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Lovesick

  • 1983
  • PG
  • 1h 35min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.2/10
996
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Elizabeth McGovern and Dudley Moore in Lovesick (1983)
A psychiatrist, who falls in love with a patient, is visited by the spirit of Sigmund Freud, who gives him advice on how to handle it.
Reproducir trailer2:08
1 video
22 fotos
ComediaFantasíaRomance

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA psychiatrist, who falls in love with a patient, is visited by the spirit of Sigmund Freud, who gives him advice on how to handle it.A psychiatrist, who falls in love with a patient, is visited by the spirit of Sigmund Freud, who gives him advice on how to handle it.A psychiatrist, who falls in love with a patient, is visited by the spirit of Sigmund Freud, who gives him advice on how to handle it.

  • Dirección
    • Marshall Brickman
  • Guionista
    • Marshall Brickman
  • Elenco
    • Dudley Moore
    • Elizabeth McGovern
    • Alec Guinness
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    5.2/10
    996
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Marshall Brickman
    • Guionista
      • Marshall Brickman
    • Elenco
      • Dudley Moore
      • Elizabeth McGovern
      • Alec Guinness
    • 12Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 9Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:08
    Trailer

    Fotos21

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    Elenco principal46

    Editar
    Dudley Moore
    Dudley Moore
    • Saul Benjamin
    Elizabeth McGovern
    Elizabeth McGovern
    • Chloe Allen
    Alec Guinness
    Alec Guinness
    • Sigmund Freud
    Christine Baranski
    Christine Baranski
    • Nymphomanic
    Gene Saks
    Gene Saks
    • Frantic Patient
    Renée Taylor
    Renée Taylor
    • Mrs. Mondragon
    Kent Broadhurst
    Kent Broadhurst
    • Gay Patient
    Suzanne Barrie
    • Jaffe's Wife
    Anna Berger
    Anna Berger
    • Analysis
    Otto Bettmann
    • Dr. Waxman
    Mark Blum
    Mark Blum
    • Intern Murphy
    Amalie Collier
    • Maid
    Anne DeSalvo
    Anne DeSalvo
    • Case Interviewer
    • (as Anne De Salvo)
    Selma Diamond
    Selma Diamond
    • Harriet Singer, M.D.
    Anne Kerry Ford
    Anne Kerry Ford
    • Katie Benjamin
    • (as Anne Kerry)
    Sol Frieder
    • Analyst
    Ann Gillespie
    Ann Gillespie
    • Actress
    Merwin Goldsmith
    Merwin Goldsmith
    • Analyst
    • Dirección
      • Marshall Brickman
    • Guionista
      • Marshall Brickman
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios12

    5.2996
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    Opiniones destacadas

    10vstoskus

    Putting Freud & censorship into perspective & questioning the value of stiff-as-rails licensing boards that stifle innovation & creativity

    Lovesick 1983. Dudley Moore, Eliz. McGovern. Movie makes mincemeat of Freud & his limited & negative theory of human motivation & potential. "Go Saul", I hear myself thinking throughout the film, feeling here is a therapist who dares stand up to the stiff board of censors who don't deserve to have access to mentally unstable people, for they appear more rigid & dogmatic than the deacons at a Southern Baptist convention. And they have the nerve to be talking about & threatening sanctions pertaining to professional ethics. Would you want to be governed by such repressed stiffs who purport to be a board of censors who can pull someone's license to practice a profession, yet see their distant grandfather Freud as still relevant, while most progressive thinkers in psychotherapy have all but laughed Freud off the shelf as ludicrous? The genius of the writer who says it through Cloe's words put Freud's ideas into perspective when she laughs him & Saul off the stage with her witty explanation of Freud's penis envy theory.

    A gem of a movie that should be part of every psychotherapist training program & anyone dealing with profession ethics. Indeed, the whole idea of licensure boards being composed solely of those within a given profession just reveals the fear of innovation & insecurity of those within those professions. It is abhorrent to the whole concept of the evolution of human thinking & knowledge to censure someone who challenges the wisdom of old, unproven, & in many cases disproven, methods of therapy, education, medicine, "justice", & many other so-called professions. Just look at the travesty of the medical profession that, hand-in-hand with the drug pushing pharmaceutical industry, prescribes aspirin for headaches rather than treating the ailment (tumor?) hiding within, or the repressive incarceration of youth, which some still dare call education, that is flooding the earth with non-thinking violent robots seeking revenge & targets for the decade plus of physical, & even more disturbingly, emotional abuse perpetrated by their unfeeling bullying teachers & peers.

