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IMDbPro

Harlow, la venus platinada

Título original: Harlow
  • 1965
  • Approved
  • 2h 5min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.5/10
1.1 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Leslie Nielsen, Martin Balsam, Red Buttons, Angela Lansbury, Carroll Baker, Mike Connors, Peter Lawford, and Raf Vallone in Harlow, la venus platinada (1965)
A screen adaption of the blistering best-seller which examines the story of platinum blonde bombshell Jean Harlow (Carroll Baker) who rose to fame in the reckless Hollywood of the 1930s.
Reproducir trailer3:26
1 video
90 fotos
BiografíaDocudramaDramaRomance

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA screen adaption of the blistering best-seller which examines the story of platinum blonde bombshell Jean Harlow (Carroll Baker) who rose to fame in the reckless Hollywood of the 1930s.A screen adaption of the blistering best-seller which examines the story of platinum blonde bombshell Jean Harlow (Carroll Baker) who rose to fame in the reckless Hollywood of the 1930s.A screen adaption of the blistering best-seller which examines the story of platinum blonde bombshell Jean Harlow (Carroll Baker) who rose to fame in the reckless Hollywood of the 1930s.

  • Dirección
    • Gordon Douglas
  • Guionistas
    • Irving Shulman
    • Arthur M. Landau
    • John Michael Hayes
  • Elenco
    • Carroll Baker
    • Red Buttons
    • Raf Vallone
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    5.5/10
    1.1 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Gordon Douglas
    • Guionistas
      • Irving Shulman
      • Arthur M. Landau
      • John Michael Hayes
    • Elenco
      • Carroll Baker
      • Red Buttons
      • Raf Vallone
    • 47Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 12Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 nominación en total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:26
    Trailer

    Fotos90

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    Elenco principal99+

    Editar
    Carroll Baker
    Carroll Baker
    • Jean Harlow
    Red Buttons
    Red Buttons
    • Arthur Landau
    Raf Vallone
    Raf Vallone
    • Marino Bello
    Angela Lansbury
    Angela Lansbury
    • Mama Jean Bello
    Peter Lawford
    Peter Lawford
    • Paul Bern
    Mike Connors
    Mike Connors
    • Jack Harrison
    • (as Michael Connors)
    Martin Balsam
    Martin Balsam
    • Everett Redman
    Leslie Nielsen
    Leslie Nielsen
    • Richard Manley
    Mary Murphy
    Mary Murphy
    • Sally Doane
    Hanna Landy
    Hanna Landy
    • Beatrice Landau
    Peter Hansen
    Peter Hansen
    • Hansen - Assistant Director
    Kipp Hamilton
    Kipp Hamilton
    • Marie Tanner
    Peter Leeds
    Peter Leeds
    • Parker
    Bobby Vinton
    Bobby Vinton
    • Theme Song Singer
    • (voz)
    David Ahdar
    • Fight Spectator
    • (sin créditos)
    John Alban
    John Alban
    • Bar Patron
    • (sin créditos)
    Leon Alton
    Leon Alton
    • Wedding Champagne Server
    • (sin créditos)
    Don Ames
    • Photographer
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Gordon Douglas
    • Guionistas
      • Irving Shulman
      • Arthur M. Landau
      • John Michael Hayes
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios47

    5.51.1K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    Coxer99

    Harlow

    An all around lurid film about sex symbol and superstar, Jean Harlow. There's no real point to the film, other than to present star Baker as a sex symbol herself. Her performance is nothing like her "Baby Doll," and everyone else is either bored with the material or reduced to overacting.
    BobLib

