Mit Hilfe eines sprechenden Autobahnplakats versucht ein verrückter Wetterfrosch, das Herz eines englischen Zeitungsreporters zu gewinnen.Mit Hilfe eines sprechenden Autobahnplakats versucht ein verrückter Wetterfrosch, das Herz eines englischen Zeitungsreporters zu gewinnen.Mit Hilfe eines sprechenden Autobahnplakats versucht ein verrückter Wetterfrosch, das Herz eines englischen Zeitungsreporters zu gewinnen.
- Regisseur/-in
- Autor/-in
- Stars
- Auszeichnungen
- 3 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Maitre D' at Brunch
- (as Eddie DeHarp)
- Rap Waiter at L'Idiot
- (as M. C. Shan)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
7 or 8 out of 10.
The acting is very good all across the board, even from a non-man-eating Sarah Jessica Parker. It has a lot of quotable dialogue, (she's not young she'll be 27 in 4 years) and some passable cameos from Rick Moranis, Patrick Stewart and Chevy Chase.
Perhaps some scenes get a bit too sentimental and make the film seem a bit uneven. But I think this helps improve the shape of its overall atmosphere, and make it heart-warming and not just a bit of gas.
LA Story is an underrated classic. It's consistently enjoyable, nicely acted and highly memorable. 7.5 out of 10.
Here's what I mean: while Martin mercilessly it pokes fun of L.A. for it's flakiness, it's love and tolerance of idiosyncrasies, it's constant preoccupation with image, it's narcissism, the humor is never vulgar, crass, or shallow. For example, one scene takes place in the municipal art museum. We see Harry Telemacher (Steve Martin), with his friends, rapt in admiration for a painting. The camera angle comes from the canvas itself, where we watch Harry, deep in thought, dissertate on the subjects in the portrait, their motives, actions, and hidden agendas. He moves forward, backward, forward again, as if in active dialogue with the lacquer. At last, moving backward, he concludes his remarks by wrinkling his nose in disgust and saying `Look at the way he's holding her: it's almost filthy!' And then the camera moves around to Telemacher's perspective. The painting's a total abstraction. There isn't a distinct line in the entire rectangular frame. In the argot of Postmodernism, one might call it a `readerly' work of art.
It's the perfect metaphor for L.A., where you may interpret anything, any way you like. There's no standard, except one's own `personal reality.' No one can use social norms as a personal club to tell someone else, `You're wrong,' because there is none. It's all `what-E-verrrr.'
Best of all, L.A. Story is a love story, the kind of love that adores someone as much for their faults as for their virtues. Martin's satire is so effective because he loves the city so much.
The humor is much more intelligent than early Steve Martin features such as "The Jerk", but it isn't snobbish. It has wit, charm, and pure satirical funniness. Whether it's watching Martin roller-skate through a museum of Old Masters, seeing a restaurant full of jaded Californians casually ride out a minor earthquake as their tables gracefully vibrate across the room, or the absurdity of a freeway sign giving out cryptic personal messages that change the course of the principal character's lives, the movie simply works.
Steve Martin is at his best here, equal to his wonderful performance in "Roxanne". Victoria Tennant is the perfect choice as the off-beat, tuba-playing British journalist Martin's character falls for. Sarah Jessica Parker is absolutely priceless as SanDeE* (that's her spelling, not a typo), the young would-be spokesmodel/bimbette who "likes to point". Even Rick Moranis as the comedic Cockney grave digger is wonderful, despite his having one of the least believable accents since Dick van Dyck as the chimneysweep Bert in "Mary Poppins". Forget the comment about Moranis' accent... you'll enjoy him anyway.
Overall, this is one of my two favorite movies of all time, and considering how many I've enjoyed, that's saying volumes.
The movie functions pretty well as a romantic comedy/fantasy between Steve Martin and Vitoria Tennant, but it works a lot better when Martin see free-spirited (and charming as all get out) Sarah Jessica Parker).
But it works best as Martin's snide valentine to the culture.
7/10
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesSteve Martin and Victoria Tennant were married at the time.
- PatzerIn the credits Sarah Jessica Parker's character is listed as "Sandy" and not "SanDeE*".
- Zitate
Tom: I'll have a decaf coffee.
Trudi: I'll have a decaf espresso.
Morris Frost: I'll have a double decaf cappuccino.
Ted: Give me decaffeinated coffee ice cream.
Harris: I'll have a half double decaffeinated half-caf, with a twist of lemon.
Trudi: I'll have a twist of lemon.
Tom: I'll have a twist of lemon.
Morris Frost: I'll have a twist of lemon.
Cynthia: I'll have a twist of lemon.
- Crazy CreditsSanDeE* (Sarah Jessica Parker) is very peculiar about how her name is spelled. Still, the character is listed as "Sandy" in the credits.
- Alternative VersionenA deleted scene featuring John Lithgow was reinstated in the cable-tv version of the film.
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- LA Story
- Drehorte
- Ambassador Hotel - 3400 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(entrance & foyer used as "L'Idiot Restaurant"/trellis area used for brunch restaurant/ballroom area used for the El Pollo Del Mar hotel rooms)
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 28.862.081 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 6.616.915 $
- 10. Feb. 1991
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 28.862.081 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 35 Min.(95 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1








