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Un soltero en el paraíso

Título original: Bachelor in Paradise
  • 1961
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 49min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.3/10
2 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un soltero en el paraíso (1961)
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Reproducir trailer2:58
1 video
38 fotos
FarceComedyRomance

Un escritor soltero de libros eróticos se muda a un barrio familiar donde se convierte en consejero sentimental de amas de casa infelices, para disgusto de sus maridos que sospechan que tien... Leer todoUn escritor soltero de libros eróticos se muda a un barrio familiar donde se convierte en consejero sentimental de amas de casa infelices, para disgusto de sus maridos que sospechan que tiene relaciones con ellas.Un escritor soltero de libros eróticos se muda a un barrio familiar donde se convierte en consejero sentimental de amas de casa infelices, para disgusto de sus maridos que sospechan que tiene relaciones con ellas.

  • Dirección
    • Jack Arnold
  • Guionistas
    • Valentine Davies
    • Hal Kanter
    • Vera Caspary
  • Elenco
    • Bob Hope
    • Lana Turner
    • Janis Paige
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.3/10
    2 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Jack Arnold
    • Guionistas
      • Valentine Davies
      • Hal Kanter
      • Vera Caspary
    • Elenco
      • Bob Hope
      • Lana Turner
      • Janis Paige
    • 47Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 10Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado a 1 premio Óscar
      • 1 premio ganado y 4 nominaciones en total

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    Elenco principal71

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    Bob Hope
    Bob Hope
    • Adam J. Niles
    Lana Turner
    Lana Turner
    • Rosemary Howard
    Janis Paige
    Janis Paige
    • Dolores Jynson
    Jim Hutton
    Jim Hutton
    • Larry Delavane
    Paula Prentiss
    Paula Prentiss
    • Linda Delavane
    Don Porter
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    • Camille Quinlaw
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    • Judge Peterson
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    John McGiver
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    Clinton Sundberg
    Clinton Sundberg
    • Rodney Jones
    Alan Hewitt
    Alan Hewitt
    • Attorney Backett
    Reta Shaw
    Reta Shaw
    • Mrs. Brown
    Roy Engel
    Roy Engel
    • McCracken
    • (escenas eliminadas)
    Dorothy Abbott
    Dorothy Abbott
    • Minor Role
    • (sin créditos)
    Rodney Bell
    • Attorney
    • (sin créditos)
    Brandy Bryan
    • Waitress
    • (sin créditos)
    Robert Carson
    Robert Carson
    • Attorney
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Jack Arnold
    • Guionistas
      • Valentine Davies
      • Hal Kanter
      • Vera Caspary
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    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios47

    6.31.9K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7msdemos

    Bachelor In Paradise, and I'm........

    ..........IN HEAVEN!!!

    1961........Kennedy was in the White House, the word 'Vietnam' meant little (or nothing) to the average American, and Bob Hope was close to winding down his prolific (film) career. Just getting to soak in the memorable era this film represents would normally have been entertainment enough, but this flick goes the extra mile by offering a fun little ride with Bob Hope at the wheel, in fine comedic form.

    Having just watched the Warner's Archive Collection Remastered Edition DVD, I can honestly say that I can't remember having had a better time watching a movie in many, many years.

    Though "The Ghost Breakers" (1940) will always be my favorite Bob Hope film, this one comes close. The script is good, Hope is Hope, and the supporting cast offers a tantalizing bevy of 'Bob' beauties, both talented AND lovely (A young Paula Prentiss showing up in form-fitting, pink short-shorts, approximately 20 minutes in, is TRULY a sight to behold!).

    If you get the chance, mix yourself a pitcher of 'Gibsons', pop this one in, and let the wondrous era that once was, and will never again be, wash over you like a light sun shower....
    suze-4

    almost a documentary on 1961 housing in California

    Bob Hope was 58 and Lana Turner was 40 when they made this movie. They have no chemistry whatsoever so a romance is not believable. Perhaps with softened makeup and hair she would have been appealing. Anyway the story is beside the point now, 45 years later.