    Glossy trash, but trash

    It's big, it's expensive, it's colorful, and that's about it. The people behind "The Carpetbaggers," obviously hoping that lightning would strike twice, put together the high budget version of Irving Schulman's alleged biography of Jean Harlow the following year. This was a mistake. "Carpetbaggers" was trash, but it was enjoyable trash. "Harlow" doesn't even reach that level. Both the Schulman book and this movie were really more fiction than fact and many of those who knew and worked with Harlow, most of whom were still alive at the time, took serious issue with both. Then there are the performances. Even talented people like Angela Lansbury and Raf Vallone, as Jean's mother and stepfather, couldn't do much with this mess, and so compensated by going over the top. But for sheer miscasting, the real violator is not Carroll Baker's overripe Harlow, but Peter Lawford's Paul Bern. Here was the tall, handsome Lawford playing a man who was, by all accounts, short, bald, and, frankly, rather dumpy looking. It's a good thing everything and everybody else in this film other than Jean Harlow, her immediate family, and agent Arthur Landau, were cloaked under various pseudonyms. To have done otherwise would have left Joseph E. Levine and Paramount open to a world of trouble resulting from the libel suits alone.

    In short, watching "Harlow," you'll gain nothing and lose 130 minutes you'll never get back again. It really isn't worth it.
    4richardchatten

    Blonde Virgin

    It's hard to believe anybody involved in the production of this glossy nonsense ever actually saw any of the real Jean Harlow's movies (none of the titles of which have been used). And apart from Harlow herself (who was seven years younger when she died than Carroll Baker was when she made this movie) only Paul Bern - played by Peter Lawford, who looked nothing like him - hasn't had his name changed. (Having been dead for over thirty years he presumably had no living next of kin liable to sue.)

    But it's a sign of how standards have plummeted since this was made that while this was laughed off screens and died at the boxoffice in 1965, forty years later Scorsese's equally phoney 'The Aviator' (in which Harlow is fleetingly impersonated by a brassy-looking Gwen Stefani) won a fistful of Oscars.
    4bkoganbing

    The Prime of Ms. Jean Harlow

    Years ago I read Irving Schulman's book Harlow upon which this film is allegedly based. Other than Jean's family the only other real characters were her agent Arthur Landau and her second husband Paul Bern, played by Red Buttons and Peter Lawford respectively. All the people she worked with and for at MGM are eliminated from the story. In fact none of the titles of her films are mentioned.

    There's a reason that MGM didn't do the story of one of its legendary stars. Too much dirty linen would be exposed and why would Paramount who produced this want to get into litigation with a rival?

    Landau who was still alive and the source for much of Schulman's book is a character. The seminal event of Harlow's private life, her disastrous marriage to an impotent man was crucial. And the overbearing mother (Angela Lansbury) and gigolo husband (Raf Vallone) all had to be in the story. But any reasonably knowledgeable fan of Jean Harlow won't recognize her at all.

    Caroll Baker plays Harlow in this and the real Harlow was never as naive as Baker plays her. She was a pretty smart girl, sadly dominated by a first class stage mother and her husband who fed off her celebrity. She did in fact have three marriages, one before and after Paul Bern, so Jean was acquainted with the facts of life.

    I did rather enjoy Martin Balsam as the Louis B. Mayer like head of Majestic Pictures.. I think Balsam channeled Mayer pretty good in his performance.

    By accounts of her contemporaries, Jean Harlow was a warm, gracious, and generous soul. Rosalind Russell in her memoirs said she was a good friend and generous to her coworkers and they worked together in China Seas and Reckless. William Powell who worked with her in Libeled Lady and Reckless and was going to marry her said she was not at all like the films that used her life had her.

    Harlow had two tellings of her life in 1965, the second was a cheap production that starred Carol Lynley, but had a few more facts straight about her life. Jean's story ought to be remade now, too many people with vested interests were still alive in 1965
    cariart

    Big-Budget Harlow Flick Rings False...

    In 1965, in yet another classic example of "Copycat Movie Making" Hollywood produced not one, but two film biographies of Jean Harlow, the 30s 'Blond Bombshell' whose tragic, short life was reminiscent of Marilyn Monroe. One was a gaudy, ambitious big-budget production starring theater and film actress/sex symbol Carroll Baker; the other was a low-budget, experimental film starring television actress/sex 'kitten' Carol Lynley. Both films failed, both in capturing the essence of Jean Harlow, and as film biographies. While the Baker film, which I'll discuss here, had enough lurid titillation for three films, the sweet-natured girl who was loved by nearly everyone who knew her never makes an appearance.

