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IMDbPro

El invencible sexo débil

Título original: Take a Girl Like You
  • 1970
  • R
  • 1h 41min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
5,6/10
823
TU PUNTUACIÓN
El invencible sexo débil (1970)
Official Trailer
Reproducir trailer2:44
1 vídeo
52 imágenes
ComedyDramaRomance

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaYoung teacher Jenny Bunn arrives in Southern England. She attracts attention from local boys, including Patrick Standish. Multiple suitors emerge, vying for her affection as she navigates he... Leer todoYoung teacher Jenny Bunn arrives in Southern England. She attracts attention from local boys, including Patrick Standish. Multiple suitors emerge, vying for her affection as she navigates her new life and career.Young teacher Jenny Bunn arrives in Southern England. She attracts attention from local boys, including Patrick Standish. Multiple suitors emerge, vying for her affection as she navigates her new life and career.

  • Dirección
    • Jonathan Miller
  • Guión
    • George Melly
    • Kingsley Amis
  • Reparto principal
    • Hayley Mills
    • Oliver Reed
    • Noel Harrison
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    5,6/10
    823
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Jonathan Miller
    • Guión
      • George Melly
      • Kingsley Amis
    • Reparto principal
      • Hayley Mills
      • Oliver Reed
      • Noel Harrison
    • 14Reseñas de usuarios
    • 21Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Take a Girl Like You
    Trailer 2:44
    Take a Girl Like You

    Imágenes52

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    + 46
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    Reparto principal26

    Editar
    Hayley Mills
    Hayley Mills
    • Jenny Bunn
    Oliver Reed
    Oliver Reed
    • Patrick Standish
    Noel Harrison
    Noel Harrison
    • Julian Ormerod
    John Bird
    John Bird
    • Dick Thompson
    Sheila Hancock
    Sheila Hancock
    • Martha Thompson
    Aimi MacDonald
    • Wendy
    • (as Aimi Macdonald)
    Geraldine Sherman
    • Anna
    Ronald Lacey
    Ronald Lacey
    • Graham
    John Fortune
    John Fortune
    • Sir Gerald Culthorpe-Jones
    Imogen Hassall
    Imogen Hassall
    • Samantha
    Pippa Steel
    • Ted
    Penelope Keith
    Penelope Keith
    • Tory Lady
    Nicholas Courtney
    Nicholas Courtney
    • Panel Chairman
    George Woodbridge
    George Woodbridge
    • Harry
    Jimmy Gardner
    • Voter
    Nerys Hughes
    Nerys Hughes
    • Teacher
    Jean Marlow
    • Mother
    Howard Goorney
    • Labour Agent
    • Dirección
      • Jonathan Miller
    • Guión
      • George Melly
      • Kingsley Amis
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios14

    5,6823
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    Reseñas destacadas

    4JamesHitchcock

    Critical and Commercial Flop- And I Can Understand Why

    Following an unhappy love affair, Jenny Bunn, a pretty twenty-year-old, moves from her home town in the North of England to work as a primary school teacher in a Home Counties dormitory town near London in order. Most of the plot revolves around Jenny's relationship with her 30-something boyfriend Patrick Standish, and around their contrasting moral values. Jenny holds firmly to the traditional view that a girl should remain a virgin until marriage. Patrick takes a much more permissive view of love and sex. The central issue is essentially whether Patrick will be able to get Jenny into bed with him, and whether he will be able to do so without having to marry her. (He has no interest in getting married, to Jenny or anyone else, but he is very interested in having sex with her).

    Kingsley Amis' novel was published in 1960, a few years before it became fashionable to talk about the "permissive society". Nevertheless, there was already a feeling in certain quarters that society ought to become a good deal more permissive, at least where sex was concerned, than it already was, and that values like Jenny's were becoming increasingly old-fashioned and outdated. Patrick was the main representative of this viewpoint in the novel, but he was far from being the only one. Jenny's good looks meant that she had to fend off attempted seductions not only from Patrick but also from her sleazy middle-aged landlord Dick Thompson, from Patrick's Scottish flatmate and teaching colleague Graham, from Julian Ormerod, another friend of Patrick, and even from her own female flatmate Anna Le Page.

    The film makes a few differences to Amis's plot. Patrick, a master at a public school in the original, here becomes a lecturer at the local technical college. Graham and Anna play less important roles here than they did in the book, and Julian a more important one. Julian is clearly wealthy, and tries to live the lifestyle of a country gentleman, but the source of his wealth remains a mystery, and there is a hint that it may not be entirely above board. In the book he is older than Patrick, but here they are around the same age.

    The film transfers the action from the early sixties to the end of the decade. Several other reviewers make the point that the British moral climate had changed considerably between 1960 and 1970 and complain that the film did not really reflect this change. There may be some truth in that, but there wouldn't have been much of a film if there was no more to it than "Patrick wants to sleep with Jenny. Jenny is happy to sleep with Patrick. The End". In any case, there were probably still plenty of girls in 1970 who wanted to save their virginity until their wedding night, even if not quite as many as there had been in 1960.

    Amis's novel does not have a great deal of plot, being more concerned to draw a social-realist picture of a particular place at a particular time, a small town in the South of England in the early sixties. This makes it a difficult novel to adapt for the screen, and George Melly's script is not a very interesting one. The cast features some well-known figures from the British acting profession, but none of them make much impression, except perhaps for Sheila Hancock as Dick's cynical, long-suffering and sharp-tongued wife Martha.

