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Pequeño gran hombre

Título original: Little Big Man
  • 1970
  • PG-13
  • 2h 19min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.5/10
39 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Dustin Hoffman in Pequeño gran hombre (1970)
Adventure EpicEpicTragedyWestern EpicAdventureDramaWestern

Jack Crabb, recordando su extrema vejez, cuenta que su vida fue criado por nativos americanos y luchando con el general Custer.Jack Crabb, recordando su extrema vejez, cuenta que su vida fue criado por nativos americanos y luchando con el general Custer.Jack Crabb, recordando su extrema vejez, cuenta que su vida fue criado por nativos americanos y luchando con el general Custer.

  • Dirección
    • Arthur Penn
  • Guionistas
    • Thomas Berger
    • Calder Willingham
  • Elenco
    • Dustin Hoffman
    • Faye Dunaway
    • Chief Dan George
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.5/10
    39 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Arthur Penn
    • Guionistas
      • Thomas Berger
      • Calder Willingham
    • Elenco
      • Dustin Hoffman
      • Faye Dunaway
      • Chief Dan George
    • 153Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 60Opiniones de los críticos
    • 63Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado a 1 premio Óscar
      • 5 premios ganados y 11 nominaciones en total

    Fotos157

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    Elenco principal46

    Editar
    Dustin Hoffman
    Dustin Hoffman
    • Jack Crabb
    Faye Dunaway
    Faye Dunaway
    • Mrs. Pendrake
    Chief Dan George
    Chief Dan George
    • Old Lodge Skins
    Martin Balsam
    Martin Balsam
    • Mr. Merriweather
    Richard Mulligan
    Richard Mulligan
    • General Custer
    Jeff Corey
    Jeff Corey
    • Wild Bill Hickok
    Aimee Eccles
    Aimee Eccles
    • Sunshine
    • (as Amy Eccles)
    Kelly Jean Peters
    Kelly Jean Peters
    • Olga
    Carole Androsky
    • Caroline
    • (as Carol Androsky)
    Robert Little Star
    • Little Horse
    Cal Bellini
    Cal Bellini
    • Younger Bear
    Ruben Moreno
    • Shadow That Comes in Sight
    Steve Shemayne
    • Burns Red in the Sun
    William Hickey
    William Hickey
    • Historian
    James Anderson
    James Anderson
    • Sergeant
    Jesse Vint
    • Lieutenant
    • (as Jess Vint)
    Alan Oppenheimer
    Alan Oppenheimer
    • Major
    Thayer David
    Thayer David
    • Rev. Pendrake
    • Dirección
      • Arthur Penn
    • Guionistas
      • Thomas Berger
      • Calder Willingham
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios153

    7.539.2K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    6laursene

    Too cartoonish

    Little Big Man is a fun, picaresque western with some fine visual sequences and plenty of good acting. But it's a major step down from the book, one of the finest American novels of the '60s. The difference is in the handling of the characters. The movie presents Custer, Wild Bill Hickok, Rev. Pendergast and his wife, the patent medicine seller, and the rest as comic "turns," not as full-fledged people in their own right. Maybe this is how Penn, with his theatrical background, instinctively saw the material, and it gives the movie too much of a Blazing Saddles feel. The script (or perhaps what Penn uses of it) boils much of the dialog down into one-liners (doubtless, the task of condensing such a sprawling story into a movie of less than three hours didn't help). Even Chief Dan George, as Old Lodge Skins, the best developed character here, often comes across as merely a lovable schlemiel. Much of it's funny, but it doesn't cut very deep.

    The book is more human, giving each character Jack encounters three dimensions and avoiding the trap of rendering any of them either all good or all bad. The moment in Penn's film that best evoke the book is the scene where Custer catches Jack approaching to kill him and instead of killing his stalker, lets him go. Throughout this wonderful novel, characters do unexpected things that seem at first to be totally out of character, and thus serve to remind us of the complexity of human beings. As someone suggests here, the film may intend to say something about the random, unpredictable nature of the universe. The novel does something a lot more difficult and down-to-earth: It reminds us that it takes a lifetime to know even a few of our fellow humans. And especially for Jack, who has to navigate two distinct cultures.

