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IMDbPro

El ángel de la muerte

Título original: Boom
  • 1968
  • Approved
  • 1h 53min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.5/10
1.9 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor in El ángel de la muerte (1968)
Official Trailer
Reproducir trailer2:27
2 videos
99+ fotos
DramaThriller

Explora el encuentro entre una mujer que lo tiene todo, incluido el vacío, y un poeta sin dinero que no tiene nada excepto la capacidad de llenar las necesidades de una mujer rica.Explora el encuentro entre una mujer que lo tiene todo, incluido el vacío, y un poeta sin dinero que no tiene nada excepto la capacidad de llenar las necesidades de una mujer rica.Explora el encuentro entre una mujer que lo tiene todo, incluido el vacío, y un poeta sin dinero que no tiene nada excepto la capacidad de llenar las necesidades de una mujer rica.

  • Dirección
    • Joseph Losey
  • Guionista
    • Tennessee Williams
  • Elenco
    • Elizabeth Taylor
    • Richard Burton
    • Noël Coward
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    5.5/10
    1.9 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Joseph Losey
    • Guionista
      • Tennessee Williams
    • Elenco
      • Elizabeth Taylor
      • Richard Burton
      • Noël Coward
    • 41Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 36Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 nominación en total

    Videos2

    Boom!
    Trailer 2:27
    Boom!
    Boom!
    Clip 2:42
    Boom!
    Boom!
    Clip 2:42
    Boom!

    Fotos103

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    Elenco principal9

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    Elizabeth Taylor
    Elizabeth Taylor
    • Flora Goforth
    Richard Burton
    Richard Burton
    • Chris Flanders
    Noël Coward
    Noël Coward
    • The Witch of Capri
    Joanna Shimkus
    Joanna Shimkus
    • Miss Black
    Michael Dunn
    Michael Dunn
    • Rudi
    Romolo Valli
    Romolo Valli
    • Doctor Luilo
    Fernando Piazza
    • Etti
    Veronica Wells
    • Simonetta
    Howard Taylor
    • Journalist
    • Dirección
      • Joseph Losey
    • Guionista
      • Tennessee Williams
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios41

    5.51.8K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7dglink

    Slow Artsy Film with Outstanding Taylor Performance

    Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, and Noel Coward in a Joseph Losey film from a screenplay by Tennessee Williams with music by John Barry and cinematography by Douglas Slocombe. These credits alone should promise an award-caliber prestige film, but, unfortunately, the production of "Boom" was flawed from the beginning, and arguably one of Elizabeth Taylor's finest late-career performances was buried when the film bombed. The foundation of a film is its screenplay, and, based on one of Williams's lesser known, lesser quality plays, "The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore," the film is slow, often tedious, difficult to fully comprehend, and hard to sit through. Taylor and Burton were fresh from career highs with "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" and "The Taming of the Shrew," and their decision to appear in such an uncommercial endeavor is mystifying. "Boom" was among the first of these missteps that led to the couple's demise at the box office.

    Flora "Sissy" Goforth is a lonely woman of immense wealth, who reigns supreme over her servants and a nurse upon a rocky Italian island; evidently quite ill, Sissy is demanding and often cruel to those around her. Enter Chris Flanders, a some-time poet with an address book whose pages list the names of deceased women; also known as the "Angel of Death," Flanders washes up on the shores of Sissy's island. For some bitchy spice, Flora's flamboyant friend, the Witch of Capri, arrives and is carried on the shoulders of a muscular servant up to the villa. Taylor is much too beautiful, young, and vibrant to be a dying recluse, although she is excellent in a part that echoes her Oscar-winning Martha. Burton is always worth watching, and his magnificent voice gives some of Williams's lines the poetic justice they deserve. Coward is Coward and is amusing in his few scenes.

