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Todo comienza el sabado

Título original: Saturday Night and Sunday Morning
  • 1960
  • Approved
  • 1h 29min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.5/10
9.7 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Todo comienza el sabado (1960)
A rebellious, hard-living factory worker juggles relationships with two women, one of whom is married to another man but pregnant with his child.
Reproducir trailer2:17
1 video
51 fotos
DramaRomance

Un trabajador en una fábrica sobrelleva dos relaciones con dos mujeres distintas, una de las cuales está casada pero esperando un hijo suyo.Un trabajador en una fábrica sobrelleva dos relaciones con dos mujeres distintas, una de las cuales está casada pero esperando un hijo suyo.Un trabajador en una fábrica sobrelleva dos relaciones con dos mujeres distintas, una de las cuales está casada pero esperando un hijo suyo.

  • Dirección
    • Karel Reisz
  • Guionista
    • Alan Sillitoe
  • Elenco
    • Albert Finney
    • Shirley Anne Field
    • Rachel Roberts
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.5/10
    9.7 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Karel Reisz
    • Guionista
      • Alan Sillitoe
    • Elenco
      • Albert Finney
      • Shirley Anne Field
      • Rachel Roberts
    • 80Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 37Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 3premios BAFTA
      • 10 premios ganados y 3 nominaciones en total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:17
    Trailer

    Fotos51

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    Elenco principal37

    Editar
    Albert Finney
    Albert Finney
    • Arthur Seaton
    Shirley Anne Field
    Shirley Anne Field
    • Doreen
    Rachel Roberts
    Rachel Roberts
    • Brenda
    Hylda Baker
    • Aunt Ada
    Norman Rossington
    Norman Rossington
    • Bert
    Bryan Pringle
    Bryan Pringle
    • Jack
    Robert Cawdron
    Robert Cawdron
    • Robboe
    Edna Morris
    • Mrs. Bull
    Elsie Wagstaff
    Elsie Wagstaff
    • Mrs. Seaton
    • (as Elsie Wagstaffe)
    Frank Pettitt
    • Mr. Seaton
    Avis Bunnage
    Avis Bunnage
    • Blousy Woman
    Colin Blakely
    Colin Blakely
    • Loudmouth
    • (as Colin Blakeley)
    Irene Richmond
    • Doreen's Mother
    Louise Dunn
    Louise Dunn
    • Betty
    Anne Blake
    Anne Blake
    • Civil Defence Officer
    Peter Madden
    Peter Madden
    • Drunken Man
    Cameron Hall
    • Mr. Bull
    Alister Williamson
    Alister Williamson
    • Policeman
    • Dirección
      • Karel Reisz
    • Guionista
      • Alan Sillitoe
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios80

    7.59.7K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    ericredfearn

    A Great Kitchen Sink Drama!

    This is the film which made Albert Finney a star. Filmed on location at Nottingham, Albert Finney plays Arthur Seaton a bored factory worker who is having an affair with his workmate's wife (Rachel Roberts). Controversial at the time because of its references to abortion, this film gives an idea of what life was like amongst the working classes during the 1950s. Shirley Anne Field also made her name in this film, but she never really fulfilled her potential as an actress. A well acted and produced gritty drama which is still watchable today.
    7slokes

    Not Conforming To Expectations

    Meeting an attractive young woman in a bar, Arthur Seaton wastes no time making his play. He asks her name, and is told with some embarrassment it's Doreen. She doesn't like her name. He doesn't like his, either.

    "Neither of 'em's up to much, but it ain't our fault," he tells her. Like everything else in his unhappy life, it's all a matter of inheritance.

    Arthur may share a name with a heroic English king, but he's not one to wear his lower-middle-class crown agreeably. He drinks away his wages, lashes out at defenseless women, and lies with discomfiting ease. But Albert Finney and the filmmakers make sure you care about him anyway.

    As Seaton, Finney glowers a lot in the way you expect from a protagonist in a kitchen-sink drama, a celebrated product of British New Wave cinema. But the film plays with your expectations just as life does his. He doesn't want to settle for life as he finds it, and while "Saturday Night And Sunday Morning," Alan Sillitoe's adaptation of his own novel directed by Karel Reisz, spits a lot in the direction of conformity, it belies its angry-young-man pedigree with a sense of cosmic acceptance at taking what life has to offer.

    Seaton's a "madhead," make no mistake. But he's not an especially honest one. He lies impulsively, often to no purpose, and is even proud of it. "I always was a liar, a good one and all," he tells the married woman he sleeps with, Brenda (Rachel Roberts). Ironically, it's his one honest moment on her behalf that lands him in real trouble.

    The film gives us other hints Seaton is not an admirable figure, like shooting an annoying neighbor with an air rifle in a manner that comes off more creepy than defiant. A "working-class anti-hero," as other reviewers put it, and the real craft in both the direction and in Finney's performance is how it accomplishes the balancing act of establishing Seaton as both miserable company and a rooting interest.

