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IMDbPro

Dos chicas y un seductor

Título original: The World of Henry Orient
  • 1964
  • Approved
  • 1h 46min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.6/10
4 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Peter Sellers, Merrie Spaeth, and Tippy Walker in Dos chicas y un seductor (1964)
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Una traviesa y aventurera chica de catorce años y su mejor amiga comienzan a seguir a un excéntrico concertista de piano por la ciudad de Nueva York después de que ella se enamore de él.Una traviesa y aventurera chica de catorce años y su mejor amiga comienzan a seguir a un excéntrico concertista de piano por la ciudad de Nueva York después de que ella se enamore de él.Una traviesa y aventurera chica de catorce años y su mejor amiga comienzan a seguir a un excéntrico concertista de piano por la ciudad de Nueva York después de que ella se enamore de él.

  • Dirección
    • George Roy Hill
  • Guionistas
    • Nora Johnson
    • Nunnally Johnson
  • Elenco
    • Peter Sellers
    • Tippy Walker
    • Merrie Spaeth
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.6/10
    4 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • George Roy Hill
    • Guionistas
      • Nora Johnson
      • Nunnally Johnson
    • Elenco
      • Peter Sellers
      • Tippy Walker
      • Merrie Spaeth
    • 73Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 34Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 premio ganado y 3 nominaciones en total

    Videos2

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    Elenco principal22

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    Peter Sellers
    Peter Sellers
    • Henry Orient
    Tippy Walker
    Tippy Walker
    • Val Boyd
    Merrie Spaeth
    Merrie Spaeth
    • Marian Gilbert
    Paula Prentiss
    Paula Prentiss
    • Stella Dunworthy
    Angela Lansbury
    Angela Lansbury
    • Isabel Boyd
    Tom Bosley
    Tom Bosley
    • Frank Boyd
    Phyllis Thaxter
    Phyllis Thaxter
    • Avis Gilbert
    Bibi Osterwald
    Bibi Osterwald
    • Erica Booth
    John Fiedler
    John Fiedler
    • Sidney
    Al Lewis
    Al Lewis
    • Tobacconist
    Peter Duchin
    Peter Duchin
    • Joe Daniels
    Fred Stewart
    Fred Stewart
    • Doctor
    Philippa Bevans
    • Emma Hambler
    Jerry Jarrett
    Jerry Jarrett
    • Doorman
    • (as Jerry Jerrett)
    Jane Buchanan
    • Lillian Kafritz
    Peter Turgeon
    Peter Turgeon
    • Orchestra Member
    William Hinnant
    William Hinnant
    • Doorman
    Colin Romoff
    • Hairdresser
    • Dirección
      • George Roy Hill
    • Guionistas
      • Nora Johnson
      • Nunnally Johnson
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios73

    6.64K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7rmax304823

    Charming Film

    A few points. Elmer Bernstein's musical score is as whimsical as the young girls themselves. George Roy Hill, the director, was sensitive to the musical moods of his films. He had originally intended to be a musician and had a bachelor's in music from Yale. The photographer, Boris Kaufman, has done a splendid job of capturing New York City in the late fall and in mid winter. (He was equally perceptive in getting wintry Hoboken on film in "On the Waterfront.")

    The acting is fine, surprisingly, from all the principles. The pavonine Peter Sellers usually steals every scene he's in. When he's trying to seduce Paula Prentiss his voice has an accent that sounds somewhere between Italian and Slovenian. He throws in Italian clichés but sometimes gets mixed up -- "Garcon! Due martinis, per favore." One of his funniest moments is when he's performing a terrible piano concerto. He's skipped the last two rehearsals so he's a bit lost. At one point he rolls dramatically into the upper registers (while the rest of the orchestra play checkers) and ends on a trill. He glances at the conductor who slowly shakes his head in disgust. The wrong key. Unperturbed Sellers starts the roll over again and looks to the conductor, who shakes his head again. After the third failure to find the right key, the conductor shakes his head and mouths -- very clearly and silently -- "B Flat." Satisfied, Sellers plunges ahead.

    Paula Prentiss doesn't have a very large role but she's delicious both in looks and in her performance. She's so nervous, so flattered by the attention of Seller's phony pianist that she gulps and staggers slightly from time to time. When Sellers finally gets her to his apartment and begins to woo her with a paean to her "burnished shoulders" and "twin poems," she wavers while sitting on the couch and caresses her body parts as he lauds them. She never appears less than half gassed.

    Angela Lansbury is in her bitchy mode here, along the lines of her mother in "The Manchurian Candidate." She never seems to go wrong, regardless of the part. Her husband, Tom Bosley, is kind of a good-natured schlub. Phyllis Thaxter looks just fine, considering that she first appeared in "Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo" more than twenty years earlier. Her sweetness might be cloying except that it seems ingrained in her real personality.

