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IMDbPro

La tiendita de los horrores

Título original: The Little Shop of Horrors
  • 1960
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 13min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.2/10
21 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
La tiendita de los horrores (1960)
Clip: Feed Me 2 - :31
Reproducir trailer0:32
8 videos
99+ fotos
B-HorrorComediaComedia oscuraFarsaHorror y monstruosTerror

Un joven torpe cultiva una planta y descubre que es carnívora, lo que lo obliga a matar para alimentarla.Un joven torpe cultiva una planta y descubre que es carnívora, lo que lo obliga a matar para alimentarla.Un joven torpe cultiva una planta y descubre que es carnívora, lo que lo obliga a matar para alimentarla.

  • Dirección
    • Roger Corman
  • Guionistas
    • Charles B. Griffith
    • Roger Corman
  • Elenco
    • Jonathan Haze
    • Jackie Joseph
    • Mel Welles
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.2/10
    21 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Roger Corman
    • Guionistas
      • Charles B. Griffith
      • Roger Corman
    • Elenco
      • Jonathan Haze
      • Jackie Joseph
      • Mel Welles
    • 177Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 74Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos8

    The Little Shop of Horrors
    Trailer 0:32
    The Little Shop of Horrors
    The Little Shop of Horrors
    Clip 0:35
    The Little Shop of Horrors
    The Little Shop of Horrors
    Clip 0:35
    The Little Shop of Horrors
    The Little Shop of Horrors
    Clip 1:10
    The Little Shop of Horrors
    The Little Shop of Horrors
    Clip 1:07
    The Little Shop of Horrors
    The Little Shop of Horrors
    Clip 1:10
    The Little Shop of Horrors
    The Little Shop of Horrors
    Clip 0:54
    The Little Shop of Horrors

    Fotos114

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    Elenco principal19

    Editar
    Jonathan Haze
    Jonathan Haze
    • Seymour Krelborn
    Jackie Joseph
    Jackie Joseph
    • Audry Fulquard
    Mel Welles
    Mel Welles
    • Gravis Mushnik
    Dick Miller
    Dick Miller
    • Ferson Fouch
    Myrtle Vail
    Myrtle Vail
    • Winifred Krelborn
    Karyn Kupcinet
    Karyn Kupcinet
    • Shirley
    • (as Tammy Windsor)
    Toby Michaels
    Toby Michaels
    • Shirley's Friend
    Leola Wendorff
    Leola Wendorff
    • Mrs. Shiva
    Lynn Storey
    • Mrs. Hortense Feuchtwanger
    Wally Campo
    Wally Campo
    • Sgt. Joe Fink…
    Jack Warford
    Jack Warford
    • Detective Frank Stoolie
    Meri Welles
    Meri Welles
    • Leonora Clyde
    • (as Merri Welles)
    John Herman Shaner
    • Dr. Phoebus Farb
    • (as John Shaner)
    Jack Nicholson
    Jack Nicholson
    • Wilbur Force
    Dodie Drake
    • Waitress
    Robert Coogan
    Robert Coogan
    • Tramp
    • (sin créditos)
    Jack Griffin
    Jack Griffin
    • Drunk
    • (sin créditos)
    Charles B. Griffith
    Charles B. Griffith
    • Kloy Haddock - Hold-up Man
    • (voz)
    • (sin créditos)
    • …
    • Dirección
      • Roger Corman
    • Guionistas
      • Charles B. Griffith
      • Roger Corman
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios177

    6.220.6K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7Hitchcoc

    Plant food!

    I remember seeing this on a weekly television show called Chiller, when I was in high school. It was one of those local celebrity things, with an emcee presiding over whatever horror movies were in the library of that particular station. I realized quickly, what an offbeat flick this was. It was utterly hilarious with its moments of masochism, the man eating plant, Audrey one and two, and all the other things that Seymour must deal with just to keep going. The plant controls him and it is a hilarious plant. The black and white neutral staging of the plant is so much better than the flashiness of the musical (though I do like some of those songs). The smallness of this film is what helps make it work. Everyone is a caricature. Jack Nicholson's proudest moment. No wonder he is such a wack, spending all that time in his formative years with Roger Corman. The acting works because it is a period piece. No matter how much we try to reproduce the fifties, it always falls short of just seeing the fifties. It's like Dragnet without the strange suits and the slang of the time. It's just more honest because they weren't trying to reproduce it. I haven't watched this in some time, so I think I'll leave my computer and sit down and watch it again.
    bob the moo

