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Love Streams

  • 1984
  • 12
  • 2 Std. 21 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,6/10
7172
IHRE BEWERTUNG
John Cassavetes and Gena Rowlands in Love Streams (1984)
Drama

Zwei eng verbundene, emotional verletzte Seelen finden nach Jahren wieder zueinander.Zwei eng verbundene, emotional verletzte Seelen finden nach Jahren wieder zueinander.Zwei eng verbundene, emotional verletzte Seelen finden nach Jahren wieder zueinander.

  • Regie
    • John Cassavetes
  • Drehbuch
    • Ted Allan
    • John Cassavetes
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Gena Rowlands
    • John Cassavetes
    • Diahnne Abbott
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,6/10
    7172
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • John Cassavetes
    • Drehbuch
      • Ted Allan
      • John Cassavetes
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Gena Rowlands
      • John Cassavetes
      • Diahnne Abbott
    • 40Benutzerrezensionen
    • 31Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 4 Gewinne & 2 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Fotos70

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    Topbesetzung66

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    Gena Rowlands
    Gena Rowlands
    • Sarah Lawson
    John Cassavetes
    John Cassavetes
    • Robert Harmon
    Diahnne Abbott
    Diahnne Abbott
    • Susan
    Seymour Cassel
    Seymour Cassel
    • Jack Lawson
    Margaret Abbott
    • Margarita
    Jakob Shaw
    Jakob Shaw
    • Albie Swanson
    Michele Conaway
    Michele Conaway
    • Agnes Swanson
    • (as Michele Conway)
    Eddy Donno
    Eddy Donno
    • Stepfather Swanson
    Joan Foley
    Joan Foley
    • Judge Dunbar
    Al Ruban
    • Milton Kravitz
    Tom Badal
    • Sam the lawyer
    Risa Blewitt
    Risa Blewitt
    • Debbie Lawson
    • (as Risa Martha Blewitt)
    David Rowlands
    David Rowlands
    • The psychiatrist
    Robert Fieldsteel
    Robert Fieldsteel
    • Dr. Williams
    Raphael De Niro
    Raphael De Niro
    • Billy
    • (as Raphael DeNiro)
    Tony Brubaker
    Tony Brubaker
    • Frank
    John Roselius
    John Roselius
    • Ken
    Jessica St. John
    • Dottie
    • Regie
      • John Cassavetes
    • Drehbuch
      • Ted Allan
      • John Cassavetes
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen40

    7,67.1K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7jim_e123

    Good solid Cassavetes movie

    I have watched this movie many times over the years. As with all of Cassavetes movies, repeated viewing improves it. This is a good solid effort with a great final image of Cassavetes waving goodbye (both to Sarah & to us). - An interesting character study of a brother & sister. Nothing actually gets resolved during the course of the movie. We just get to watch these two characters for awhile. Both characters are just as messed up at the end as they were at the start.

    As much as I like the movie, I wouldn't go overboard raving about it. I recognize that it isn't perfect. I think that the opera dream sequence at the end of the picture is kind of annoying. However, on the positive side, it avoids including the bad acting that mar some of Cassavetes other movies.
    8jpschapira

    Deal...

    Firstly, it's not easy to have the full understanding of the cinematographic universe that John Cassavetes has. To take a stage play by Ted Allan and to co-write a script and create something that looks like everything but something you can imagine on a theater stage. In "Opening Night", almost everything occurred on the stage; here we have cities, we have bars, we have houses and, of course, people…Real people.

    I don't know if it makes any good to write long reviews about every Cassavetes' film. He pursued a style, he conquered it and he maintained it while dealing with different topics. "Love Streams" is the story of two brothers, Robert and Sarah (Cassavetes and his eternal muse Gena Rowlands), and some days they spend together.

    Like in the best movies, there's room for the viewer to draw conclusions. When Sarah knocks at Robert's door, it appears that they haven't seen each other for a long time; but we don't really know. When Robert receives his son (Jakob Shaw), the house is full of women and it appears that he doesn't care about the kid, but we don't really know; we also never fully understand the nature of Robert's work as a writer, meaning that we know he writes novels but the house full of women and the process he uses to create remains widely unexplained. When Robert interviews a singer he thinks is beautiful, it appears that he cares about her, but we don't really know.

