interesting. All three of the skits are pretty boring. I could hardly keep myself awake during the second one, I only watched the third one because i heard it was the best of the three, It was just as bad as the first two. Walter Matthau is a fine actor but not in here.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe stage version of "Plaza Suite" by Neil Simon originally had four acts instead of three. The act that was cut was entitled "Visitor from Toledo", and was intended to open the play. Simon once described the act to the Newark Evening News as being "...about a man who came to New York from out of town and lost his luggage. He got there in the middle of a transit strike. It was snowing. So after he had checked into the Plaza [Hotel] he had this monologue. We put Plaza Suite into rehearsal, and after about the fifth day [director] Mike Nichols said, 'We just have too much show here. If we include that monologue, the curtain will be coming down at midnight.'" Simon later re-worked and expanded that story into the film Nie wieder New York! (1970).
- PatzerIn Act 3, Norma Hubley's hat gets soaking wet when she sticks her head out of the window. In the next shot it is dry again.
- Zitate
Norma Hubley: Promise me you won't get hysterical.
Roy Hubley: Why? What'd you do?
Norma Hubley: Just promise me.
Roy Hubley: Alright, I promise. what'd you do?
Norma Hubley: I broke my diamond ring.
Roy Hubley: Your good diamond ring?
Norma Hubley: How many do I have?
- VerbindungenFeatured in Paramount Presents (1974)
- SoundtracksTangerine
Written by Johnny Mercer and Victor Schertzinger
Top-Auswahl
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Details
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 1.669.403 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 54 Min.(114 min)
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
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