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Talk Radio

  • 1988
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 50 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
15.193
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Talk Radio (1988)
A rude, contemptuous talk show host becomes overwhelmed by the hatred that surrounds his program just before it goes national.
trailer wiedergeben2:16
1 Video
99+ Fotos
Psychological ThrillerDramaThriller

Ein unhöflicher, verächtlicher Talkshow-Moderator wird von dem Hass überwältigt, der seine Sendung umgibt, kurz bevor sie landesweit ausgestrahlt wird.Ein unhöflicher, verächtlicher Talkshow-Moderator wird von dem Hass überwältigt, der seine Sendung umgibt, kurz bevor sie landesweit ausgestrahlt wird.Ein unhöflicher, verächtlicher Talkshow-Moderator wird von dem Hass überwältigt, der seine Sendung umgibt, kurz bevor sie landesweit ausgestrahlt wird.

  • Regie
    • Oliver Stone
  • Drehbuch
    • Stephen Singular
    • Eric Bogosian
    • Tad Savinar
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Eric Bogosian
    • Ellen Greene
    • Leslie Hope
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    15.193
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Oliver Stone
    • Drehbuch
      • Stephen Singular
      • Eric Bogosian
      • Tad Savinar
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Eric Bogosian
      • Ellen Greene
      • Leslie Hope
    • 101Benutzerrezensionen
    • 34Kritische Rezensionen
    • 66Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 3 Gewinne & 5 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:16
    Trailer

    Fotos118

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    Topbesetzung45

    Ändern
    Eric Bogosian
    Eric Bogosian
    • Barry
    Ellen Greene
    Ellen Greene
    • Ellen
    Leslie Hope
    Leslie Hope
    • Laura
    John C. McGinley
    John C. McGinley
    • Stu
    Alec Baldwin
    Alec Baldwin
    • Dan
    John Pankow
    John Pankow
    • Dietz
    Michael Wincott
    Michael Wincott
    • Kent…
    Linda Atkinson
    • Sheila Fleming
    Robert Trebor
    Robert Trebor
    • Jeffrey Fisher…
    Zach Grenier
    Zach Grenier
    • Sid Greenberg
    Tony Frank
    Tony Frank
    • Dino
    Harlan Jordan
    • Coach Armstrong
    Bill Johnson
    Bill Johnson
    • Fan #1
    Kevin Howard
    • Fan #2
    Anna Thomson
    Anna Thomson
    • Woman at Basketball Game
    • (as Anna Levine)
    • …
    Bruno Rubeo
    • Tony
    Pirie MacDonald
    • Judge Willard
    Allan Corduner
    Allan Corduner
    • Vince…
    • Regie
      • Oliver Stone
    • Drehbuch
      • Stephen Singular
      • Eric Bogosian
      • Tad Savinar
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen101

    7,215.1K
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    7johnnyboyz

    One man constantly upping the stakes and living the American Dream in his numerous promotions and career born out of free speech; but at what cost?

    Talk Radio sees a man somewhat accidentally stumble through life, indeed the American Dream, from whatever bog-standard and everyday job he has in a store; to presenter of a local radio show before going right the way through to the same job only later syndicated nationwide. It's a role he adopts out of his own aggression and natural mannerisms, a frothing mad approach to freedom of speech as he attacks just about everyone and everything, even those that often call up to agree with him or compliment him. His role as a man that rants on all things good, evil, right, wrong, political, religious, moral and immoral is something that people seem to take to in one form; that of 'it's entertaining and worth tuning in for', but additionally on a plane of rejection and antagonism – two things born out of the very things seemingly encouraged in professional working life in the Western World. This, towards a man as he gets to the very top of his game by way of the American Dream and dealing in freedom of speech as people take to a man but do anything but take to what it is he says.

    Talk Radio begins with a montage of tall, towering buildings in a business based area of Dallas, Texas. The skyscrapers are shot from a ,ow angle and tower over the viewer plus everything else in the general vicinity as this voice of one man tears through the images, belting out statements and information on items as these monolithic buildings dominate out screen. They are the very physical representation of capitalism, while the voice of what we learn to be a radio DJ is the oral representation of the free west; personal speech and opinions on anything and everything. Stone will finish his film in the exact same manner in which he started it, although the film is anything but a circular journey of any sort as the characters undergo monumental changes in both what they witness and their general livelihood. Rather, the shots of the buildings act as an anchor around which the study is observed. The ideologies and ideas of a way of life exist; people subscribe to them, but it does them more harm than good; before the re-establishment that this proud way of life still exists and will continue to exist in churning out the sorts of people on display in the film until someone or something drastically changes things.

