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IMDbPro

Warum eigentlich... bringen wir den Chef nicht um?

Originaltitel: Nine to Five
  • 1980
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 49 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,9/10
42.003
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Jane Fonda, Dolly Parton, Dabney Coleman, and Lily Tomlin in Warum eigentlich... bringen wir den Chef nicht um? (1980)
Trailer ansehen
trailer wiedergeben1:34
1 Video
99+ Fotos
FarceKomödie

Drei Mitarbeiterinnen eines sexistischen, egoistischen, verlogenen, heuchlerischen Frömmlers finden einen Weg, den Spieß umzudrehen.Drei Mitarbeiterinnen eines sexistischen, egoistischen, verlogenen, heuchlerischen Frömmlers finden einen Weg, den Spieß umzudrehen.Drei Mitarbeiterinnen eines sexistischen, egoistischen, verlogenen, heuchlerischen Frömmlers finden einen Weg, den Spieß umzudrehen.

  • Regie
    • Colin Higgins
  • Drehbuch
    • Patricia Resnick
    • Colin Higgins
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Jane Fonda
    • Lily Tomlin
    • Dolly Parton
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,9/10
    42.003
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Colin Higgins
    • Drehbuch
      • Patricia Resnick
      • Colin Higgins
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Jane Fonda
      • Lily Tomlin
      • Dolly Parton
    • 143Benutzerrezensionen
    • 54Kritische Rezensionen
    • 58Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Oscar nominiert
      • 4 Gewinne & 8 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:34
    Trailer

    Fotos167

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    Poster ansehen
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    Topbesetzung46

    Ändern
    Jane Fonda
    Jane Fonda
    • Judy Bernly
    Lily Tomlin
    Lily Tomlin
    • Violet Newstead
    Dolly Parton
    Dolly Parton
    • Doralee Rhodes
    Dabney Coleman
    Dabney Coleman
    • Franklin Hart, Jr.
    Sterling Hayden
    Sterling Hayden
    • Tinsworthy
    Elizabeth Wilson
    Elizabeth Wilson
    • Roz
    Henry Jones
    Henry Jones
    • Hinkle
    Lawrence Pressman
    Lawrence Pressman
    • Dick
    Marian Mercer
    Marian Mercer
    • Missy Hart
    Renn Woods
    Renn Woods
    • Barbara
    • (as Ren Woods)
    Norma Donaldson
    • Betty
    Roxanna Bonilla-Giannini
    • Maria
    Peggy Pope
    Peggy Pope
    • Margaret
    Richard Stahl
    Richard Stahl
    • Meade
    Ray Vitte
    Ray Vitte
    • Eddie
    Edward Marshall
    • Bob Enright
    Alan Haufrect
    Alan Haufrect
    • Chuck Strell
    Earl Boen
    Earl Boen
    • Perkins
    • Regie
      • Colin Higgins
    • Drehbuch
      • Patricia Resnick
      • Colin Higgins
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen143

    6,942K
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    7Mr-Fusion

    The boss is gonna get his

    I'll take the blame for this: not only am I forty years late to the party, but I'd also underestimated the star power of Dolly Parton; a natural performer who's integral to the success of this movie. On its own, 9 to 5 is a decent comedy, led by the more-than-capable Lily Tomlin, but Parton infuses her scenes with a bubbly independence that really helps sell the feminist message. Dabney Coleman is the consummate company sleaze, the tinpot schemer helming this faceless conglomerate; ideal for the target of such a workplace revenge fantasy.

    In less capable hands, this may have fallen flat. But I enjoyed myself and have a newfound (overdye) reverence for The Queen of Nashville.
    8bkoganbing

    "Poured Myself A Cup Of Ambition"

    While watching Nine To Five, I couldn't help but think about the Billy Wilder classic film, The Apartment. Part of the plot of that film was Fred MacMurray, a more polished version of Dabney Coleman from this film who also used his office and position of authority to behave like a real pig. I thought about poor Shirley MacLaine who tried to commit suicide and eventually found love with Jack Lemmon, but both faced an uncertain future albeit with each other.

    Shirley and the other of MacMurray's victims should have seen this film and taken a lesson from Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin, and Dolly Parton who start as strangers and end up as allies and who find a way to get even with Dabney Coleman for using and abusing his employees.

