Ein Schriftsteller für eine Grußkartenfirma lernt die wahre Bedeutung von Einsamkeit kennen, wenn er nach Hause kommt, um seine Freundin im Bett mit einem anderen Mann zu finden.Ein Schriftsteller für eine Grußkartenfirma lernt die wahre Bedeutung von Einsamkeit kennen, wenn er nach Hause kommt, um seine Freundin im Bett mit einem anderen Mann zu finden.Ein Schriftsteller für eine Grußkartenfirma lernt die wahre Bedeutung von Einsamkeit kennen, wenn er nach Hause kommt, um seine Freundin im Bett mit einem anderen Mann zu finden.
- Joyce Brothers
- (as Dr. Joyce Brothers)
- Park Guard
- (as Daniel P. Hannafin)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
As a New Yorker, I liked seeing the city in this movie. It's a somewhat dirtier but more variegated New York than in movies like "Ghost" or "When Harry Met Sally," which spent too much time in tony neighborhoods like Tribeca, the Village and Midtown.
Unfortunately, the definitive home video version does not exist and probably never will. The laserdisc is marred by a bad transfer and excessive, very objectionable video and audio noise. This may be the dreaded laser rot in action or just bad production. The DVD is beautiful, with a crisp transfer and no noticeable noise. But its 1.85:1 widescreen presentation is in the form of matting/masking the 1.33:1 Academy Frame, so instead of showing more picture, it actually shows less than the cassette and the laserdisc. The matting makes the "widescreen" frame feel distractingly cramped, with characters' heads continually butting up against the top. One joke in particular suffers badly: When Larry is laying on a bed talking to a woman, he's bare-chested in his fantasy to imply they're in bed together. But the widescreen version shows only his head, so the joke is weakened. Too bad a full-frame DVD will probably never be made as this is one of the few times when a full-frame presentation would have been preferable.
And in the second half, there is a scene in bed involving the 'o' word, that is very painfully unfunny and completely inane.
But what do I know.
Two scenes that really stick out in my mind:
1. When the girl says to Steve: "Nice guys don't stay lonely for long" -- so sweet!
2. When Steve realizes he missed out on a golden opportunity to "get lucky" with a pretty woman. That was wickedly funny!
But Larry can't stay lonely forever can he? It's so sad, so depressing, so... so... so... lonely.
This movie isn't a laugh-a-minute but it always stays on the plus side of humor. It doesn't fall into somberness or seriousness and it doesn't go haywire either for cheap laughs. It's an enjoyable comedy about dealing with heartache, love, and the fear of the latter causing the former.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesSteve Martin claims that he and Charles Grodin improvised 30% of their dialogue.
- PatzerThe mechanical chess game moves its rook and says, "Queen Rook to Queen Seven," taking Warren's queen, then says "Checkmate." The space it moves the rook to is King 7, not Queen 7. It is also not checkmate because there is no piece guarding the rook. Warren could have taken the rook with his king.
- Zitate
Warren Evans: I don't like to take naps. I don't like to wake up more than once a day. 'Cause when I first wake up I get that shock of who I am and everything. I... I really don't like to do that more than once a day.
Larry Hubbard: Ya.
- VerbindungenFeatured in At the Movies: Special Show: At the Cassette Store, Part 3 (1986)
- SoundtracksLove Comes Without Warning
Performed by America
Music by Jerry Goldsmith
Lyrics by John Bettis
Produced by Matt McCauley
Courtesy of Capitol Records
Top-Auswahl
- How long is The Lonely Guy?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 5.718.573 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 2.072.130 $
- 29. Jan. 1984
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 5.718.573 $