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IMDbPro

El terrón de azúcar

Título original: The Big Cube
  • 1968
  • M/PG
  • 1h 38min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
4.3/10
891
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Lana Turner, George Chakiris, Karin Mossberg, and Regina Torné in El terrón de azúcar (1968)
DramaMisterioThriller

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA former actress clashes with her wealthy and spoiled stepdaughter over their inheritance after the death of their protector.A former actress clashes with her wealthy and spoiled stepdaughter over their inheritance after the death of their protector.A former actress clashes with her wealthy and spoiled stepdaughter over their inheritance after the death of their protector.

  • Dirección
    • Tito Davison
  • Guionistas
    • William Douglas Lansford
    • Tito Davison
    • Edmundo Báez
  • Elenco
    • Lana Turner
    • George Chakiris
    • Richard Egan
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    4.3/10
    891
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Tito Davison
    • Guionistas
      • William Douglas Lansford
      • Tito Davison
      • Edmundo Báez
    • Elenco
      • Lana Turner
      • George Chakiris
      • Richard Egan
    • 45Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 27Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Big Cube
    Trailer 3:21
    The Big Cube

    Fotos51

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    Elenco principal33

    Editar
    Lana Turner
    Lana Turner
    • Adriana Roman
    George Chakiris
    George Chakiris
    • Johnny Allen
    Richard Egan
    Richard Egan
    • Frederick Lansdale
    Dan O'Herlihy
    Dan O'Herlihy
    • Charles Winthrop
    • (as Daniel O'Herlihy)
    Karin Mossberg
    Karin Mossberg
    • Lisa Winthrop
    Pamela Rodgers
    Pamela Rodgers
    • Bibi
    Carlos East
    Carlos East
    • Lalo
    Augusto Benedico
    Augusto Benedico
    • Dr. Lorenz
    Víctor Junco
    Víctor Junco
    • Delacroix
    • (as Victor Junco)
    Norma Herrera
    • Stella
    Pedro Galván
    • University Dean
    • (as Pedro Galvan)
    The Finks
    • The Finks
    Regina Torné
    Regina Torné
    • Queen Bee
    • (as Regina Torne)
    Ricardo Adalid
    • Justice of the Peace
    • (sin créditos)
    Carlos Agostí
    Carlos Agostí
    • Party guest
    • (sin créditos)
    Javier Batiz
    Javier Batiz
      Carolina Cortázar
      • Girl in the shower
      • (sin créditos)
      María Luisa Cortés
      • Guest wedding
      • (sin créditos)
      • Dirección
        • Tito Davison
      • Guionistas
        • William Douglas Lansford
        • Tito Davison
        • Edmundo Báez
      • Todo el elenco y el equipo
      • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

      Opiniones de usuarios45

      4.3891
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      Opiniones destacadas

      4blanche-2

      You need to have survived the '60s and Lana Turner to survive this movie

      Lana Turner on an acid trip - a bizarre thought, but this low-budget Mexican production, "The Big Cube," is about just that - you know, "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds," the "Sugar Shack" - LSD. And what a bizarre trip it is for all involved.

      Turner plays a great theater star, Adriana Roman, who retires to marry Charles Winthrop (Dan O'Herlihy) and comes up against his angry daughter Lisa (Karin Mossberg). No one explains why O'Herlihy's daughter has some sort of foreign accent. Everyone else is American. Anyway, Lisa falls for a sleaze drug dealer and soon to be ex-medical student (George Chakiris) who is after her money. When O'Herlihy dies in a boating accident, the Chakiris character hints to Lisa that they can hurry along the inheritance by - and this is really not clear - either driving Adriana nuts with LSD or using it to kill her. It falls to the playwright with whom Adriana has worked (Richard Egan) to rescue her from the clutches of these two connivers.

      The plot is beyond muddled. One day Lisa hates her stepmother, and then the next day they're best buddies. One day Adriana has an acid trip while in a car, and Lisa and her boyfriend take her to a cliff, presumably to throw her over, and Adriana gets away from them and doesn't die. The next day, Adriana goes on another acid trip and tries to throw herself out a window, and Lisa saves her. Why did she save her when she tried to kill her the day before? It's a mess.

      The movie is filled with psychedelic parties and horrible acting, particularly from Mossberg, Pamela Rodgers, Lisa's friend, and Carlos East, who plays an overly made-up artist named Lalo.