    All these situations are not as simple as they sound; they're constant subjects in the film's two and half hours duration time. The same happens with the Rowlands character; a woman who loves his family but seems to be loosing them. There's a scene in which Sarah, her daughter Debbie (Risa Blewitt) and her husband Jack (Seymour Cassel) sit together to review the divorce papers and suddenly the little girl stands up and tells her mother: "I want to go with daddy".

    Sarah reacts as an unstable woman would do, and there are many moments in the film where we see this characteristic (we even witness a short but honest visit to a psychiatrist). However, her problem is not completely detailed and we have to figure it out through the same process we use to study Robert and every other character.

    This is what Cassavetes does. He puts the viewer to work. He presents the characters, he lets us know what we could normally see with a camera (Al Ruban's beautiful and observing camera, in a very similar style to "Opening Night"): the outside. The rest? Well, it's real life and people deal with it as it comes.

    In "Love Streams" you also have to deal with it. Deal with the things the characters are dealing with. It's not like you've never been involved with a movie character.
    10acmebooks

    the best film I've ever seen

    having seen and studied all of cassavete's films repeatedly i must say this is my favorite and one of his very best. there is such a wonderful array of emotions going on here and complex character development. we have his amazing camera, the stunning long takes of faces smiling staring really in the moment like no other acting i have ever seen on the big screen. each series of decisions by the protagonists gets us further involved in their struggles and triumphs. this film is very challenging for first time cassavetes' viewers, but well worth returning to year after year. cinema just doesn't get this good. if you like to think and want something really unique and special check this out.
    10ElMaruecan82

    Love is like alcohol ... one is too many and more is never enough ...

    An emotional exploration into the true meaning of love, not the feeling itself but the very endurance of it, whether this feeling that fills your heart is canalized toward a person, an animal …or an addiction…

    Like many Cassavetes' movies, "Love Streams" provides more interrogations than answers, and while I couldn't determine what the director's intentions were, I thought the film's was the portrayal of two tormented hearts: Robert, a trashy alcoholic writer incapable to show affection and his sister Sarah, a divorced mother drown in her awkward obsessions for love and love be loved. Two polar opposites who'd learn lessons from each other in the movie-defining moment when Robert, witnessing the emotional downfall of his sister, grab her in his arms with a fierce tenderness, a moment of pure emotion beautifully conveyed by the film's poster.

    As usual with Cassavetes, characters are as unique and specific as their feelings. It's extraordinary how Cassavetes' films paradoxically embody the very aspect that differentiate between movies and reality: the absence of archetypes, no plot, no typical characters, all of his films are a tribute to the total independence of human's spirit from any attempt to translate them into plot devices, and "Love Streams" is the fitting masterpiece of the champion of independent film-making that concludes one of the most fascinating series of cinematic character studies that started with "Shadows", foreshadowing the coming of the American New Wave, and that reached its pinnacle with the unanimously applauded "A Woman Under the Influence". Indeed, it's only after having watched the other films that I became aware that "Love Streams" was the most beautiful statement to Cassavetes' work… the epitaph of an artist haunted by an imminent death.

    Sarah's torment mirrors the condition of Mabel from "A Woman Under the Influence", as a mother incapable of being herself because of her alienation by a total desire to be loved. On the other hand, Robert reflects the character of Cosmo in "The Killing of a Chinese Bookie" in his dedication to his occupation, his constant womanizing habits and the "Husbands" syndrome in the many contradictions that inhabits his mind and prevents him for being a good father. The presence of a child also reminds of the poor kids in "Influence" or "Gloria", and the total incapability to be educated or tutored by so-called adults as themselves happen to act with the same level of child-like cowardice by escaping from their responsibilities and picking the easy way. Indeed, Robert lets his kid have a beer or discover his lifestyle (including going to Vegas or hanging out with girls) while Sarah, in the most memorable scene, buys his brother animals so he can have 'a presence' to love.