    The most surprising thing in the performances are the two 14-year-old girls, neither of whom went on to a respectable movie career. They're plain charming, both goofy and funny, but smart and perceptive as well. "Gilbert" (Spaeth) comes from a warm middle-class family. We can tell because on Christmas we see them preparing a turkey and having friends over for dinner. Spaeth went on in real life to become a strong George W. Bush supporter and helped torpedo John Kerry with the Swiftboat Ads in 2004, for what it's worth.

    "Valerie Campbell Boyd" (Walker) is a neurotic genius from a dysfunctional rich family. (That name is a great WASP cognomen, by the way). They're two cute kids, believe it or not, especially Tippy Walker who brings a molestable element to her role. Hill seems to recognize this and gives the PREverts in the audience a couple of slow-motion upskirt shots as the two jump over fire hydrants and dance on park benches. But it's all pretty unstressed and one would be hard put to think of a better image for two pleasant and happy kids living in a world of fantasy than to have them laughing and leaping in the air. Where do they find kids who can act so well? Walker has a way of flipping her hair back and gawkily hunching her shoulders that spells Preppiness.

    The film has its serious moments but most of it is low-key humorous. I saw it in a drive-in in Riverhead, Long Island. You probably won't regret watching it.
    9middleburg

    New York has never looked so beautiful--in a bittersweet tale of adolescent yearning and discovery

    A truly lovely and engaging film, with surprisingly real and complex characters anchored in the perceptive viewpoints of adolescents -- their joys, confusions and hurts, paving the way for future joys, confusions and hurts. This is a remarkable film with countless moments to cherish--the adults with all their foibles, inconsistencies, concerns real or selfish--and those two girls exploring the world with wonderment and imagination born of exuberant discovery and painful denial. The feelings are so complex--it is often playful fun, but with a tinge of bittersweet wisdom that pervades practically every frame of the film. And New York. For those that love New York City, this film is a must. Filmed over 40 years ago--it is a joy to see all the familiar, beloved landmarks as they looked before. Only Woody Allen has filmed NYC with as much loving detail. From the opening scene on the East River where the girls first meet, to their first romp through the glories of Central Park (The Bow Bridge never has looked more elegant and graceful--and the Rambles never more wild and rustic), Park Avenue in the snow with the Christmas tree lights all glowing (truly capturing the magic of NYC at holiday time)--to surprising scenes of Carnegie Hall, and the wonderful Greenwich Village neighborhoods with their charming mews and meandering streets. How appropriate that the girls' discoveries should take place in this beautiful, complex city. One final comment--Elmer Bernstein's film score is a sheer delight-befitting this delicate, but profound story--bathing the film in a musical glow as beautiful as New York City.
    gregcouture

    An unexpectedly pleasurable gem!

    I wasn't quite prepared for how much I enjoyed this sophisticated (but certainly not too much so) romp when I caught it during its first-run release. I thought it so well-executed in every department that I was delighted to note that it's now available in a DVD edition with its Panavision widescreen ratio restored. But unfortunately the audio element is so bad (requiring turning the volume way up to even begin to hear the dialogue, and a music score that's mangled beyond belief) that I had to return the disc for a refund. Fortunately Turner Classic Movies recently showed it and the soundtrack was not a problem, making possible a fairly decent high-fidelity VHS recording.

    The two young actresses who played the very natural but entirely madcap duo who precipitate most of the plot's ins-'n-outs are completely charming and they are supported by an extraordinarily well-chosen cast of top-notch professionals. Angela Lansbury, never an actress to shrink from the somewhat less savory aspects of a character she's playing, strikes just the right note as a socialite whose maternal instincts are close to non-existent. I do remember wishing that Paula Prentiss had been given more to do, but I suppose getting mistaken for Jayne Mansfield (in one of the film's funnier sequences) wasn't something to be sneezed at. As the film's title character, Peter Sellers wasn't permitted by director George Roy Hill to unbalance the proceedings. And it certainly seems that scenarist Nora Johnson had inherited more than a modicum of her father Nunnally's professional good taste. This one is a treat for all but the dyspeptic and the excessively demanding.
    7gee-15

    It's not about Henry Orient

    If you go into this film expecting to see a lot of Peter Sellers, you will be disappointed. Make no mistake, he's in there and he's very funny but this film is not about his character, a mediocre pianist with a penchant for married women. Rather, it's about two 14-year old girls who are making the awkward transition from childhood to adulthood. One of the girls has an incredible crush on Orient and her friend is helping her worship him from afar. Henry Orient is the catalyst for their transformation when they learn a little too much about his "world".

