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IMDbPro

Una vez en la vida

Título original: Dead Ringers
  • 1988
  • C
  • 1h 56min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.2/10
57 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
3,709
597
Jeremy Irons and Geneviève Bujold in Una vez en la vida (1988)
Dead Ringers: Stay With Me
Reproducir clip2:25
Ver Dead Ringers: Stay With Me
5 videos
99+ fotos
Eróticos de suspensoHorror psicológicoSuspenso psicológicoDramaTerrorThriller

Los ginecólogos gemelos aprovechan al máximo el hecho de que nadie puede diferenciarlos, hasta que una mujer les enfrenta.Los ginecólogos gemelos aprovechan al máximo el hecho de que nadie puede diferenciarlos, hasta que una mujer les enfrenta.Los ginecólogos gemelos aprovechan al máximo el hecho de que nadie puede diferenciarlos, hasta que una mujer les enfrenta.

  • Dirección
    • David Cronenberg
  • Guionistas
    • David Cronenberg
    • Norman Snider
    • Bari Wood
  • Elenco
    • Jeremy Irons
    • Geneviève Bujold
    • Heidi von Palleske
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.2/10
    57 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    3,709
    597
    • Dirección
      • David Cronenberg
    • Guionistas
      • David Cronenberg
      • Norman Snider
      • Bari Wood
    • Elenco
      • Jeremy Irons
      • Geneviève Bujold
      • Heidi von Palleske
    • 183Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 127Opiniones de los críticos
    • 86Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 20 premios ganados y 14 nominaciones en total

    Videos5

    Dead Ringers
    Trailer 1:29
    Dead Ringers
    Dead Ringers: Stay With Me
    Clip 2:25
    Dead Ringers: Stay With Me
    Dead Ringers: Stay With Me
    Clip 2:25
    Dead Ringers: Stay With Me
    Dead Ringers: Nightmare
    Clip 1:41
    Dead Ringers: Nightmare
    Dead Ringers: Peter Suschitzky On Jeremy Irons Playing Beverly And Elliot
    Featurette 2:21
    Dead Ringers: Peter Suschitzky On Jeremy Irons Playing Beverly And Elliot
    Dead Ringers: Gordon Smith On Creating The Special Effects
    Featurette 1:53
    Dead Ringers: Gordon Smith On Creating The Special Effects

    Fotos148

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    Elenco principal42

    Editar
    Jeremy Irons
    Jeremy Irons
    • Beverly Mantle…
    Geneviève Bujold
    Geneviève Bujold
    • Claire Niveau
    Heidi von Palleske
    Heidi von Palleske
    • Cary
    Barbara Gordon
    • Danuta
    Shirley Douglas
    Shirley Douglas
    • Laura
    Stephen Lack
    Stephen Lack
    • Anders Wolleck
    Nick Nichols
    • Leo
    Lynne Cormack
    • Arlene
    Damir Andrei
    • Birchall
    Miriam Newhouse
    • Mrs. Bookman
    David Hughes
    • Superintendent
    Richard W. Farrell
    • Dean of Medicine
    • (as Richard Farrell)
    Warren Davis
    • Anatomy Class Supervisor
    Jonathan Haley
    • Beverly (Age 9)
    Nicholas Haley
    • Elliot (Age 9)
    Marsha Moreau
    • Raffaella
    Denis Akiyama
    Denis Akiyama
    • Pharmacist
    Dee McCafferty
    Dee McCafferty
    • Surgeon
    • Dirección
      • David Cronenberg
    • Guionistas
      • David Cronenberg
      • Norman Snider
      • Bari Wood
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios183

    7.257.2K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7Jonny_Numb

    difficult to get into, but once it takes hold...

    David Cronenberg is a director of great unique vision, and he ranks highly on my list of favorites, not because every film he does is great per se, but because there is a certain level of consistency and quality that infects each bizarre celluloid mutation he comes up with. David Lynch and Stanley Kubrick have done a few good films, but their track records are generally inconsistent--Cronenberg, while grossly underrated, outshines them all. And "Dead Ringers"--probably his most widely-praised film in the mainstream, next to "The Fly"--is no exception. The film is quite puzzling on first inspection, and I did have a hard time settling into the mentality that would let me enjoy it, but once I did, I was thoroughly impressed--whether playing the smarmy Elliott or the sensitive Beverly Mantle, Jeremy Irons gives a wonderfully nuanced performance as identical twin gynecologists (the subtleties of difference in personality command multiple viewings to register). Not only is the film's central theme both compelling and disturbing (one personality split between two people), but the descent into (prescription) drug addiction and botched gynecological procedures (with Cronenberg's trademark insect-like surgical instruments) will make your skin crawl. It's a bleak, depressing, and tragic tale, but it shows brotherly relations with an intimacy few films ever approach. Anchored by Irons' spectacular dual performance, "Dead Ringers" is a film that shows a lot of maturity on Cronenberg's part, and though it might be hard to call it 'entertaining,' it does contain harsh imagery with an emotional pulse that will not be easily forgotten.

    7/10
    8lost-in-limbo

    Deep meaning and stylish art by Cronenberg.