      Turner, approaching 50, does her "Portrait in Black," "Imitation of Life" acting number wearing some horrific wigs. With a simple upswept hairdo, those enormous blue eyes, and petite figure, she's quite beautiful and glamorous, though dressed like she's supposed to be 18; with her hair down, she's a way over the hill ingénue; and with those gargoyle wigs, she looks just plain awful. Her closeups are shot through linoleum. I hate that older beautiful classic film stars had so few alternatives that they turned to these trash movies, but many did.

      Campy though not on the camp level of a "Valley of the Dolls" or another Lana Turner film, "Portrait in Black" but some might find it fun. It was fun, but also a little sad for those who enjoyed Lana in "Slightly Dangerous," "Green Dolphin Street," and the Ross Hunter glossy melodramas of the '50s.
      3planktonrules

      Great if you enjoy watching a movie star's career crash and burn.

      This was made during an age when old-time Hollywood stars were destroying themselves in film and it would have been better if many had just retired instead of making god-awful films like Joan Crawford, Jennifer Jones and Lana Turner did late in their careers. BUT, these bad films are enjoyable, as they are so bad you can't help but enjoy them for their camp value.

      The film begins with Turner marrying a rich guy (Dan O'Herlihy). However she tries, Turner is not able to get the man's daughter (Karin Mossberg--who was an odd choice to play the daughter, as her command of English seemed rather poor) to accept her. However, Turner doesn't realize just how deep the step-daughter's resentment of her is. When the father dies in a boating accident and Turner is left in charge, Mossberg and her freaky boyfriend (George Chakiris) decide to drive the woman crazy--that way they can get their hands on all that money. So, combining LSD and recordings weird suggestions, they drive her towards the deep end. What happens next (other than lots of crazy psychedelics), you'll have to see for yourself. Just be prepared--it's embarrassing and amazingly silly.

      While there is some shock value (with all the boobies scattered throughout the film), the writing is just awful. Characters behave in insanely inconsistent ways and the ending is just dumb (you've GOT to see the play--it's amazingly dopey). A bad film but a strangely enjoyable one.
      4AlsExGal

      Not enough camp to make up for the tedium

      Lana Turner plays Adriana, a stage actress who retires to marry wealthy widower financier Charles (Dan O'Herlihy). Charles has an adult daughter Lisa (Karin Mossberg) who resents this and takes up with the hippie types. One of those, med student Johnny (George Chakiris), finds out that Lisa is rich, and takes Lisa for his girlfriend.

      Then Daddy dies, leaving Adriana as executor of the will. There's a clause about her having control over disbursement of the estate and her approval of any husband for Lisa (at least before she turns 25), and when Adriana doesn't approve of Lisa and Johnny getting married, Johnny comes up with a devious plan to drive Adriana crazy by spiking her sleeping pills with LSD! The basic plot, that of a parent not approving of a child's marriage, and the two young lovers deciding to do something about it, isn't a bad one. With the right script, as in Pretty Poison, it can be quite good.

      Unfortunately, The Big Cube doesn't have the right script. And it certainly doesn't have the right acting. Mossberg is wooden; O'Herlihy is wasted in a bit part; Adriana's playwright Lansdale (Richard Egan) plays the guy who just knows he knows more than all of the doctors; and then there's Lana, who has to play bad acid trip scenes. Oh my.

      There are also the other hippies, and the Travilla-designed gowns Lana has to wear. Parts of the movie wind up in "so bad it's good" territory, but too much of it winds up in the realm of just being tedious.
      5Scott_Mercer

      Douglas Sirk Meets Roger Corman at Churobusco

      Man, what a mess.

      Yes, another example of old-line Hollywood attempting to deal with the pop culture youthquake of the late 1960's, and failing miserably. This thing lurches back and forth between a Douglas Sirk like melodrama and an LSD exploitation film. Jarring changes in pacing and tone abound. Even the accompanying background score shifts disturbingly from string-drenched light orchestral goop to fuzz-laden rock and roll freak-out.

      Somehow I get the feeling that both Russ Meyer and Roger Ebert yanked a lot out of this film for their own delirious happening, "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls," released a couple years later. Fans of that craziness should be right at home here.

      Lana Turner overacts appropriately here, and I am not going to blame any of the actors here (except for Mossberg -- this was her last film credit, probably appropriately), but I will take the writer, director, and the entire crew to task for their dubious contributions.