    All three women are different, different in real life and playing different types of characters in the film and at the beginning not really liking each other because they don't know each other. Tomlin is the efficient office manger who makes Coleman look good because he takes credit for her work. Fonda is a new employee who had to go back to work because her husband left her. And the beautiful and curvaceous Parton is Coleman's secretary who Coleman is trying to jump her form and the folks in the office think he already has.

    But eventually these women make common cause and what they do to Coleman is an inspiration to working women everywhere.

    As good as these women are the film would go nowhere without Dabney Coleman who makes a specialty of playing men you love to hate whether in comedy or drama. He's as big a sexist pig as MacMurray and a whole lot funnier.

    The supporting cast has some real interesting roles as well. Elizabeth Wilson plays the office snitch and anyone who has ever worked in an office you can count yourself lucky if there are only one of those in your place of work. And they don't have to necessarily be women. I also liked Marian Mercer as Coleman's completely clueless wife. And movie veteran Sterling Hayden comes on in the end as the chairman of the board of the company who in his own earnest, but clueless way settles all their problems.

    To Dolly, Jane, and Lily who took action for put upon employees everywhere, we did love you in this film.
    tfrizzell

    Hilarious Office Angst.

    Three miserable women (Dolly Parton, Lily Tomlin and Jane Fonda) take it upon themselves to get back at their evil boss (Dabney Coleman) in this hilarious little film. Rat poison, crazy dream sequences and S&M-styled equipment are the main calling cards in this amazingly creative little comedy. Parton's title song is also strong and it received an Oscar nod in 1980. Impressive comedic fare. 4 stars out of 5.
    7lasttimeisaw

    as delightful and jolly as one can get in a comedy that has something to say but consciously eschews any trace of indoctrination

    Three female company employees wage war against their "sexist, egotistical, lying, hypocritical bigot" boss in this prototype 80s sisterhood comedy, 9 TO 5 is the late Colin Higgins' second feature film and flexes the muscle of female star power which not only brings down the house, but also sets alight its box office, the runner-up top-grosser of its year, second only to STAR WARS: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK.

    The Fonda-Tomlin-Parton trinity embodies three different types of career women, Fonda's Judy is a housewife grossly jilted by her ex-husband for his secretary, so she is the greenhorn in the workplace, prissy but not without wits and guts, her frilly entrance is remarkably incongruous with the rest, although her clash with the boss Frank (Coleman) is most tangential among the three, her personal victory climaxed when she blurts out to her feckless ex-husband that being dumped by him is the best thing ever happened to her.

    Tomlin's Violet is a widow with a brood of four, the assertive senior office supervisor who has plodded for years in the company, yet the promotion she deserves proves to be unattainable because of Frank's sexism, and aggravated by being ordered about like a servant by him, she has every reason to get back at him; Parton's Doralee (her maiden picture, who also pens and belts out the Oscar-nominated title song), a corn-fed, bosomy secretary repulses the derogated stereotype as a boss-hunting schemer, who is indeed happily married and only humors Frank's advancement for the sake of the job, but in the face of Frank blabbering blackmail, she is the one who is not hesitant to pinion him like a steer.

    Truly, the triad enjoys a real blast together, initiated by a joint-influenced brainstorm about how each envisions a scenario to vent their grievance on Frank - here Higgins makes a good fist of genre conventions, whether it is a black-white mob thriller, a lasso-tossing oater or a Snow White animation with a dark spin, all are given a reality simulacrum later in the plot - and hits the mark during their hilarious blunder with the wrong body, although the resultant kidnapping idea is less wholly engaging for its yawning implausibility, not least when the deus ex machina comes about in the form of Sterling Hayden's chairman of the board, publicly asks equal pay to be eliminated from the reform program, which is actually conceived by the triad and executed by forging Hank's signature.

    Nonetheless, 9 TO 5 is as delightful and jolly as one can get in a comedy that has something to say but consciously eschews any trace of indoctrination, all three leading ladies are having a field day, but for my liking Tomlin is the one gets an upper hand for her steely nerve and comedic timing; as the antagonist, a versatile Coleman eloquently exhibits shameless wickedness to the hilt, and lastly, Elizabeth Wilson has her own moment as a brilliant tittle-tattler, who perfectly encapsulates the entire farce with a precisely uttered "Holy merde!" to bring down the curtain in the coda.
    8misslv80

    Cheesy 80s fun!