    The 'real' Harlow, born Harlean Carpenter, in 1911, arrived in Hollywood at 16, with an over-ambitious mother and newlywed husband in tow. Divorcing her husband, she appeared in 'bit' parts until Howard Hughes 'discovered' her, and cast her "Hell's Angels", in 1930. She was a sensation, despite possessing a tinny, twangy speaking voice (which voice coaches would work on, throughout her career.) Eventually signing with MGM, she would become a sensation, frequently co-starring with Clark Gable, and her off-screen life would be even more sensational; her second marriage, to producer Paul Bern, would last only two months, and he would soon commit suicide, fueling rumors of his inability to 'perform' his duties as a husband; a third marriage, to cameraman Harold Rosson, soon followed, only to last eight months. She finally found happiness with actor William (The Thin Man) Powell, but before they could marry, she developed uremic poisoning and kidney failure, dying in 1937, at 26.

    Baker's "Harlow" dumped any references to Gable and Powell (Mike Connors, in an off-beat piece of casting, plays the character 'based' on Powell), created an agent who served as a confidant (Red Buttons), and showed a decline in Harlow's spirit, until she became as sleazy as some of the characters she occasionally played (which those who knew her best flatly denied; the sensational headlines did not 'cost' her a career, or her 'soul', they maintain). The film presents her finally 'cleaning up her act', but dying before she can share her new-found joy.

    Jean Harlow was an optimist, self-reliant and resilient, with a ready laugh, and an often too-generous nature. She never took her sex appeal too seriously, and preferred 'being comfortable' to creating illusions. She was adored by her co-workers, and the grief everyone felt at her death was genuine, not staged.

    If "Harlow" had gotten even a part of this right, it would have been a far better film!

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    • Trivia
      This film neglects to mention any of Jean Harlow's actual movies by name, or even that she was under contract to MGM (she works at the fictitious "Majestic Studios" in this account of her life). None of her real-life co-stars is named or depicted, nor are her unsuccessful first and third marriages mentioned. She is said in the film to have died from pneumonia, but, in actuality, it was uremic poisoning which killed her. The only characters given their real names are Harlow, her second husband Paul Bern, her agent (as well as the source of this movie), Arthur M. Landau, and her mother and stepfather. The fictitious studio boss "Everett Redman" is a fairly blatant caricature of Louis B. Mayer, who was also the obvious basis for the similar character the same actor, Martin Balsam, played the previous year in "The Carpetbaggers". This movie's claim that Paul Bern committed suicide because he was impotent has been widely questioned - some, such as his close friend, director Henry Hathaway, have suggested he was murdered by gangsters, and that the studio covered this up to avoid bad publicity. Another (highly feasible) explanation is that Bern was murdered by his former mistress Dorothy Millette, a woman with a history of mental illness who is known to have left Connecticut for Los Angeles two days before Bern's death, and who committed suicide two days after it.
    • Errores
      Although all of Jean's earlier movie roles depicted here were in silent films, primitive microphones are always seen on sets and in one scene a musical number is even being rehearsed.
    • Citas

      Jean Harlow: A bedroom with only one person in it is the loneliest room in the world.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Mad Men: The Forecast (2015)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Lonely Girl
      (theme from Harlow)

      Words by Jay Livingston and Ray Evans

      Music by Neal Hefti

      Sung by Bobby Vinton

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    Preguntas Frecuentes16

    • How long is Harlow?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 24 de febrero de 1966 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Harlow
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos
    • Productoras
      • Embassy Pictures
      • Prometheus Enterprises Inc.
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 2,500,000 (estimado)
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      2 horas 5 minutos
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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