    See the movie & think about the rights of innovative creative thinkers & why so few are free to think for themselves.
    5AlsExGal

    This hasn't aged well at all

    It's rather like Arthur meets Woody Allen but manages to do neither well, which is surprising since the director wrote the script for Annie Hall. You'd think you'd at least have a decent rip-off of an Allen rom-com. But you would be wrong.

    Dr. Saul Benjamin (Dudley Moore) is a well ordered and conscientious married psychiatrist in New York City. A colleague confesses that he has fallen in love with a patient (Elizabeth McGovern as Chloe) and then dies of a heart attack. As a result, Benjamin ends up taking on the object of his dead colleague's affection as a patient. Subsequently, he also falls in love with her, but wonders what she feels for him. So he does what any conscientious psychiatrist would do - He steals her keys, breaks into her apartment, reads her diary, and then hides in the bathroom - in the bathtub actually - which is where she discovers him.

    Rather than finding this behavior over-the-top creepy and calling the police, she finds it endearing and they start a love affair. At least Benjamin is honest with his wife about all of this, and she doesn't mind in the least because she is having an affair too. Complications ensue.

    The part that ages the worst - the stalking, the breaking and entering, and the diary reading - was actually the main part of the trailer for the film, which 41 years later is unbelievable. I know this, because I remember the ads for it in the theater so I remember the scene.

    Peter Sellers was supposed to have the role of Dr. Benjamin, but died of a heart attack before filming began. I can't see it playing any better had he had the role, since the age difference between Moore and McGovern is part of what makes this thing not work, and Peter Sellers was even older than Moore.
    9jayraskin1

    Charming, Sweet Comedy

    I cannot believe that only two people have reviewed this movie. I would think that all Woody Allen fans would want to see a film written and directed by the co-writer of Sleeper, Annie Hall, and Manhattan. Also, I would think that there must be more Dudley Moore fans around. Moore made this when he was king of romantic comedies in the 1980's, with hits like "10" and "Arthur". He took the crown from George Segal, and was followed by Andrew McCarthy in the late 80's and John Cusack in the 1990's.

    I movie is a bit slow, or seems that way today, but that's because everybody has been hooked on television series like "Friends" and "30 Rock" where there has to be a laugh every 15 seconds. The laughs come, but they arrive at a leisurely pace of about one a minute.

    The movie makes fun of Freudian psychiatry, which has pretty much become a relic of the 20th century like walkmen and pong video games. Still, scenes like the one where Moore tries to tell Elizabeth McGovern that she has penis envy seem to work better today, when we all can agree that the theory is absurd.

    Incidentally, McGovern has possibly never looked so seduction and beautiful as she does in this movie.

    Many of the supporting cast members are good, including Larry Rivers, John Huston, Selma Diamond, Christine Baranski, and Alan King. Unfortunately, they all have small parts of just two or three short scenes.

    My favorite Dudley Moore rom-com is Mickey and Maude, but this one runs a close second. Go out and buy it or download it online and give it a try.
    10wannabeme5960911

    Wonderful Light hearted Romantic Comedy

    If you are looking for fantasy with a happy ending, this is it.

    The Beautiful Elizabeth Mcgovern and Dudley Moore make a interesting couple.She's ( 5'10')tall, he is short, She has a Mid-West accent and he has a English accent, He's calm and she has anxiety neurosis.They say opposites attract.

    There are some interesting " Freudian Slips " in the movie. Moore's fantasy about being in the late 19th Century, rowing her down the river, and both being attired appropriately ( she is stunning to say the least )is based on the painting in his office.During a Analytic session she puts him into her recollection of a book,because his first name ( Saul ) and the author's first name are the same.Finally, in the beginning of the flick, his friend,Otto goes to cut his cake and puts the knife through his name as the camera records.Otto has a heart attack and dies. It was nice seeing Manhattan of the early 80's.Especially Chloe and Saul walking arm in arm in Central Park Also the soundtrack ( especially the flute )is and very excellent and soothing.
    8robert-temple-1

