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IMDbPro

Confidencias de medianoche

Título original: Pillow Talk
  • 1959
  • 13
  • 1h 42min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,4/10
21 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Confidencias de medianoche (1959)
Trailer for the hit comedy Pillow Talk starring Doris Day and Rock Hudson
Reproducir trailer2:21
2 vídeos
99+ imágenes
Comedia locaComedia románticaComediaRomance

Una decoradora de interiores y un compositor playboy comparten una línea telefónica y se juzgan mutuamente.Una decoradora de interiores y un compositor playboy comparten una línea telefónica y se juzgan mutuamente.Una decoradora de interiores y un compositor playboy comparten una línea telefónica y se juzgan mutuamente.

  • Director/a
    • Michael Gordon
  • Guionistas
    • Stanley Shapiro
    • Maurice Richlin
    • Russell Rouse
  • Estrellas
    • Rock Hudson
    • Doris Day
    • Tony Randall
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,4/10
    21 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Director/a
      • Michael Gordon
    • Guionistas
      • Stanley Shapiro
      • Maurice Richlin
      • Russell Rouse
    • Estrellas
      • Rock Hudson
      • Doris Day
      • Tony Randall
    • 130Reseñas de usuarios
    • 59Reseñas de críticos
    • 73Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 1 premio Óscar
      • 8 premios y 11 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos2

    Pillow Talk
    Trailer 2:21
    Pillow Talk
    Pillow Talk: I Couldn't Help Overhear
    Clip 3:02
    Pillow Talk: I Couldn't Help Overhear
    Pillow Talk: I Couldn't Help Overhear
    Clip 3:02
    Pillow Talk: I Couldn't Help Overhear

    Imágenes196

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    + 188
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    Reparto Principal47

    Editar
    Rock Hudson
    Rock Hudson
    • Brad Allen
    Doris Day
    Doris Day
    • Jan Morrow
    Tony Randall
    Tony Randall
    • Jonathan Forbes
    Thelma Ritter
    Thelma Ritter
    • Alma
    Nick Adams
    Nick Adams
    • Tony Walters
    Julia Meade
    Julia Meade
    • Marie
    Allen Jenkins
    Allen Jenkins
    • Harry
    Marcel Dalio
    Marcel Dalio
    • Pierot
    Lee Patrick
    Lee Patrick
    • Mrs. Walters
    Mary McCarty
    Mary McCarty
    • Nurse Resnick
    Alex Gerry
    Alex Gerry
    • Dr. A.C. Maxwell
    Hayden Rorke
    Hayden Rorke
    • Mr. Conrad
    Valerie Allen
    Valerie Allen
    • Eileen
    Jacqueline Beer
    Jacqueline Beer
    • Yvette
    Arlen Stuart
    • Tilda
    Perry Blackwell
    Perry Blackwell
    • Perry
    Robert B. Williams
    Robert B. Williams
    • Mr. Graham
    Muriel Landers
    Muriel Landers
    • Moose Taggett
    • Director/a
      • Michael Gordon
    • Guionistas
      • Stanley Shapiro
      • Maurice Richlin
      • Russell Rouse
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios130

    7,420.7K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    BumpyRide

    Bedroom Problems

    Out of all the "Bedroom Comedies" of the 50's & 60's this is the best by far. Nothing else comes close to "Pillow Talk" with its witty script, stylish sets, and costumes and a great cast of "A" actors at their very best. Some movies wrap you up like a warm mink coat and make everything seem right in the world. 1950's New York looks fabulous, and I've always wanted to go one of those chic supper clubs decked out like Doris is here. This is one of those rare movies that make you laugh, no matter how many times you've seen it. How sad it is for some reviewers to take fault with Alma and her apparent drinking problem (only to find love herself and throw away the bottle!) or Rock's sexuality that some just can't get past. This is an elegant romp with Doris and Rock.
    8claudio_carvalho

    Delightful Romantic Comedy

    In New York, the interior decorator Jan Morrow (Doris Day) and the wolf composer Brad Allen (Rock Hudson) share a party line, but Brad keeps it busy most of the time flirting with his girlfriends. They do not know each other but Jan hates Brad since she needs the telephone for her business and can not use it.