    The DJ is Barry Champlain, a man with a radio show on a local Texan station dealing with just about anything. Champlain's somewhat carefree attitude to some pretty explosive content is established when he flies from one call with a bigoted man whom recently visited a Holocaust museum to a young drug addict whose girlfriend has supposedly overdosed and onto both the berating and mocking of a pizza shop. To us, the content comes across as quite shocking; to these people, everything seems to be business as usual which plants some serious seeds of both doubt and horror within the minds of us, the newcomers to all of this.

    What Barry's show is about, nobody ever seems to really establish: everything and nothing. Indeed, time is taken in the form of either jingles or dialogue that the shows immediately pre and post Champlain's show are on specific subjects; gardening, for instance, and are hosted by calm speaking and methodical people whom, I'm sure, do not flit from one random or extreme to another all the time raising the stakes. One wonders what Barry's jingle is, the kind that plays around about lunch time during someone else's' show: "Coming up later, the Barry Champlain show! Featuring the village idiot and psychotic drug abusers!" Indeed, his show's introductory piece carries a matter-of-fact tone, a shouting at the audience, as a loud rock track accompanies it.

    Barry's success arrives in the national syndication proposal. It's born out of confrontation and a relationship built on the contempt he has for his listeners and that they have for him. The furthering of the material and the upping of the stakes ought to call into question just how far they think they can take this, and whether this progressing down a track for sake of entertainment is really worth it. It is when the show reaches this level of broadcast that Barry seems to come unstuck for the first time in his broadcasting life, when a supposed serial rapist calls in and leaves mostly everyone slightly stunned. It's at this point the camera pauses on Barry, and by way of depth of focus, encompasses those same looming, towering buildings the film began with which stand outside of the window, directly behind Barry. They remain tall and proud. Specifically, of the ideologies they've been built on and this furtherance of freedom of speech in broadening Barry's show nationwide as one man climbs his profession's ladder suddenly clashes with the sort of content that's being offered. Everything reaches a point too far, and that with freedom, ought to at least come a sense of clarity rather than a mere revelling.

    Oliver Stone made Talk Radio right in the middle of both a fascinating and explosive period of film-making he had in the late 1980s. In this time, he produced a series of really well received films in a pretty short space of time; beginning with one of my favourite war films in Platoon before continuing with the quite brilliant Wall Street and eventually finishing with 1991's JFK. One might even say that this run continued on into the mid-nineties with Natural Born Killers. Talk Radio is like its lead character in the sense it's loud, booming, stark and confrontational. It isn't anti-capitalism, as much as it is focused on drawing a line between what is perceived as entertainment and what is just going too far for sake of popularity and riches. Talk Radio is certainly a film that sticks in the memory.
    9xfiler100

    WOW a masterpiece of a movie not to be missed

    WOW, a masterpiece of a movie not to be missed.

    I had no idea what this movie was when I started watching it late night. I didn't find out it was a Stone film until after the film when I went on IMDb. Watching it, I was mesmerized. The cast, especially Eric Bogosian is just superb. One of the best scripts and camera work ever...The movie drew me in and kept me entranced until the very end...I did not dare blink for fear of missing something...Amazing how a small-budget film can be so engrossing and well made while huge-budget films that feature tons of action and computer generated special effects can be so incredibly boring. Don't miss this film...
    burger-5

    A masterpiece of shadows and doom

    A top notch drama enhanced by Stone's camera work. The story involves the meteoric rise and fall of a popular shock-jock. The main character's ego and opinions drip out of his pores like sweat on a hot afternoon. Stone's camera sweeps and glides around the radio studio like a hungry panther. His use of reflections turns up the heat until the whole world starts to warp and melt around the main character as his world starts to crumble. Bogosian's dialogue is sharp but sometimes preachy. The voices over the telephone seem brainwashed and generic but I think that was done with purpose to enhance the DJ's view of his audience as being mindless followers. The technical work on this film is what does it for me. It adds up to a fine film.
    10Derek237

    The best movie you've never seen

    When you think 'Oliver Stone' the movies that come to mind would be his biggest and most controversial ones like Platoon, JFK, Born On The Fourth Of July, or Natural Born Killers. Talk Radio usually doesn't. It's a pretty small movie, actually. More than half the movie takes place with Barry Champlain at his radio station talking into his mike. But believe me, this is one of Oliver Stone's greatest movies and should NOT be missed.