    Oliver Reed as Patrick is too crude; Amis's character may have been a cad, but he was also handsome, intelligent and charming enough to persuade Jenny to stick with him despite his obvious lack of principles. Reed is charmless enough to make her run a mile. Hayley Mills as Jenny is rather dull; she was never to have as much success in adult roles as she had had as a child or as a teenager. And Ronald Lacey as Graham should have won a special BAFTA for "Worst Attempt at a Scottish Accent"; if they couldn't have found a Scottish actor to take the part, they should have rewritten the script to make Graham English.

    This was the only feature film to be directed by Jonathan Miller. Miller had already become known for directing television dramas such as a version of "Alice in Wonderland" and the M R James adaptation "Whistle and I'll Come to You", and was later to direct many theatrical and operatic productions, so I was surprised to learn that "Take a Girl Like You" was his only excursion into the world of the cinema. Perhaps he was dissuaded from any further such ventures by the film's lack of success; it flopped both with the critics and at the box office. Having seen it, I can well understand why. 4/10.
    7christopher-underwood

    Not many people seem to like this

    Not many people seem to like this film and it maybe that Hayley Mills seemed rather young for her age at 24 because of course she had been a child actor. But also the film had been a book by Kingsley Amis ten years earlier and things were changing fast at the time. I still liked it though even if it is rather odd for Mills and Oliver Reed to be thinking of having sex as if they were not quite as young as they thought. Both are very good and even if some of those around her are really strange, like John Bird as a Labour MP and Sheila Hancock seems completely lost, although Rex Harrison's son Noel is rather splendid. Jonathan Miller had previously directed on TV the wonderful Alice in Wonderland (1966) and George Melly had written previously Smashing Time (1967) which would have been more appropriate for the time.
    1Maverick1962

    Vacuous 1970 unfunny sex comedy

    Being the same age and lifelong fan of Hayley Mills I just had to watch this film when it showed up recently on TV. Sadly, I'm unable to recommend it to anyone above the age of about 16 as this is about the age that all of the adult actors seem to be in this mess. The fault is with the script, by jazz singer George Melly who adapted it from the Kingsley Amis novel. It's so badly written with such dire dialogue that it's almost unwatchable. Jonathan Miller directed and he should have known better than to take this turkey on. The entire script calls for Oliver Reed to attempt to bed Hayley. That's it. Nearly two hours going over the same trite dialogue of teenage sex talk. It becomes a triangle when Noel Harrison also gets involved which doesn't help. The only sane adult performance comes from Sheila Hancock as the increasingly frustrated wife of idiot Labour prospective candidate, John Wells who tries desperately to inject some of that missing comedy ingredient. Even the normally reliable Ronald Lacey is miscast with the strangest accent. Very of it's time but there were far better, although now dated, sex comedies made, although they didn't really have much of that either. The Me Too movement now would be justifiably horrified by all the groping on display here that makes all the male actors look like randy manics. All very embarrassing and one I'm sure Hayley Mills would rather forget.
    2richardchatten

    A Disaster

    Based on Kingsley Amis's 1960 novel, everything about this travesty is rendered hideously dated by it having actually been made at the wrong end of the sixties during that fleeting era when Hayley Mills & Noel Harrison were considered bankable stars; and well and truly put Jonathan Miller off ever getting involved with the film industry again.

    Amis's contempt both for the permissive society and for women in general, alas, comes through loud and clear. And why Oliver Reed is so charmlessly set on bedding the virginal Hayley when the lovely Aimi MacDonald is all over him is one of several uninteresting mysteries the film presents us with, such as how - with the possible exception of Sheila Hancock - such a good cast is ill-used.
    4BOUF

    Reading Kingsley Amis's original novel is probably a better option

    The opening titles (in funky 1970 font) are accompanied by the Foundations singing the title song, the hook of which sounds a lot like "Fly Me To The Moon" (aka "In Other Words"). If this film were set when Kingsley Amis, the novelist, set it, and when "Fly Me To The Moon" had its first success (mid-1950s) it might work better. Transposing the action to the dog-end of the swinging 60s is an awkward fit for a story about a young woman who comes from the North of England to a dull Southern town, and is determined to cling to her virginity, rings slightly false, but that's not the only problem. It's a curiously lifeless mix of sketch-comedy turns and a soapy boy-meets-girl sequences which never quite gels. Oliver Reed seems to be on automatic, Sheila Hancock is wasted, Noel Harrison is creepy, but Hayley Mills, despite being slightly too old for the central role of the girl is such a positive force, that every time she's on screen she almost saves this plod. She is a brilliant actress and an inspirational human being - at least that's the vibe I get from her performance in this pale adaptation of a very funny novel.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      This is the only theatrical movie directed by Jonathan Miller.
    • Pifias
      The opening title sequence shows a train. It is hauled by a BR Class 47 diesel loco. The first carriage is BR Mk1 full brake. The next scene is that of a train pulling into a station. This train is though is hauled by a BR Class 35 diesel (smaller than a 47). The first carriage is now a BR Mk1 composite brake.
    • Citas

      Martha Thompson: My old man made a pass at you yet? Not to worry, he will. Just give him a kick in the crotch.

    • Conexiones
      References Come Dancing (1949)
    • Banda sonora
      Take A Girl Like You
      Composed by Bill Martin and Phil Coulter

      Sung by The Foundations

      [Title song played during the opening credits, and again in the lead up to the end credits]

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    Preguntas frecuentes14

    • How long is Take a Girl Like You?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 1975 (España)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Francés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Take a Girl Like You
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • The George Inn, 29 Windsor Road, Wraysbury, Staines-upon-Thames, Surrey, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Jenny, Graham, Anna and Patrick meet Wendy at the pub)
    • Empresa productora
      • Albion Film Corp. (I)
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      1 hora 41 minutos
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1(original ratio)

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