    A surprisingly funny piece of b-movie entertainment from Corman

    Mushnick's is a small florists in skid row – a dead end part of town that everyone knows about but nobody wants to know about. Business is not great, in fact it is awful – nobody wants to buy flowers when they can't be sure where their next meal is coming from. However the cleaning boy has nurtured a strange new plant up from seed and it seems to be getting interest. When he discovers it needs a few drops of blood to make it grow Seymour is the toast of the town with his employer very grateful for the increased revenue the visitors bring. However as it grows it begins to need more than a few drops and soon he is heading down a terrible, dark road.

    Like many viewers I suspect, I came to this film after seeing the musical remake; as such I assumed that this would be a straight film in the b-movie genre that Corman is famous for. However I was taken by how amusing this film was because really this is as much a horror comedy as the musical is. From Seymour's alcoholic mother to the cop so hard that even the death of his son is met with a shrug, the whole film is full of darkly comic touches that drew some nice laughs from me. This comic approach helps the film because really it is a silly plot and the fact that the script was tongue-in-cheek meant it was easier to swallow, if you pardon the choice of words. As a horror it doesn't really work but it does have a slocky property that Corman films tend to have – not high quality but low budget, b-movie fun.

    The cast match the material and all buy into the joke, watching them also shows that the cast in the musical are really pretty much just impersonate the actors here. Haze is enjoyably geeky and convinces throughout. Welles is funny and plays up to his ethnic caricature well. Corman regular Miller hasn't really got much to do but his face is always a ruggedly familiar and welcome sight. Joseph is not great but her performance suits the b-movie genre – likewise Campo and Warford (who are very funny as Dragnet style cops). Nicholson is pretty funny and was a curious find in a small cameo.

    Overall this is not a great film but it is a great b-movie horror. Never taking itself seriously means that it can be darkly funny and take the audience along for the ride. To me it is just as funny as the musical even it is a different type of humour and it is worth checking out.
    7Quinoa1984

    One of Corman's first is still one of his best

    The first version of The Little Shop of Horrors, long before the Broadway musical and Frank Oz's musical/horror/comedy, is one of the primary examples of shoe-string movie-making. Shoe-string, of course, refers mostly to the budget, and this possibly ranks above others like Clerks, Slacker, Night of the Living Dead and Blair Witch in order to put it together so quickly. And yet for all of its little slip-ups and deranged moments of comedy, it does work for what its worth. Not that it doesn't show that the film was made in two days, but on those terms of extremely low-budget, go-for-broke B-movie-making, Roger Corman as a director has quite a nifty effort here. The story is similar to a fairy-tale (a darkly comic one to be sure, like one of the Fractures Fairy tales from the old Rocky & Bullwinkle show), in how Seymour (Jonathan Haze, perfect as an awkward, easily shockable little guy) tries to nurture a plant to earn the affections of Audrey (Jackie Joseph). But then the plant turns into a meat-eater, to put it that way, and from there Charles Griffith's script goes into wild comic turns where he now has to figure out how to take care of the plant before it 'takes care' of him. Some scenes are less notable than others, and sometimes the cheesiness of it all (just look at the plant itself for proof enough) can be wearisome. But Corman keeps the atmosphere with a giddy amount of late 50s 'shlock', and some scenes stand the test of time as the best of their B-movie status. Tops go to the 2nd film appearance from Nicholson as the most psychotic of the bunch, as a 'chipper' fetishist who gets off on getting his wretched teeth worked on- it's a masterpiece of a scene with cartoonish action, innuendo and crazy looks from a 23 year old Nicholson. Worth checking out, maybe more than once, and you're likely to find it (appropriately) in the cheapest lot of DVDs and videos at your local store.
    8Ben_Cheshire

    I lurve this movie!