    Coincidently Jan's wealthy client Jonathan Forbes (Tony Randall) that woos her is the best friend of Brad and he comments with him that he feels an unrequited love for Jan, who is a gorgeous woman. When Brad meets Jan by chance in a restaurant, he poses as a naive tourist from Texas named Rex Stetson and seduces her. But Jonathan hires a private eye to find who Rex Stetson is.

    "Pillow Talk" is a delightful romantic comedy that improved my Saturday afternoon. This is the first time that I watch this movie and Doris Day and Rock Hudson show a great chemistry. But Thelma Ritter steals the movie in the role of the alcoholic housemaid Alma. The gags with the nurse and the obstetrician are also hilarious. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "Confidências à Meia-Noite" ("Confidences at Midnight")
    7xyzkozak

    P-P-P-Pillow Talk-Talk-Talk

    Favorite Movie Quote: "At least my problems can be solved in one bedroom. You couldn't solve yours in a thousand!"

    With Westerns, War-Dramas, and Sci-Fi dominating the movie-fare of the 1950s, producer Ross Hunter was aptly warned that Screwball Comedy like Pillow Talk would never, ever be a success at the box-office.

    Even though Screwball Comedy had long been pronounced "dead" at the end of the 1940s, Pillow Talk turned out to be one of the most successful films of the 1950s. It proved just how starved movie-audiences were for pure escapist fluff, such as it was. Pillow Talk went on to be nominated for 5 Academy Awards. It won an Oscar for "Best Screen-writing".

    Pillow Talk starred Doris Day and Rock Hudson. Pairing these 2 stars together proved to be such a success that they eventually went on to make 2 other Romantic Comedies together, but neither of which turned out to be as magical as Pillow Talk.

    Featuring some pretty snappy dialogue, energetic performances, lush photography, and high production values, Pillow Talk is certainly an all-round fun and very enjoyable 1950s Comedy.
    7moonspinner55

    The wildest behind in New York City!

    One of the first (and certainly the most popular) of the early-'60s bedroom comedies--movies about sex that never use the word, relying instead on double entendres, implications and innuendo. A New York City party-line connects a single working girl--a somewhat rigid and humorless interior decorator with a shapely figure--and a bachelor songwriter and ladies' man who has one tune for every new gal. They're enemies on the phone-line only; once he gets a good look at her (or rather, her shimmying behind on the dancefloor of a nightclub), he decides to woo her using the alias of a shy Texas cowboy. In their first of three pictures together, Rock Hudson and Doris Day share fresh, happy chemistry; their love scenes are convincing--Hudson is a great kisser--and soon Day is singing "Possess Me" to herself on the car-ride with Hudson to his pal's country hideaway. Tony Randall (who also appeared with Hudson and Day in both 1961's "Lover Come Back" and 1964's "Send Me No Flowers") and Thelma Ritter are equally terrific, and the picture has a lovely, cocktail lounge-styled plastic-perkiness which is very winning. With the advent of '60s permissiveness on the screen, "Pillow Talk" (with it's winking, nudge-nudge 'naughtiness') soon looked coy and antiquated; however, it holds up nicely today. Five Oscar nominations--including Day as Best Actress (her only such nomination!)--with one win: for Stanley Shapiro and Maurice Richlin's original screenplay from an initial treatment by Russell Rouse and Clarence Greene. *** from ****
    8Isaac5855