      The fact that this film was actually produced in Mexico with a Mexican crew (though all American actors and shot in English) tells you a lot of the background. The set design has the over-the-top qualities of Mexican production design has in spades. The homes of the wealthy main characters are drenched in overdone luxurious furnishings. The freaky psychedelic club overflows with more colored lights and oil projection lamps than Bill Graham's storage room. The fashions worn are of the most extreme examples available at that time. These were clothes that might actually be worn by real people you might see on the street (maybe if you lived in Beverly Hills) but, just barely.

      The Swedish accent of lead actress Karin Mossberg also throws another off-kilter element into the highly unbelievable proceedings. Explained away by the fact that she's been in boarding school in Switzerland for years, the fact that she looks nothing like the actor portraying her father is another example of the ongoing cognitive dissonance that makes this film a laugh riot. (I would also like to point out the ironic fact, that she did not recognize LSD laced into a sugar cube when exposed to it, due to the fact that she had been sheltered all these years in a boarding school in Switzerland. This conveniently ignores the historical fact that LSD was discovered by Dr. Albert Hoffman in a laboratory...wait for it....wait for it....in Switzerland).

      To sum up, if you are ready for a ride into high camp, a film that screams to even the most submissive viewer, "Don't take me seriously," then you will be in a heaven of arranged artificiality. If you liked "The Trip," or "Skidoo" or "Beyond The Valley of the Dolls," and can appreciate all of them on the level of laughing at the fact that anyone could possibly take this kind of foolishness seriously, then you will have a riot of a time with this film.
      4alehua6

      No.. it can't be Lana Turner!

      My father in-law was channel surfing and accidentally found this movie playing on TV last night. I heard some of the lines and the weird 60's style music from another room and thought what the heck they were watching. It intrigued me enough to walk over to see what it was and my in-laws commented that it looked like a 'B' movie. At a glance, I thought the acting was really bad. But then I took a closer look at one of the actors and realized that it was Lana Turner! I couldn't believe my eyes. I noticed immediately how much older she looked. I love how every time the camera was on her face she looked mysteriously out of focus. Kind of like what they did with Sybil Shepard in Moonlighting. The lines were really awful and painful to hear but we all found ourselves compelled to keep watching it. Even my husband woke up from a snooze on the couch and started watching it. The daughter, Lisa sounded out of place with some French-like accent. The special psychedelic effects were really bad. I felt almost embarrassed for Ms Turner. I was also surprised there was nudity in this film.

      She shouldn't have done this movie. She looked really out of place as if she was still playing one of her roles in her older movies like Imitation of Life. Don't get me wrong, I loved Imitation of Life. That was a really wonderful movie. She was really great in it and her acting was right for that time. But this movie was not right for her type of acting. It looked really out of place.

      Also, the guy who played Johnny looked really familiar until I realized that it was 'Bernardo' from West Side Story! He seemed to play this sleazy character all too well.

      I do have to say that it was entertaining. But if you're a real big fan of Lana Turner, save yourself the agony if you want to remember her as she was in her heyday. Cheers!

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      Argumento

      Editar

      ¿Sabías que…?

      Editar
      • Trivia
        The Winthrops' car is a 1968 Chrysler Imperial Convertible; fewer than 500 of these rolled out of the factory that year, ranking it as one of the rarest and most rarely-seen passenger vehicles of that era.
      • Citas

        Julius the butler: Anything else you wish?

        Bibi: There might be, if you were 80 years younger, you sexy thing.

      • Conexiones
        Featured in Colorspace Vol. 1 (2010)
      • Bandas sonoras
        Lean on Me
        Music by Val Johns

        Lyrics by Howard Finkelstein

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      Preguntas Frecuentes14

      • How long is The Big Cube?Con tecnología de Alexa

      Detalles

      Editar
      • Fecha de lanzamiento
        • 23 de abril de 1970 (México)
      • Países de origen
        • México
        • Estados Unidos
      • Idiomas
        • Español
        • Inglés
      • También se conoce como
        • The Big Cube
      • Locaciones de filmación
        • Acapulco, Guerrero, México
      • Productoras
        • Francisco Diez Barroso
        • Producciones Anco
      • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

      Especificaciones técnicas

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      • Tiempo de ejecución
        • 1h 38min(98 min)
      • Relación de aspecto
        • 1.85 : 1

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