    These unsettling moments highlight the insecurity of the protagonists their incapacity to control their emotions, yet their lucidity on their desires. Sometimes it worked like in the light-hearted "Minnie and Moskowitz", sometimes it didn't like in "Shadows", "Faces" and "Husbands". Satisfying, frustrating, embarrassing or even infuriating, the key in Cassavetes' characters is that they don't tell a story, but the slices of their lives echo the eternal duality of what we are and what we want to be, our social beings and emotional ones, and maybe the source of happiness is to reconcile one another, like in "Opening Night". I'm not trying to make random connections between "Love Streams" and other Cassavetes' films but to show how the Artist never changed and this film is probably the truest and most complete expression of all the eternal conflict between social pressure and emotions.

    And on that level, even the title, beyond its poetic resonance, perfectly describes the painful beauty of love. The word 'streams' refers to a movement, that follow either a linear or tortuous road, it kind of reminds of Fellini's strada: love as a road, a journey between hearts that are mostly chaotic in Cassavetes' film, streams being above any social labels. Being a parent is not loving like a parent and Cassavetes never take those labels for granted; love is too much an abstraction to be defined by a social status. In her desperate attempt to make her daughter and husband Seymour Cassel laugh, in a powerful improvised scene, Gena Rowlands shows more what it is to be a mother, than by claiming it in a meeting, and through his journey with his boy, in his tragic clumsiness, there is a part of inner truth in Robert's fatherhood, that the kid finally perceives when he shouts "you're my father".

    This is what love is about, it's action. And as most Cassavetes' film, "Love Streams" is guided only by actions, and the only genuine emotions that don't need actions to be proved are between Sarah and Robert, as they are so close they don't need to play a role together, the intimacy between them echoes the same intimacy between Cassavetes and his audience, who don't expect answers or entertainment, only the closeness to the truth of life. Yet the film feels more achieved, more mature on a technical level, like an allegory of Cassavetes' artistry, as if he tried to overcome a fascinating paradox that defined his genius: being an Artist, loved by average viewers, while making films that could only appeal to a certain category.

    Cassavetes was no elitist, yet his movies divided, he loved people, yet the reciprocity is more uncertain and maybe he tried to make a more 'normal' film so 'more' people would love him… but perfectly lucid that you can't do something just to please without becoming a patronizing impostor, and the reason we love his films is that he always remained true to his own nature, and desire of human authenticity.

    That's how real Artists are, and "Love Streams" is the best tribute to Cassavetes' genius.
    julesee

    Cassavetes wouldn't be possible without Gena Rowlands

    There's an amazing scene in this movie where the character played by Gena Rowlands visits an animal farm and buys practically the entire stock. She's heartsick and probably insane, so she becomes ecstatic just because a dog starts licking her hand. This scene reminded me what a great actress Gena Rowlands is. I've seen all of her Cassavetes movies, and she's tough, smart and heartbreaking in all of them. She gets put through the emotional wringer in virtually every movie, but her reactions never seem phony. People might disagree over the value of Cassavetes' movies, but I think everyone could agree that he was very lucky to have her.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      A large part of the picture was filmed inside the home of John Cassavetes and Gena Rowlands.
    • Patzer
      (at around 1h 40 mins) The camera crew can be seen clearly behind the taxi when Sarah brings the animals home to Robert.
    • Zitate

      Sarah Lawson: Love is a stream, it's continuous, it doesn't stop.

    • Alternative Versionen
      When released on videotape in the US by MGM/UA, "Love Streams" was cut to 122 minutes.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in At the Movies: Body Rock/Irreconcilable Differences/A Soldier's Story/Love Streams (1984)

    Top-Auswahl

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 24. August 1984 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Französisch
      • Spanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Torrentes de amor
    • Drehorte
      • Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Cannon Films
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    Box Office

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    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 10.823 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      2 Stunden 21 Minuten
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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