Tras la muerte de un anciano rico en un sospechoso accidente automovilístico en Acapulco, México, su viuda quiere que su compañía de seguros pague 5 millones de dólares. El investigador Jake... Leer todoTras la muerte de un anciano rico en un sospechoso accidente automovilístico en Acapulco, México, su viuda quiere que su compañía de seguros pague 5 millones de dólares. El investigador Jake Decker y la modelo Ellie vienen a comprobarlo.Tras la muerte de un anciano rico en un sospechoso accidente automovilístico en Acapulco, México, su viuda quiere que su compañía de seguros pague 5 millones de dólares. El investigador Jake Decker y la modelo Ellie vienen a comprobarlo.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Farrah Fawcett
- Ellie Morgan
- (as Farrah Fawcett-Majors)
Joanna Rush
- Mamie
- (as Joanna Lehmann)
Alex Sharp
- Kunz
- (as Alex Sharpe)
Delroy White
- Dr. Kellogg
- (as Deloy White)
Opiniones destacadas
It's not "Citizen Cane" nor is it suppose to be, but I will always love this movie. Definitely makes me think of the late 70s, with it's visuals and "neat-o" soundtrack with cool songs by Wings and 10cc. I seen it on Showtime in about 1981 and have loved it ever since. I also remember that I just about flipped when it played "With a little luck" at the end. Charles Grodin is hilarious and Farrah is stunning. Joan Collins is kind of a hot cougar as well, if you are into horny old winos, which I must be. It'd make a great triple feature of late 70s light entertainment and music with "Xanadu" and "FM". Perfect movie to watch on an air conditioned hot summer day.
In 1979's strangely toned "Sunburn" insurance investigator Charles Grodin hires Farrah Fawcett to pose as his wife while he probes a dodgy death in Acapulco. There they're drawn into a bland plot involving blackmail & the mob with the likes of Joan Collins, Art Carney & Seymour Cassel. Director Richard C Sarafian and writers John Daly, Stephen Oliver & James Booth may have thought they had the best of both the mystery thriller & jaunty rom-com genres - but ended up falling between the two as neither funny nor tense: just pretty lame & pointless. What it DOES having going for it in retrospect though is its nostalgic Seventies feel - but that's not enough. Disappointing fare.
This is one of my all time favorites. For pure entertainment value. I usually go for much more thought provoking films, but this one was fun. I saw it originally on cable many years ago. I still hear the 10cc song "I don't want to lose you. Dadda dadda da dah" and think of putting lotion on Farrah's back side while she lies with that bed sheet seductively covering her!(Which was much more enticing than actually seeing a nude scene.) With the dry comedy of Grodin, and his way of making you believe it could be you and the always likeable Art Carney I just wish I could've been there in Mexico with them. I almost became a Insurance Investigator! I wish I could find this on video. Stranded on an island, this would be one of my 5 films to keep.
A forgettable easygoing romp in the rich tourist section of Mexico, this movie was hamstrung from the beginning with its insurance scam plot - not an exciting prospect. Grodin is the maverick investigator whom the head of the insurance company wants on the job even though he caused them some problems in the past. Grodin plays this sort of slack jawed throughout, to the point of annoyance. Farrah joins up as his make believe wife. This was Farrah in her prime, just post the silly Angels TV show and before she got into serious actress mode. It's her middle film in the 'S' trio - all of which bombed. She & Grodin are incompatible, in more ways than one, and the fact she does end up in bed with him feeds the fantasies of many a middle-aged males. Art Carney's a private eye employed by Grodin; he brings in the usual feisty old man humor. Joan Collins shows up as a rich, horny wife. A lot of the scenes are plain stupid, such as Grodin dressing up in a night prowler outfit for no reason, other than to appear stupid. But, since all of this takes place in hot weather, Farrah usually wears something skimpy. There's also a fairly exciting car chase in the last third, including a run-in with a bull - some of those shots looked very realistic, to the detriment of the bull.
Based on Stanley Ellin's not-bad mystery novel "The Bind", "Sunburn" became Farrah Fawcett's second attempt to resurrect her TV golden-touch at the movies (it drove her back to television after one more try, the sci-fi bomb "Saturn 3"). It has amusing fashions and disco music, a pleasant ambiance at the outset, lots of sand and sunshine, but a script that becomes murky early on. There are too many sub-plots and incidental characters here (such as Joan Collins in an indescribable bit). The central relationship between insurance investigator Charles Grodin and model Fawcett (posing as his wife) is curious but unsatisfying, and Art Carney has very little to do as a gumshoe. Not a disaster by any means, and '70s aficionados will soak up the clichés, but it's easy to see why "Sunburn" never attained much of a following: it's a commercial for Acapulco--not a movie. * from ****
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis was the final production that Farrah Fawcett was billed as Farrah Fawcett-Majors prior to her separation and divorce from Lee Majors. Before this marriage, earlier in her career, she had previously been billed as Farrah Fawcett.
- ErroresMan posing as police officer is beside the driver's door when the car is stopped; when vehicle accelerates, they hit him.'
- Bandas sonorasWith a Little Luck
Written by Paul McCartney (uncredited)
Performed by Paul McCartney and Wings (as Wings)
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- How long is Sunburn?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 2,410,776
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 2,410,776
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