    Above all things it's a character study. Barry Champlain is a rude, self-destructive, risk-taking talk radio show host who says one too many things and starts to get in trouble with his boss, his lover(s), his fans, and even some Nazis. He doesn't like his audience and callers and a lot of them don't like him (eithor that or do like him, but have no idea why). But, at the end he says on his show: "I guess we're stuck with each other."

    See Talk Radio, even if you don't like Oliver Stone movies. You might be surprised. I sure was.

    My Rating: 10/10
    10kingprobert

    Hugely ignored classic

    I have seen it a few times and get completely glued to it every time. It is very suspenseful and intense. To describe it sounds boring but it is amazing. It is the kind of movie where you need can't miss a thing, but if you soak it in it sticks with you long after it ends. Now thinking about it I don't even know what Stone was trying to make us see. Just the story of Alan Green? I don't think so. It was a look at ignorance, stupidity, self-absorption, and a guy just loosing his grip. Maybe he had more grip than the listeners though. I didn't like Barry but still seemed worried about him for some reason. I was perplexed at why I couldn't get him out of my mind when the movie ended. I wish I could see inside Olive Stone's mind for this one.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Eric Bogosian's play "Talk Radio", on which this film is based, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.
    • Patzer
      When Barry Champlain says that he's going to punish his listeners by playing the Bee Gees' song - Saturday Night Fever, ten times in a row. While they had a monster hit with "Night Fever" there is no such song as "Saturday Night Fever." The record they actually play is Disco Inferno by The Tramps. This may be intentional due to copyright issues; however, the track is on the OST for Saturday Night Fever.
    • Zitate

      Barry: I should hang; I'm a hypocrite. I ask for sincerity and I lie. I denounce the system as I embrace it. I want money and power and prestige: I want ratings and success. And I don't give a damn about you, or the world. That's the truth: for that I could say I'm sorry, but I won't. Why should I? I mean who the hell are you anyways you... audience! You're on me every night like a pack of wolves because you can't stand facing what you are and what you've made! Yes, the world is a terrible place. Yes, cancer and garbage disposals will get you. Yes, a war is coming. Yes, the world is shot to hell and you're all goners. Everything's screwed up and you like it that way don't you? You're fascinated by the gory details. You're mesmerized by your own fear. You revel in floods and car accidents, unstoppable diseases. You're happiest when others are in pain. That's where I come in, isn't it? I'm here to lead you by the hands through the dark forest of your own hatred and anger and humiliation. I'm providing a public service. You're so scared. You're like a little child under the covers. You're afraid of the boogeyman but you can't live without him. Your fear; your own lives have become your entertainment. Next month, millions of people are going to be listening to this show and you'll have nothing to talk about! Marvelous technology is at our disposal, and instead of reaching up to new heights, we're gonna see how far down we can go! How deep into the muck we can immerse ourselves! What do you wanna talk about, hm? Baseball scores? Your pet? Orgasms? You're pathetic. I despise each and every one of you. You've got nothing, absolutely nothing. No brains, no power, no future, no hope, no God. The only thing you believe in is me. What are you if you don't have me. I'm not afraid see. I come in here every night, I make my case, I make my point, I say what I believe in. I tell you what you are, I have to, I have no choice! You frighten me! I come in here every night, I tear into you, I abuse you, I insult you, you just keep coming back for more. Whats wrong with you, why do you keep calling? I don't wanna hear anymore, stop talking! Go away! Bunch of yellow-bellied, spineless, bigoted, quivering, drunken, insomnia-tic, paranoid, disgusting, perverted, voyeuristic, little obscene phone callers, that's what you are. Well to Hell with you. I don't need your ferior stupidity, you don't get it. It's wasted on you. Pearls before swine. If one person out there had any idea what I'm talking about... I...

      [answers caller]

      Barry: friend you're on night talk.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Working Girl/I'm Gonna Git You Sucka/Rain Man/Torch Song Trilogy/Haunted Summer (1988)
    • Soundtracks
      Bad to the Bone
      Written by George Thorogood

      Performed by Budd Carr

    Top-Auswahl

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    FAQ20

    • How long is Talk Radio?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 23. Februar 1989 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Kanada
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Sırdaş radyo
    • Drehorte
      • Thanksgiving Park, Dallas, Texas, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Cineplex Odeon Films
      • Ten-Four Productions
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Budget
      • 4.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 3.468.572 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 80.547 $
      • 26. Dez. 1988
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 3.468.572 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 50 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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