    A New Screen Coupling Creates Box Office Magic

    By 1958, Doris Day's career was on the downslide and something drastic needed to be done to revive her career. 1959'S PILLOW TALK redefined Doris' image and created an entirely new genre of the "will she or won't she" sex comedy as well as introducing one of the greatest romantic screen couplings in history...Doris Day and Rock Hudson. Day plays Jan Morrow, an interior decorator who shares her phone line with Brad Allen (Hudson) a song-writing playboy who ties up Doris' phone by singing love songs (actually the same song) over the phone to the parade of women in his life. Day's attempts to get a private phone line fail and she and Hudson begrudgingly come up with a system to share the phone which Hudson doesn't stick to. Tony Randall plays Jonathan Forbes, a rich playboy who is a client of Doris' and Rock's best friend, who is crazy about Doris but she doesn't feel the same way. One night, Brad discovers Jan at a nightclub and knowing she already hates him, pretends to be a wealthy Texan in order to romance her and this is where the fun begins. Yes, the story is dated because party lines are virtually a thing of the past but it is the linchpin upon which this story delightfully plays out. Director Michael Gordon cleverly uses split-screen images to put Doris and Rock together on screen in seemingly compromising positions, very adult for 1959 and watching Brad pretending to be cowboy Rex Stetson, trying to romance Jan while Brad tries to advise Jan over the phone about what a cad Rex is, is a lot of fun. Day lights up the screen here, in a luminous performance that earned her her first and only Oscar nomination. Hudson, previously only seen in dramatic films up to this point, turns out to be gifted farceur and interviews in his later years, always credited Doris for teaching him how to do comedy. Randall is comic perfection as Jonathan as is Thelma Ritter, who was also nominated for an Oscar for her work as Jan's housekeeper. A delight from start to finish that introduced a new movie couple that would give Fred and Ginger and Spenceer and Kate a run for their money.

    Más del estilo

    Pijama para dos
    7,1
    Pijama para dos
    No me mandes flores
    7,0
    No me mandes flores
    Apártate, cariño
    6,9
    Apártate, cariño
    Suave como visón
    6,6
    Suave como visón
    Su pequeña aventura
    6,9
    Su pequeña aventura
    Una sirena sospechosa
    6,4
    Una sirena sospechosa
    Su juego favorito
    7,1
    Su juego favorito
    Doris Day en el Oeste
    7,2
    Doris Day en el Oeste
    Enséñame a querer
    7,1
    Enséñame a querer
    Juego de pijamas
    6,6
    Juego de pijamas
    Cuando llegue septiembre
    6,9
    Cuando llegue septiembre
    Quiéreme o déjame
    7,1
    Quiéreme o déjame

    Intereses relacionados

    Barbra Streisand and Ryan O'Neal in ¿Qué me pasa, doctor? (1972)
    Comedia loca
    Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal in Cuando Harry encontró a Sally... (1989)
    Comedia romántica
    Will Ferrell in El reportero: La leyenda de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedia
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Ross Hunter wrote that after he made this film, no theatre managers wanted to book it. Popular movie themes at the time were war films, westerns, and spectacles. Hunter was told by the big movie chains that sophisticated comedies like this movie went out with William Powell. They also believed that Doris Day and Rock Hudson were things of the past and had been overtaken by newer stars. Hunter persuaded Sol Schwartz, who owned the Palace Theatre in New York, to book the film for a two-week run, and it was a smash hit. The public had been starved for romantic comedy, and theatre owners who had previously turned down Hunter now had to deal with him on HIS terms.
    • Pifias
      When Jan and Jonathan are talking in front of the interior design store about the car he is offering her, the same extras are seen multiple times. A woman with a blue coat and gray hat walks by four times, and a woman with a red coat walks by at least three times.
    • Citas

      Hotel clerk: There's no phone number, but I have a forwarding address.

      Jonathan Forbes: 241 Stoneybrook Road.

      Hotel clerk: Why yes sir.

      Jonathan Forbes: [slams counter] And you let her go.

      Hotel clerk: Well, it wasn't my place...

      Jonathan Forbes: No, it's my place, and I helped him pack.

    • Créditos adicionales
      As Doris Day sings 'Pillow Talk' over the closing credits, the film finishes with 'the end' on two horizontal pillows followed by 'not quite', 'not quite', 'not quite', 'not quite' stacked vertically on four pillows.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in The Doris Mary Anne Kappelhoff Special (1971)
    • Banda sonora
      Pillow Talk
      Words and Music by Buddy Pepper and Inez James

      Performed by Doris Day (uncredited)

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    • How long is Pillow Talk?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 7 de octubre de 1959 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Francés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Problemas de alcoba
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Central Park, Manhattan, Nueva York, Nueva York, Estados Unidos
    • Empresa productora
      • Arwin Productions
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 10.265 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      • 1h 42min(102 min)
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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