    The visuals are often striking; the Sardinian scenery is magnificent; and a white Mediterranean villa, perched atop a cliff, and filled with striking art works, makes a suitable backdrop for the actors who are garbed in outlandish Japanese-inspired costumes. However, Barry's music is intrusive and inappropriate at times, and, unfortunately, Joseph Losey's direction is self-consciously arty, and he uses much symbolism, even beyond Williams's obvious Goforth, Angel of Death, and Witch of Capri monikers. Taylor is always dressed in white, while Burton is wrapped in a black samurai kimono and often carries a sword. Burton references the film's title several times, which is taken from the boom of the waves against the rocks below the villa. "Boom" is generally slow, pretentious, ponderous, talky, and difficult to recommend to any non-fans of Taylor, Burton, or Williams. However, for Taylor-Burton devotees, the film is essential viewing, and they will not be disappointed by Taylor's performance or Burton's reading of William's lines.
    10antonio-21

    Failed Art? Yes. Camp Masterpiece? YES! YES! YES!

    Well, this is certainly SOME kind of classic!

    I recently saw this film as it was meant to be seen, in a theater with a packed audience of Gay men and Lesbians (and don't panic, some token Heteros too)! This was at the 2nd Annual Provincetown Film Festival, and this evening was hosted by John Waters. (If I need to explain who he is, then forget EVER seeing this movie)

    John Waters informed us that this was the movie that he shows to friends of his as his "litmus" test, if they don't enjoy it, he claims to never speak to them again! I'm inclined to agree.

    If you're a fan of camp, SEE THIS FILM! If you're a fan of Elizabeth Taylor, SEE THIS FILM! If you're a fan of Joanna Shimkus, well I don't know what to say then, except congratulations! You're the first one! (although, she is great in this movie)

    What more can you say about a film that has Elizabeth Taylor decked out in Kabuki-Vegas drag holding an intimate bitchy dinner party with an aged and drunken Noel Coward (in a role written for a woman, and first offered to Katharine Hepburn!) To watch Miss Taylor in action, is to behold a true screen legend fully embrace her diva acting self. She lets rip with such abandon and power, she manages to wipe everybody else off the screen, including HERSELF!

    While Richard Burton, Noel Coward, Joanna Shimkus, and Michael Dunn (of Ship of Fools and Wild Wild West[tv version, please!] fame) manage to deliver the goods in this Tennessee Williams free for all, it is the incredible Miss Taylor who grounds this late 60's arthouse flop, and manages to transcend it's failing qualities, to make it a screen orgy of bad taste and over the top drama!

    Try and keep a straight face during Miss Taylor's prolonged coughing fit on the balcony! I thought I was going to be sick just watching her hack up her lungs. Watch Richard Burton somnambulistically maneuver his way through a role played on stage by Tab Hunter! (I can't help but think, that this film might have actually been pulled off as a straight drama with the original casting of Simone Signoret and Sean Connery!)

    We lovers of camp and all things over the top should revel in this failed artistic masterpiece!

    This film gets a 10 Star rating as Camp, and a 4 Star rating as anything else!

    endnote: Where is the DVD/Video release of this film????!!!!!!
    10dargossett

    The road of excess

    How can a film be a 10 and a 1 at the same time? As serious art, Boom is a bomb. Yet, as a testimony, a very camp testimony, to the lives of Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Noel Coward, and Tennessee Williams, it is literally hysterical. As the Age of Aquarius was dawning on America, what were these pioneers of love, lust, decadence, and existential meaning to do? What is there to say, to do, to perform, two years after Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? 1968. the play Hair is delighting Broadway. The hippies have overtaken the Beats. Where can the stars go? To the Old World, Europe, Italy, Capris... The movie reveals their state of mind: preoccupation with death, the emptiness of wealth, sex, and luxury. As we watch this undeniably amusing costume melodrama, we can't help wondering just what Taylor and Burton's "real" life there in Sardinia must have been like. Did they throw tantrums when their whims went unsatisfied, or was it the opposite? I'll have to leave the answer to the biographers. But this film makes it impossible not to imagine them all there in Italy, trying with desperation NOT to be what they were portraying. That is what makes the film intriguing.
    6Bunuel1976