    The acting is uniformly fine. Sellers' character is a rat but he's so clumsy and foolish you find him endearing. Angela Lansbury, as the coldly selfish mother of one of the girls, is extremely hissable. It's hard to believe that she's the same actress playing the warm, friendly Jessica Fletcher so many years later. Paula Prentiss is very amusing as Orient's exceedingly nervous married girlfriend. Tom Bosley plays Lansbury's kind-hearted husband. One of the final scenes in the film is between him and Lansbury and their daughter and it's a great one. There's a great deal of superficial dialogue but the subtext is unmistakable and it becomes the climax of the film. The best part is the two young actresses playing the girls. I have a fourteen year old daughter and she acts just like they do (almost anyway, she doesn't jump over fire hydrants). Their portrayal of giddy women/children is what the film is really all about.

    Highly recommended.
    9jacksflicks

    This was also the Sixties

    The sixties became The Sixties around the time of this film, 1964. There was a time, believe it or not, when kids played grown-up, instead of the other way around, as is the case today. Two cute girls are venturing from childhood to youth, in a benign Manhattan. They have a crush on a pianist-Lothario who happens to be Peter Sellers. You can imagine the complications - and the hilarity.

    What makes this film so appealing is the way it portrays adolescent awakening as a completely unsordid and sweet experience. Yes, there is pathos, when the two discover how adults have turned their world into Henry Orient's world.

    Although the cast is sterling all around, Tom Bosley is a standout as father to one of the girls, who helps put things to rights.

    If the Kennedy assassination and Vietnam are cultural watersheds, then this film is a refreshing antidote; it gives the lie to the glib put-downs of the era by the current generation.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      The character of Henry Orient was inspired by real-life concert pianist Oscar Levant. Nora Johnson, who wrote the novel on which the movie was based (and co-wrote the screenplay with her father, Nunnally Johnson), said that she and a friend had a crush on Levant when they were schoolgirls.
    • Errores
      When Mrs. Gilbert pours Mr. Boyd a drink at her home, the "scotch" foams slightly. Real booze doesn't do that; its ubiquitous stand-in, cold tea, does.
    • Citas

      [Val induces a fantasy about Gil's divorced parents]

      Val Boyd: Think your Dad will ever come back?

      Marian Gilbert: Why can he? He's married and has a couple of kids.

      Val Boyd: But how do you know he's happy?

      Marian Gilbert: He's crazy about her.

      Val Boyd: I know, but just suppose he suddenly realized his second marriage was a tragic mistake. His eyes are opened at last, and he knows now that your mother is the only woman he's ever loved in his whole life.

      Marian Gilbert: I don't think there's much chance of that.

      Val Boyd: So there's nothing to do but tell her the truth... the scond wife I mean. He's simply got to go back to the only woman he's loved in his whole life. Good-bye, second wife.

      Marian Gilbert: You think that's really possible?

      Val Boyd: Well, he's got no other choice. He can't go living a lie, can he? He's got to go back to his one true love.

      Marian Gilbert: Maybe, during Christmas.

      Val Boyd: Chirstmas Eve maybe.

      Marian Gilbert: About 6:00.

      Val Boyd: You and your mother are all alone trimming the tree, when suddenly the doorbell rings.

      Marian Gilbert: I'd be the one to go and answer it.

      Val Boyd: But you'd be wondering 'who on earth it could be,' because you weren't expectign anyone. He'd open the door, and he'd be standig there simply loaded with presents. And before you could say anything, he'd say, 'Shhhh,' because he wants to surprise your mother. At first, he'd give you a big hugh, just as tight as he could.

      Marian Gilbert: And them Mom would come down wondering who it was, beause she'd be wondering why she didn't hear anybody say anything.

      Val Boyd: And for a long time, they'd just stand there and stare at each other not saying anything.

      Marian Gilbert: They wouldn't have to.

      Val Boyd: [sighing mid-sentence] And then he'd take her in his arms, and rain kisses on her upturned face, and they'd just... love each other to death right there at the front door.

    • Créditos curiosos
      introducing MERRIE SPAETH as "Gil" TIPPY WALKER as "Val"
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Hollywood: The Gift of Laughter (1982)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Henry Orient Concerto
      Music by Ken Lauber (as Kenneth Lauber)

      Conducted and orchestrated by Ken Lauber (uncredited)

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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 25 de agosto de 1966 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Italiano
      • Francés
    • También se conoce como
      • The World of Henry Orient
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • The Brearly School, 610 E. 83rd Street, Nueva York, Nueva York, Estados Unidos(School bus drop-off at end of opening credits)
    • Productora
      • Pan Arts
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 46 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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