    The movie is all about the huge, spacious, tract developments in undeveloped parts of California in 1961. I lived in one, so this movie takes me back there. Watching it takes me back to those days when Kennedy was the new president, when there were brand new houses in pale pink, light green, and yellow; each house divided from its neighbour by a row of cacti. Families moved to them from the older, two-story traditional houses. It was supposed to be a great thing to have no stairs; to live in a sprawling "rancher." Just looking at the houses with the huge kitchens and wall phones brings nostalgia, as only the very rich can afford space now; back then it was taken for granted.

    A major "comedic" event in this film is Bob putting too much detergent in the washer, and the ensuing crisis when soap suds flood the entire house.

    The houses were spacious and everything was inexpensive - such houses were $20,000 new. Nowadays any surviving houses from that era have been remodeled and no longer have the orange built-in bars, the gold appliances, or wood grained walls.

    This is my parents' world, post-war - 16 years after the end of WW II. This is an era where everything is available, where the kitchen is the size of a restaurant, but there is no happiness whatsoever.

    A scene in the supermarket is jarring when a little girl who had been left in the car by her mother is talking to Bob Hope and her mother comes along and just leaves her with him as she goes about her shopping. That would never happen now and reminds us of a more innocent and trusting time.

    The development is called Paradise. It's more like Paradise Lost, or Discarded. There's a dark subplot of an unhappy marriage, a couple that is "practically divorced" and the wife (Janis Paige) is throwing herself at Bob Hope. But he's secretly a gentleman who only has eyes for the stiff, unmarried Lana Turner, and when he finally gets her, there is the obligatory panning across the floor showing their discarded clothing and then we hear her giggles. Just like a Rock Hudson/Doris Day ending.

    Then the movie ends and I guess maybe we are meant to think they will have a real life together. They're too old to start having kids to populate the housing tract and be ignored and spoiled, so maybe they will write and think and discuss real things and have a happy life together.

    The sixties are gone - but here in this movie we have the remnants of what it started out to be, if people could only have held on to it and preserved something for the future.

    Who knew a fluff piece like this would be so thought provoking 40 years later.

    I thank Turner Classics for realizing these are valuable period pieces that give us insight on a bygone age. An age where people lost the values they had in the 30s and 40s. After the war, people wanted comfort and ease, and wanted their kids to enjoy a carefree life without the privation of the depression and the war. Unfortunately it only shows that comfort and ease do not bring happiness.
    8Andrew_Eskridge

    Worth a look at back when

    Bob Hope plays a worldly writer whose specialty is the sexual mores of European women. He is called back to the U.S. from his home on the French Riviera after his business manager takes off with his money, leaving him with back taxes to pay. His editor (played by the delightfully droll John McGiver) assigns him to write a book about the sexual mores of American suburbanites and places him in a tract house in a new Southern California subdivision. There, Hope meets the glamorous Realtor Lana Turner, who has given up on men, and the wacky pre-feminist wives and mothers who are his neighbors. Romance and troubles follow to a predictable ending.

    This is escapist humor at its purest, produced at a time when Americans faced a world seemingly on the brink of nuclear war. Filmed on location, it also provides a fascinating look at the culture of the time, making you wish you were living then amid the Atomic Age architecture. Dig those compact tract homes painted in California coral and aqua, that far-out supermarket with the giant windows in front, that snappy diner with the carhops, that chic barbecue restaurant where they serve shrimp cocktails, ribs and gibsons al fresco! (I wish I knew where it was filmed).

    The first hour is great, with quirky comic turns by Paula Prentiss as the excitable young housewife next door, Janis Paige as the sexy soon-to-be divorcée on the make and Reta Shaw as the overbearing neighborhood snoop. Unfortunately, the second half drags a bit as the farce grows thin, Hope grows more grating and most of the action moves inside to studio sets.