    So if you liked the movie, by all means read the book. You'll finish it loving this tall tale way more.
    7secondtake

    Lightly funny, wry, and with doses of American tragedy...an odd, long, decent film

    Little Big Man (1970)

    Well, this was destined to be a headliner--Arthur Penn directing (after "Bonnie and Clyde") and Dustin Hoffman (after "The Graduate" and "Midnight Cowboy"). And it's a comedy in the wackiest way. Hoffman is a survivor from Little Big Horn (Custer's Last Stand) and this is an invented life up to that point, told from memory to man with a tape recorder at the age of 123.

    And the old (old!) Hoffman is pretty terrific, mostly in the narration, but including some pretty caked on make-up, too. Most of the movie is a young Hoffman as both Indian and White Man (alternating, depending on how he gets miraculously saved from one disaster after another). It's a farce, yes, but there are overtones of tragedy throughout (the annihilation of a race can only be so funny for so long) and there are some truly violent scenes, mostly of Indians being slaughtered by the Army.

    It might help to know this is a metaphor of sorts about the brutality of the Army in Vietnam, which was raging at the time. It does make it all less frivolous. But it's also just fine as a crazy retelling of the last great famous Indian War, and the events (more or less) leading up to it. Hoffman is terrific in his usual way, and the support around him funny, especially the old Indian Chief, played by Chief Dan George. The two other big stars appear only briefly, Faye Dunaway in a couple scenes, and Martin Balsam in one. It's really Hoffman's film, and Penn's, too, with a grand and complex range of scenes inside and out, night and day, city and wide open country.

    It didn't strike me as a brilliant film, or even as funny as it could have been, but it's endlessly engaging and there are some witty and funny moments sprinkled all through. It is long, and I might not call it slow even though it feels like it drags here and there, for sure.
    8thinker1691

    " I Didn't Mean to Kill him, . . . just, distract him a little " "

    For many years in Hollywood, Native Americans were not allowed to portray themselves in films. One director commented, they neither know how to play Indians, nor can they act. Once this absurd idea was quashed and Native Indians were allowed to portray their own people, not only was the myth crushed, but some of them received the highest tributes the film industry could honor them with. Such was the case with this unusual story which was touted as the most forgotten hero of the southwest. Jack Crabb (Dustin Hoffman) plays a white boy who landed smack dab in the emerging historical west at the start of the colonization period. Through his own fanciful narrative, we journey along as he survives an Indian massacre, adopted into the native culture, then re-acculturated into the White world near emerging townships, and then through several high frontier adventures which culminates with, The Battle of The Little Big Horn. Chief Dan George is Old Lodge Skins a native American who made himself memorable to American Audiences plays tutor and mentor to Jack Krabb. Faye Dunaway plays Mrs. Louise Pendrake who is both step-mother and temptress to the maturing Krabb. Martin Balsam plays Mr. Merriweather who literally goes to pieces throughout the film. Jeff Corey befriends Crabb as Wild Bill Hickok. Finally there is Richard Mulligan who plays Gen. George Armstrong Custer, both as a serious military man and then as a lunatic officer. The entire film is destined for classic status, depending on history's eventual reflection of modern Native Americans. ****
    8TYLERdurden74

    Cult Movies 53

    53. LITTLE BIG MAN (western, 1970) From his Hospital bedside 121-year old Jack Crabb (Dustin Hoffman) recounts his exploits to a reporter: Captured by Cheyenne Indians at the age of 10 he's integrated into their 'alien' society and made the son of Indian 'Old Lodge Skies' (Chief Dan George). Proving his courage despite his short stature he's given the name of 'Little Big Man'. During the Indian Wars Jack is returned to white society. There he works as a shopkeeper, gunfighter, and finally used as an Indian Scout. The latter landing him under the command of General Custer (Richard Mulligan), who's putting together an army to fight the Indians at Little Big Horn.