    BOOM (Joseph Losey, 1968) **1/2

    Joseph Losey would have turned 100 on 14 January 2009 had he lived and it seems appropriate that I should commemorate that anniversary a day late and with this very film because: a) it deals with a much-married dying woman looking back on her life and b) it misses the mark of being a good movie. Actually, for most people, it does much more than the latter and is an unmitigated disaster, a serious blot on the careers of a handful of talented people: director Losey, playwright-screenwriter Tennessee Williams (who boldly claimed this was the best film ever to be made out of his own plays!) and lead actors Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. On the other hand, the ones who generally escaped the critical trashing with their dignity intact were cinematographer Douglas Slocombe (shooting in the lovely Mediterranean island of Sardinia), composer John Barry (who provides a terrific and playfully eclectic score) and supporting players Noel Coward (making a droll appearance as the Witch of Capri) and Joanna Shimkus (as Taylor's long-suffering secretary). For one thing, the Burtons were both miscast, with her being far too young – she was just 36 at the time – and him too old for their roles (Tallulah Bankhead and Tab Hunter, respectively, had originally played those parts in the equally catastrophic stage version)! The fact that BOOM is one of eccentric film-maker John Waters' all-time favorites is a clear sign that the movie's reputation (bad or cult, depending which side of the fence one happens to be on) rests squarely on its high camp quotient: Taylor's constantly shrill, foul-mouthed delivery (including the occasional line in massacred Italian) – which, again, can be downright annoying or mildly amusing – and her parading in an incredible Kabuki costume to the strains of live sitars; "Angel of Death" Burton's walking around (hair blowing in the wind) in a samurai warrior's attire and brandishing the proverbial sword on the ledge of Taylor's clifftop villa; diminutive bodyguard Michael Dunn unleashing his pack of wild dogs on intruder Burton, etc. In the long run, however, what really saves the film for me – apart from those assets already mentioned at the top – is Losey's mise-en-scene which, from the very first shot to the last, is remarkably cinematic and inventive – in spite of his allegedly hitting the bottle quite hard during production (which did not prevent either of the Burtons from working for him once more, albeit separately)!
    federovsky

    The sound of a film imploding

    Adaptated by Tennessee Williams from "The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore", he obviously pulled in a few of his old friends to get this done. It's a gender-bending allegory with Liz Taylor as rich, dying Sissy Goforth, a bad-tempered recluse in her remarkable clifftop Mediterranean villa. Along comes Dick Burton, a freeloader-cum-Grim Reaper figure who sees it as his mission to help ladies in extremis.

    Neither of them are right for their roles, but that only adds a certain fascination - a totally earnest rendition would be dull and pretentious. Taylor lets rip here and it's a riot. The highlight is her dinner with Noel Coward playing a role originally meant for a woman. She is wearing an utterly outrageous kabuki outfit while Coward camps it up like there's no tomorrow, which is no doubt the film's theme.

    The script is full of naff psychology, Taylor is shrill and unpleasant, Burton looks like he's on vacation. With this set-up, Losey hasn't the slightest chance of delivering his usual sophisticated, simmering subtlety, and maybe that was fortuitous - this is so godawful it's brilliant.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      Tennessee Williams stated that this was the best movie version of any of his plays that was ever produced. The rest of the world did not seem to agree, for the monumentally expensive production bombed at the box office.
    • Errores
      Near the beginning of the film, when Taylor is lying on the bed, she pushes a button on the cassette player at her bedside which introduces John Barry's soundtrack music. However, the button she pushes is "rewind", not "play".
    • Citas

      Flora 'Sissy' Goforth: Did somebody tell you I was dying this summer? Did somebody tip you off that Sissy Goforth was about to go forth this summer?

      Chris Flanders: Yes. That's why I came.

      Flora 'Sissy' Goforth: Well, well. I've escorted six husbands to the eternal threshold and come back alone without them. Now it's my turn. I've no choice but to do it, but I want to do it alone. I don't want to be escorted. I want to go forth alone. And you... you counted on touching my heart because you knew I was dying. Well, you miscalculated with this one. The milk train doesn't stop here anymore.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Adicta al sexo (2004)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Hideaway
      Music by John Dankworth

      Lyrics by Don Black

      Performed by Georgie Fame

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is Boom!?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 19 de diciembre de 1968 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Italiano
    • También se conoce como
      • Boom!
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Capo Caccia, Sardinia, Italia
    • Productoras
      • World Film Services
      • Moon Lake
      • John Heyman Productions
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 10,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 413
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 53 minutos
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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