    Still, it's a nice trip back to 1961.
    7lchaim7

    portrait of late 50s-early 60s image of CA

    As some people who already posted reviews mentioned, the greatest value to me about this movie is being able to see a slice of what it was like in CA during the late 50s and early 60s. I love this particular era, so I guess I am biased. I also enjoy listening to the music that's heard throughout the movie, especially the slower-paced cool jazz-like tunes with xylophones.

    It's too silly to be taken seriously but if you like documentaries about American society, this film is very interesting and won't disappoint. I'm pretty sure that some neighborhoods like this in CA had bad neighbors and even dangerous ones, as hard to believe as that may be. A good example is when bikers during this period would buy homes in fairly new conservative neighborhoods like the ones depicted in this film. All kinds of sordid behavior occurred, and the neighbors had to put up with it for some time until police would finally kick them out. That and other undesirable reality was swept under the rug and hardly ever reported, but it did happen and it was very scandalous and shocking at that time-more than today. Not everything was as happy during this era as it seems in this film, but life was slower and there were fewer people in CA. The neighborhoods in this film are located in Panorama City and Woodland Hills, still very nice neighborhoods today. They're both located in San Fernando Valley, an area that is still in the higher end of the real estate market. Unfortunately, most neighborhoods that looked like this at that time have been transformed to ugly ghettos or concrete jungles with endless and boring strip malls.

    Even if the neighborhoods and life in the film seem to be exaggerated, it's still a contrast to today's life in CA. I'd rather live in that era than in the one today. There's a lot of negative that can be listed about that era, but there's also a lot of positive. People were held to higher standards and most people dressed a lot better than they do today. Even the colors seemed to be nicer, not just in the clothing that people wore but in the colors they chose for their cars. I also notice the artistic quality of the cursive shapes of the letters in marquees, advertisements and neon signs. The way buildings look today and their marquees look unappealing, very boring and very ugly. Of course, I'm biased because I have always liked almost everything about the particular era depicted in the film. It was like the beginning of the end of a fantasy that I unfortunately didn't get to experience because I was born in the the mid 60s. I think it was the apex of ideal happiness in CA. But I still remember some things about the late 60s that were distinct from the 70s and the ensuing decades. Unfortunately and ironically, life improved in many ways, it also degenerated after the early 60s; and that's why I think many people like me yearn for that era.
    7dhammoa175

    Clamelot's suburbs preserved in film.

    I watch this every time it's on cable, mainly because it is a graphic memento of "Camelot" - a time in America of sheer optimism and middle class power. This movie revels in the 60s suburban life style and the fact even the middle class was shrugging off stuffy Victorian sexuality. But within a setting of Bob Hope's dry humor, lots of hot 60s women, the BIG cars, the ranch style canyon subdivision houses - and the consumptive 60s lifestyle. Gotta love it on nostalgia value alone but as one of the better Hope 60s comedies, peppered with his slick double entendre one-liners bounced off a bevy of Hollywood hotties, it's a winner as well.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      The house Niles rents, as of 2021, still stands. It was built in 1959, has 2,083 sq. ft, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths on a quarter-acre lot and in 2021 was valued at over $1,000,000.
    • Errores
      When Larry Delavane arrives home drunk as Adam Niles is babysitting his kids, the headlights on his car are covered with paper to prevent reflections from the camera lights.
    • Citas

      [after entering his house in Paradise]

      Adam J. Niles: Oh, it's very charming. What do you call this style... early Disneyland?

    • Conexiones
      Featured in 7 Nights to Remember (1966)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Bachelor in Paradise
      Music by Henry Mancini

      Lyrics by Mack David

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    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 19 de julio de 1962 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Francés
    • También se conoce como
      • Bachelor in Paradise
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • 22931 Brenford St., Woodland Hills, California, Estados Unidos(house Adam rents)
    • Productoras
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • Ted Richmond Productions
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 1,989,000 (estimado)
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 49 minutos
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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