    A gentle romantic comedy from the school of Woody Allen

    This is a very fine romantic comedy, and if it reminds us of a Woody Allen film, then guess why! It is written and directed by Allen's friend and colleague Marshall Brickman, who wrote Allen's famous films ANNIE HALL (1977), for which he won an Oscar, and MANHATTAN (1979, see my review), for which he was nominated for an Oscar, as well as his earlier film SLEEPER (1973), and twenty years later, Allen's MANHATTAN MURDER MYSTERY (1993). Brickman's association with Woody Allen goes back so far that he wrote Allen's comedy material in 1967 for a television special. I believe Brickman used to be represented by Jack Rollins, back in the days when Jack was agent and manager for Allen, Dick Cavett, Joan Rivers, and the whole crowd of young Manhattan comedians as they were in the 1960s when I knew them all, as well as the amazing Jack Rollins himself, who is certainly one of the cinema's unsung heroes. Woody Allen owes his whole cinema career to Jack Rollins in my opinion, and without Jack, Dick Cavett would possibly never have risen above stand-up work in nightclubs such as the Bon Soir on 8th Street, as he was when I knew him. Jack Rollins thus created the entire genre of which this Marshall Brickman film (possibly written for Allen originally, with Allen being replaced instead with Dudley Moore) is an excellent example. Brickman (now 74) is still at work, and has written the book for the musical film JERSEY BOYS set for release next year. And last year he appeared in WOODY ALLEN: A DOCUMENTARY (2012). This film has Sigmund Freud step into the action as a projection of the hero's imagination, a device used so brilliantly in Herbert Ross's film with Allen, PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM (1972), where Bogart does the same thing. Freud is impeccably played by Alec Guinness, who does not overdo the accent and judges the part perfectly. Dudley Moore had, by the time this film was made, been a terrific hit in Hollywood because of 10 (1979) and ARTHUR (1981), and he was considered a hot box office property. Probably this film was set up on that basis. 'Dud', as he was called in England, was certainly no dud on screen, and here he shines with his usual soft charm and melting gaze. He was really very cuddly as a screen personality. The only time I ever met him was when he was still married to Suzy Kendall (they divorced in 1972), and they came together to a private screening. I didn't speak to her but exchanged a few words with him. I knew, as everyone did, that Dudley was short, but it was a shock to see in person just how short, especially beside his wife. He was only five foot two and a half. On that occasion, he was wrapped in an enormous fur coat with a huge collar which nearly engulfed his head, and he did not take it off in the screening theatre, even though it was not cold. In this film, Dudley's limp shows clearly, as he was born with his left foot as a club foot, and the corrective surgery as a child was not completely satisfactory. With those two physical handicaps, it is amazing that Dudley had such a successful career, and what is more, was assailed by countless women who wanted not only to cuddle cute little Dud, but do real grown up things with him as well, so that he developed a reputation as a serious ladies' man and had four wives. Certainly Dudley was in my opinion one of the funniest comedians ever produced by Britain, and his BBC TV sketches with his pal Peter Cook will and cannot ever be forgotten, so that people still roar with laughter at them even though they have seen them dozens of times. The girl in the film is played by the beautiful 22 year-old Elizabeth McGovern, in her first major film role. The makeup lady went a bit too far in whitening her face, especially around her eyes to heighten the startling blue of her eyes. But never mind, she is a vision of beauty and who could resist her? Certainly not Dudley's character, Dr. Saul Benjamin, a respected Freudian psychoanalyst, whose patient she becomes. Dudley goes through the various Woody Allenesque guilt and obsession syndromes, and does a terrific job of it. Everything is very hilarious, but sad at the same time, and it is also all very Manhattan. Most of Dudley's psychiatric patients, seen often on the couch or flapping their arms as they imagine they are flying around his office, are hilariously mad, or otherwise self-indulgent narcissists, which is almost as funny. The ups and the downs of this 'counter-transference' romance are shown as the inevitable waves of the sea of love, pardon the purple prose. It is all very entertaining and well done, and I hope that one day in the future when all the ouevres are complete, some wise cinema historian surveying the 'Woody Allen Movement', will not omit the films directed by Marshall Brickman, especially this one, from consideration as an inseparable part of the genre. Brickman deserves more attention and recognition than he has ever received, although as an Oscar winner, maybe he has a few laurels upon which to rest his comically imaginative head, and perhaps even thus rests content. Let us hope so.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      This movie is credited with creating the "aluminum foil hat" for paranoid conspiracy people.
    • Errores
      Saul's Manhattan condo is just past the east end of East 84th Street and his office is a couple doors off 5th Avenue on East 82nd Street, yet he is shown crossing Park Avenue on East 81st Street, one block further south than the most direct route, meaning he would have to go north a block on Madison Avenue to approach his office as shown. Considering he woke only 65 minutes before arriving at his office and was never shown hurrying through shower, dressing, breakfast or his trek, it's doubtful he would have had time to walk the extra two blocks.
    • Citas

      Chloe Allen: Here I was, in the middle of an obscene phone call, and I thought of you.

    • Conexiones
      Referenced in This Girl for Hire (1983)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes17

    • How long is Lovesick?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 18 de febrero de 1983 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Analysis
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Coler-Goldwater Hospital, Roosevelt Island, Nueva York, Nueva York, Estados Unidos
    • Productora
      • The Ladd Company
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 10,100,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 10,171,304
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 3,093,281
      • 21 feb 1983
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 10,171,304
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 35min(95 min)
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Stereo

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