    Critique: Extremely enjoyable, epic western directed by Arthur Penn. Praised for its depiction of Native Americans, it has biting satirical (and political) touches, saddled with farcical historical accounts of the Indian Wars. The once controversial aspects were meant to represent the ideologies of the time, but it has not lost any of its grit.

    What I like the most is its unique interpretation of Indians. Never in the long cycles of American westerns were Indians presented as almost alien, coming across as a mythical people whose ignorance of political maneuvers and technology proved their downfall. A very bitter and sad farewell swansong to what war and genocide has taken away.

    Atypical cast delivers strong passages but you won't forget the 2-standout roles of General Custer as portrayed by the maniacal Richard Mulligan and 'Old Lodge Skies' played by the philosophical Chief Dan George.

    QUOTES: Old Lodge Skies: "There is an endless supply of white men. But there has always been a limited number of 'human beings'. We won today, we won't win tomorrow."
    jay4stein79-1

    Excellent Western

    My parents purchased a VHS copy of Little Big Man for me when I was 14 and, because it was a western, I didn't touch it for two years, in spite of their belief in its greatness. When I finally watched the film, I was astounded to find a film that was funny, angry, violent, and moving simultaneously. It turned out that my parents were, in fact, correct. Little Big Man was great.

    I've gone back to the movie several times since that first viewing and it continues to entertain and affect; for me, a film that has emotional resonance well after the first viewing is rare and, though it does not always point to greatness, it often does.

    Every element of the film is fantastic. The acting, by Hoffman and Dan George in particular, is amazing, as is Penn's direction. The story picaresque and always fascinating. There simply is no weak component to this movie.

    I must also commend the film as a literary adaptation. I am not the most supportive critic of the Thomas Berger novel upon which the film is based. I find its thematics confused; it cannot decide whether or not it wants to revise western mythology or further it and, in that way, it fails for me. Calder Willingham's adaptation removes the ambivalence inherent in the novel and thereby writes one of the first and greatest revisionist Hollywood Westerns.

    Little Big Man is a great movie, as I have said, and it deserves much more notoriety than it receives. This is, I fear, a film that too few people of my generation know. If you haven't seen it, I highly recommend it as an excellent and entertaining way to spend a couple of hours.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      The role of Old Lodge Skins was initially offered to Marlon Brando, who turned it down. Other sources claim Arthur Penn's first choice for the role was Sir Laurence Olivier. When that didn't work out, Richard Boone was slated for the role. When Boone backed out at the last minute, Chief Dan George was given the part and earned an Oscar nomination.
    • Errores
      The wires forcing a horse to fall are visible in the final battle scene, just before Custer exclaims "Fools! They're shooting their own horses!"
    • Citas

      Jack Crabb: Do you hate them? Do you hate the White man now?

      Old Lodge Skins: Do you see this fine thing? Do you admire the humanity of it? Because the human beings, my son, they believe everything is alive. Not only man and animals. But also water, earth, stone. And also the things from them... like that hair. The man from whom this hair came, he's bald on the other side, because I now own his scalp! That is the way things are. But the white man, they believe EVERYTHING is dead. Stone, earth, animals. And people! Even their own people! If things keep trying to live, white man will rub them out. That is the difference.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Arthur Penn: The Director (1970)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Bringing In the Sheaves
      (1880) (uncredited)

      Music by George A. Minor (1880)

      Hymn by Knowles Shaw (1874)

      Sung a cappella by Faye Dunaway

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    Preguntas Frecuentes19

    • How long is Little Big Man?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 23 de febrero de 1972 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Little Big Man
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Little Bighorn River, Montana, Estados Unidos
    • Productoras
      • Cinema Center Films
      • Stockbridge-Hiller Productions
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 15,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 31,559,552
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 31,559,552
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      2 horas 19 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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