    "Nine To Five" is one of those classic 80s comedies which was what made the decade so fun as far as movies go. Jane Fonda plays Judy, a recently divorced housewife who lands a secretarial job at a corporate office. Lily Tomlin is Violet, the beleagured supervisor at the office who shows Judy the ropes on her disasterous first day. Dolly Parton is Doralee, a secretary whom everyone at the office thinks is using her - ahem - "assets" to get ahead by sleeping with the boss.

    Soon these three become best friends and team up after they've gotten fed up with their chauvinistic and smarmy boss Mr. Hart, played to the hilt by Dabney Coleman. Sure, it does delve into zany corniness, such as the scene where they all get high on pot and share their fantasies about how each of them would like to knock off the boss (the funniest is Violet's "Snow White" coffee one, which uses cartoon animation and live action) or the scene where Violet thinks she accidentally poisoned Mr. Hart's coffee with rat poison and tries to steal his supposed dead corpse out of the hospital! This is the kind of movie where you check your brain at the door and take it for what it is.

    There are some great one-liners like the one where Fonda tells her ex-husband, who thinks she's having a kinky S&M affair with Mr. Hart, something along the lines of, "If I want to do M&M's, that's fine with me!" The office they work in is reminiscent of the one in "The Apartment". Three very clever characters, great comedic acting from Parton as Doralee and Tomlin as Violet. Jane Fonda, who I never cared much for, was good as the naive Judy. Sterling Hayden has a great cameo at the end as the "Chairman of the Board". A funny revenge comedy about Every Office, U.S.A.. You gotta love the theme song, too. Most recommended!

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      This was Dolly Parton's theatrical film debut. In preparation for her role as Doralee Rhodes, she not only committed to memory her own part, but the parts of every other role in the film. Apparently, the two experienced starring actresses, Lily Tomlin and Jane Fonda, burst out laughing when Parton let on that she believed that pictures were filmed in the chronological order of a film's script.
    • Patzer
      In some versions, when Doralee lassos Hart and he falls backward, the crash mat he falls onto can be seen.
    • Zitate

      [a candy-striper, with a 'Buffy' nametag, approaches Violet who's hauling a dead corpse on a gurny under a sheet]

      Buffy: Excuse me. Could you tell me where the coffee shop is?

      Violet Newstead: [nervous tone] The what?

      Buffy: The coffee shop.

      Violet Newstead: The coffee shop? No, I'm new here, I don't drink coffee.

      Buffy: I'm new here too. Where do you work?

      Violet Newstead: Uh... downstairs.

      Buffy: In the morgue?

      Violet Newstead: [nervous tone] Yes, that's right!

      Buffy: [looks at the body on the gurny] How did he... ?

      Violet Newstead: Coffee... too much coffee. I'm just taking him out for some air. Uh, I mean fresh air for me, he's just coming along for the ride.

      [Buffy gasps]

      Violet Newstead: *What?*

      Buffy: Oh, you're a doctor! I'm sorry, I didn't see your badge.

      [Violet looks at the badge and finally realizes that the white lab coat she's stolen is a doctor's]

      Violet Newstead: Oh yeah... I'm a doctor. So why the hell am I talking to you? Piss off!

    • Crazy Credits
      Doralee Rhodes quit Consolidated and became a country and western singer.
    • Alternative Versionen
      HBO/Cinemax's version of the film on Closed-Captioning changes one word of dialogue. Violet says to Mr. Hart, angrily, "The boys in the club are threatened, and you're so intimidated by any woman that won't sit in the back of a bus." Closed-Captioning reads, "The boys in the club are threatened, and you're so intimidated by any woman who isn't submissive." HBO Max's showing of the movie, as of August 6, 2022, corrects this error.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Sneak Previews: Any Which Way You Can/The Formula/Raging Bull/Nine to Five (1980)
    • Soundtracks
      Nine To Five
      Written and Performed by Dolly Parton

      Produced by Gregg Perry

      ©1980 Velvet Apple Music and Fox Fanfare Music, Inc.

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 9. März 1981 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Französisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Cómo eliminar a su jefe
    • Drehorte
      • 4370 Ocean View Boulevard, Montrose, Kalifornien, USA(Judy's apartment)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • IPC Films
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Budget
      • 10.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 103.290.500 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 3.966.832 $
      • 21. Dez. 1980
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 103.303.473 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 49 Min.(109 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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