    It's a well-structured film, too, a quick 90 minutes that breaks neatly into thirty minutes of establishing the situation, thirty minutes of developing a crisis (Seaton stringing along two women, one pregnant), and thirty minutes of tense resolution. At the same time, Reisz gives his film a grimy authenticity that feels real, never stagy, with scenes that have a real lived-in quality while serving the larger story.

    "Saturday Night And Sunday Morning" is a bleak film in many ways, not pleasant to watch. Laughs and insights are minimal, and Finney downplays his considerable screen charm. There are hardly any toothy grins like he'd bestow on his later breakout role, as the title character in "Tom Jones." The handling of his relationship with Doreen is a trifle pat, and too-simply resolved. So is the issue of his relationship with Brenda, although Finney shares a good final scene with her character's husband, played effectively by Stephen Fry lookalike Bryan Pringle.

    There are a lot of good performances in this film, which blend together to create an effective if routine story. If it's not what you expect from angry-young-man cinema, it's nice to have your expectations batted down now and then.
    10maddoxpt

    The movie that first gave me an impression of 'cinema verite'

    In 1960, in a small Black Country town, I went to see this movie, with a male friend, at our local fleapit - it was a revelation. I found myself in a cinema that was a real setting for what appeared on the screen, for there Albert Finney was, not represented, was the working class bloke that sat in the picture house near to me.

    Equally I knew that, on leaving, I would see his aunt (Hilda Baker) in the local chippy, and that Norman Rossington would be cycling to some nearby canal to fish. Indeed when Ben (my friend) and I left we went to our local for a quick pint and, I swear,we both had the uncanny feeling of being part of the film.

    Time has passed and the working class East and West Midlands have change completely so it may not have such resonance for a new generation but if you want to know what a good slice of England looked and sounded like in the 1950s you should see it: it's better than any documentary. Indeed it is a great film.
    8Pedro_H

    A classic - but cannot have the impact it once had

    The movie that made Albert Finney a star cannot, now, be viewed as anything more than an a (UK) cinematic gem in it own glass case. At the time of release it hit the audience like a bomb-shell due to its frank portrayal of life, sex and double standards in the late 50's.

    Today some will be puzzled by the dilemmas and themes to the point of "so what?"

    Writer Alan Silitoe (from his own novel) quickly draws us in the to real world of a Nottingham factory worker. This is not the factory work of normal movies with the made-up hero having a blob of black stage paint across his forehead; more the dishevelled, sweaty, badly lit world that he knows from first hand experience.

    In it we find Finney, smoking and gruff at his lathe. No actor, before him or after has ever made so much of an impression in a mundane situation as the ex-Shakespearen actor does here. Reality comes out of every pore. His matter-of-fact speaking voice, as a voice-over narrator, should not be underrated either - like someone giving testimony partly against their will.

    His world of is one of petite rebellion and cheap thrills. The "fighting pit prop that wants a pint of beer." He is immoral and the wife of a friend is seen as fair game: Although the consequences are beyond his immature mind.

    There is good supporting performances from British character actors such as Norman Rossington and Hylda Baker, but this movie belongs to one man and one man alone: Sir Albert Finney.

    Twenty five years after he is dead the cinematic world is going to wake up and realize how brilliant an actor this man was: Like they did with Humphrey Bogart
    10mike n

    best of the "angry young man" movies

    I first saw this film during its original u.s. run in 1961, loved it, and jumped at the chance to see it again at a local revival movie house. The movie is justly famous for Finney's brilliant performance (I think it was his first.), but has other virtues as well. Karel Reisz and Freddie Francis succeed in making the film visually interesting, and it is well paced, with essentially no dead time.

    The thing that deserves the most praise, however, is Sillitoe's script, which puts virtually all modern dramatic screenplays to shame. In a general way, the working class british films of the late 50s and 60s launched the tradition that leads to Loach, Leigh, Tim Roth, etc. This film's subtlety and ambivalence towards its leading character reminds me specifically of Mike Leigh at his very best.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      The factory scenes were filmed in the same factory that original author Alan Sillitoe worked in during the war when he was making shells and other artillery. At the time of filming, the factory was owned by the Raleigh bicycle company.
    • Errores
      When Arthur and Doreen meet for the first time, her packets of crisps on the counter disappear and reappear between shots.
    • Citas

      Arthur Seaton: Mam called me barmy when I told her I fell of a gasometer for a bet. But I'm not barmy, I'm a fighting pit prop that wants a pint of beer, that's me. But if any knowing bastard says that's me I'll tell them I'm a dynamite dealer waiting to blow the factory to kingdom come. I'm me and nobody else. Whatever people say I am, that's what I'm not because they don't know a bloody thing about me! God knows what I am.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Viewpoint: We the Violent: Part 1 (1961)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Bristol Cigarettes Jingle
      (uncredited)

      Written by Mike Sammes

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    Preguntas Frecuentes18

    • How long is Saturday Night and Sunday Morning?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 19 de abril de 1962 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Saturday Night and Sunday Morning
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Raleigh Bicycle Works, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(bicycle works)
    • Productora
      • Woodfall Film Productions
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • GBP 100,000 (estimado)
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 370
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 29 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.66 : 1

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