    Funny, sexy black comedy shot by "King of the B's" Roger Corman on a landmark budget of 27 000 and in landmark time of only 2 days! Its the funniest movie i've seen from 1960 or before, and between this fact, the fact that it is black comedy, and the fact that it has the charm and lack of pretension of a cheaply made horror movie, its no wonder it has such a huge cult following.

    It has the incredibly sexy Jackie Joseph, one of the most buxom lasses i've ever seen, and many risque scenes, which, along with the jazzy soundtrack and black humour, give this a much freer feel than any studio picture of the era, or any picture before. Its humour hasn't aged a bit - and feels quite modern compared to most humour of the day.

    As an added curio, this features Jack Nicholson in his first ever appearance in a feature film (he was in one short film before it), as the nerdy, masochistic patient who squeals with delight when the dentist is drilling holes in his mouth and pulling teeth. Though its only a five minute part, its a great part.

    The movie is filled with an edgy humour that the remakes (including the broadway musical, which the 1986 film was based on) are too conservative for. I thoroughly recommend it to you.

    Corman went on to become one of the most important producers of the century, since he provided opportunities to many young filmmakers in the 70's, whose projects the major studios would never have invested in, and so we would have been deprived of the talents of Peter Bogdanovich, Francis Ford Coppola (The Godfather, Apocalypse Now), Martin Scorcese (Taxi Driver, Raging Bull), Jonathan Demme (Silence of the Lambs) and many others. Corman taught them how to just go out and make a good movie, and make it cheaply - and his major qualification to be able to teach them this, in my opinion, is that he made Little Shop of Horrors.
    7ma-cortes

    Horror comedy with low budget converted a cult movie

    The picture concerns upon a geeky employee (Jonathan Haze) working in a florist shop called Mushnick (Mel Welles) who brings a carnivorous and ferocious plant developing a bloodthirsty hunger and is forced to murder for human eating .

    Horror comedy blending black humor , parody , tongue-in-cheek and horror . The comedy is absurd and cheesy but gets its moments here and there . Incredible cheap but effective visual effects . This is a well known terror-comedy , it's a quickie but was shot for two days and is deemed one of Corman's best and funniest movies ever made although with lack budget . The principal actors and technicians will repeat along with Corman in various films ,in fact, the picture belongs to horror-black comedy sub-genre as ¨A bucket of blood¨ and ¨Creature from the haunted sea¨, both of them written by Charles B. Griffith (who is the voice of ¨Audrie the plant¨ and besides plays the thief) . In the film appears the Corman's ordinary actors as Mel Welles, Dick Miller, Haze and a young newcomer Jack Nicholson in a comic interpretation as a sadomasochistic who receives a especial dental intervention . The picture is remade (1986) as an amused musical comedy by Frank Oz with Steve Martin and Rick Moranis . The flick will appeal to classic and cult movies fans.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      Howard R. Cohen learned from Charles B. Griffith that when the film was being edited, "there was a point where two scenes would not cut together. It was just a visual jolt, and it didn't work. And they needed something to bridge that moment. They found, in the editing room, a nice shot of the moon, they cut it in, and it worked. Twenty years go by. I'm at the studio one day. Chuck comes running up to me and says, 'You've got to see this!' It was a magazine article--eight pages on the symbolism of the moon in La tiendita de los horrores (1960)."
    • Errores
      Mel Welles's character name is spelled as "Mushnik" in the end credits, but appears as "Mushnick" on the sign outside his shop.

      Discrepancies between a character's name in the film and the credits are classified as "Unacceptable Goofs" per IMDb guidelines.
    • Citas

      Fouch: Besides, I've got to get home. My wife's making gardenias for dinner.

    • Versiones alternativas
      The Filmgroup Inc. opening logo is cut from some prints.
    • Conexiones
      Edited into Sábado 14 (1981)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Auld Lang Syne
      (1788) (uncredited)

      Traditional Scottish ballad

      Words by Robert Burns

      Sung off-screen and a cappella by Jonathan Haze

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    • How long is The Little Shop of Horrors?Con tecnología de Alexa
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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 5 de agosto de 1960 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • La pequeña tienda de los horrores
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Bunker Hill, Downtown, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos(Location)
    • Productoras
      • The Filmgroup
      • Santa Clara Productions
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 27,000 (estimado)
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 13 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono

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