Agrega una trama en tu idiomaEvan Bonner is an army deserter who returns home to deal with the fallout of his actions. He becomes distracted when he meets attractive model Diedre McCluskey, thinking he's fallen in love.Evan Bonner is an army deserter who returns home to deal with the fallout of his actions. He becomes distracted when he meets attractive model Diedre McCluskey, thinking he's fallen in love.Evan Bonner is an army deserter who returns home to deal with the fallout of his actions. He becomes distracted when he meets attractive model Diedre McCluskey, thinking he's fallen in love.
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KTLA would play this once a year in the late 70's early 80's. Nice little film of two crossed people meeting each other at the wrong time in their lives and making 36 hours count. Certain things about Fondas character dont completely translate but its competently acted and better than i expected.
On the train from Marrakech to Casablanca, a Vogue model (Lindsay Wagner, in her film debut) meets an Army deserter from Vietnam (Peter Fonda) who is tired of running and is ready to turn himself into the US Embassy. In Paris, the two meet up again and she proposes that he stay with her in Europe rather than risk a five-year jail sentence. Muted love affair with conversation that takes a liberal stance on the government (corrupt) and the war (stupid and useless), yet is also cynical about peace rallies back home (where celebrities show up just to show off!). Rather a dispassionate boy-meets-girl story, that is until the lovemaking begins and David Shire's flowery-romantic music swells up in the background. "Two People" is of absolutely no importance, so one wonders why a veteran director like Robert Wise would waste his time on it or why a former rebel like Fonda would choose to star in it. *1/2 from ****
Peter Fonda is a deserter from Vietnam who has been hiding in Marrakesh. Lindsay Wagner is a fashion model who's in Marrakesh on a photo shoot. They meet on a train heading back to the US via Paris and fall in love. The catch is that Fonda is returning to the US because he's turned himself in.
This is not a bad idea for a film. In the early 70's it must have seemed like "Love Story" with a healthy dose of hip radical politics, so you can see what drew Robert Wise to it. It's a pretty bad film though, mainly because the main performances are not very good and the script is awful.
Fonda is an appealing screen presence, but he's a pretty shallow actor and he's playing a character that needs depth of feeling that he just can't provide. He's supposed to be full of regret and uncertainty about both what he's done in Vietnam and his decision to desert ... so much so that his decision to turn himself in makes some sense. Fonda is so cool and self-assured that none of this really registers, and you can't really accept the idea that he's about to go to prison for years. Wagner, in her film debut, has nothing to play off and is let down by both Fonda and the screenplay.
Boy is this screenplay bad. None of the dialogue feels like it's uttered by actual people.
Estelle Parsons is along for the ride as Wagner's travelling companion. She has very little to do.
Other than Wagner having a topless scene (which must be rare, right?) and being the only film where I've seen someone try to by marijuana from a man who's crying, the real draw here is seeing how not to make "Before Sunrise".
This is not a bad idea for a film. In the early 70's it must have seemed like "Love Story" with a healthy dose of hip radical politics, so you can see what drew Robert Wise to it. It's a pretty bad film though, mainly because the main performances are not very good and the script is awful.
Fonda is an appealing screen presence, but he's a pretty shallow actor and he's playing a character that needs depth of feeling that he just can't provide. He's supposed to be full of regret and uncertainty about both what he's done in Vietnam and his decision to desert ... so much so that his decision to turn himself in makes some sense. Fonda is so cool and self-assured that none of this really registers, and you can't really accept the idea that he's about to go to prison for years. Wagner, in her film debut, has nothing to play off and is let down by both Fonda and the screenplay.
Boy is this screenplay bad. None of the dialogue feels like it's uttered by actual people.
Estelle Parsons is along for the ride as Wagner's travelling companion. She has very little to do.
Other than Wagner having a topless scene (which must be rare, right?) and being the only film where I've seen someone try to by marijuana from a man who's crying, the real draw here is seeing how not to make "Before Sunrise".
Evan Bonner (Peter Fonda) is a deserter from the Vietnam war; he is on his way back to America to give himself up when he meets Deirdre McCluskey (Lindsay Wagner) a beautiful if petulant model. The two make an unlikely couple, but once in France the magic of Paris works its charm and these two vulnerable people finally find each other.
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- TriviaLindsay Wagner's movie debut.
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- How long is Two People?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 1,700,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 40 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Two People (1973) officially released in Canada in English?
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