    Elliot and Beverly Mantle (Jeremy Irons) are identical twins that are top-of-the-class and incredibly well known gynaecologists. They also treat themselves by swapping their identities around, so they can share each other's work commitments and pleasures, like woman. But all of this comes back to destroy them emotionally and physically.

    An intriguing and rather inventive premise director / co-writer David Cronenberg has come up with here. The worlds Cronenberg creates in his film's are rather fascinating in looking at the human body and technology. This film is no exception. So you can't really call this mainstream, as it's not for everyone's tastes. That's why his films seem to have great impact in the realistic visuals and material context. It's flowing with originality, good psychological elements, erotica and it holds such an artistic feel with its stunning visuals and elegance to show.

    This thought-provoking drama is rather stimulating and quite downbeat. Though, it's mostly a talkative film; the dialogue is dense on many levels that it's truly captivating. It's more the material context that tries to shock and explore in a subtle way rather than the horrific visuals and shocks that we come to expect from most of Cronenberg's films. It doesn't contain much graphic moments, only about one or two. The sub-plots are drawn up quite well with dabbling in sexual desires and pleasure, technology (instruments and tools of the trade), the twins physical bond, addiction and a rather modernistic world. It's filled with sharp and intense sequences that are entrenched with an effective music score, as it overwhelmingly draws you in. This unsettling aurora builds into paranoia in the last half of the film and it ends rather disturbingly. The stylish production valves are incredibly glossy and professional. With beautifully crafted and slick cinematography. The gloomy colours that fill the screen hold great contrast in the moody and detail backdrop. From their fashionable home to their cold work office.

    Jeremy Iron gives a tremendously charismatic performance playing both Elliot and Beverly Mantle. Elliot is Beverly's backbone as he's confident and arrogant. Beverly is the opposite as he's more innocent and rather sweet. Beverly wants to break the bond that they share, but Elliot can't let that happen. At first they weren't that likable, but the further the film goes along we see their downfall and there spiral into madness. That's when you start to feel for them and it gets rather emotionally charged. They also live and depend on each other, feeling what the other one feels and that's mostly pain and gloom here. This happens when they start to depend on painkillers and Beverly believing his girlfriend is cheating on him. This portrait shows how fragile they really are and how we really depend and feel when love ones are in pain and sorrow. As we are effected in the same way too. Genevieve Bujold is splendid as Claire Niveau the movie star and Beverly's love interest.

    Maybe the film was a bit overlong, but this is a shockingly grim and efficient film that plays on many levels of the mind.
    7roland-sinn

    Horrific, Disgusting, Grotesque, Riveting

    Cronenberg consistently makes technically well crafted films. His subject matter however and the way he displays his subject matter (ie – his love of gore and perverse creations), often divides opinion of his works.

    I think what makes DR a remarkably strong film is that Cronenberg tones down his use of trademark gore. There is a little, but it's used sparingly and non-gratuitously. This shows that Cronenberg can exercise self-control when he wants to.

    The overall look of the film is beautiful: Ultra modern and austere. The twins apartment looks like the perfect abode for socially detached souls.

    But the most extraordinary aspect of DR is Jeremy Iron's performance as both Mantle Twins. He shades each of the twin brothers amazingly and makes them both terrifying and sympathetic characters. Geneviève Bujold also delivers a faultless performance, looks fantastic as a more mature woman and proves the fact that women over 40 can be very sexy; a fact which Hollywood (very insultingly) continues to ignore.

    The film's subject matter is very unsettling and controversial. As a man, I found a lot of scenes difficult to watch. But to be fair, Cronenberg never pushes the film into the cheap and tasteless territories of gratuitousness and exploitation.

    Overall, DR is a very heavy experience. As one reviewer noted: ‘Do not watch if you are feeling depressed.' I agree totally with this point. But it is a film which is guaranteed to remain in the mind a long, long time afterwards. Ultimately, I like films which I can remember in detail years after I've seen them.

    7/10
    bob the moo

    Typically Cronenberg but yet accessible as well; a great script and plot is made all the more compelling by the director and two fantastic performances from Jeremy Irons

    Growing up together as social outcasts with only each other for company, twins Elliot and Beverly Mantle become very close. This closeness becomes more like them both sharing one self in two bodies as they study in the same area and eventually become experts in the field of gynaecology. They share everything and few can tell them apart; an arrangement that works well until Beverly falls for a patient (Claire Niveau) and finds that there are things he doesn't want to share with Elliot. As Bev confronts the idea of them being separate for the first time ever, he starts to fall apart mentally and, when Elliot tries to reach out and help him he too is drawn into confusion over identity and an inability to find where one of them stops and the other starts.

    Being a Cronenberg film I knew to expect body horror and, shall I say, an 'unusual' theme and in many ways the film delivered in spades but in a much more cerebral fashion. The plot is not easy to explain but it is a totally convincing breakdown of both Elliot and Beverly as they lose contact with the lines between them (if the lines ever really existed). Of course it is rather extreme but it is relentlessly interesting in terms of the script and the characters. The gynaecological part of the film allows Cronenberg to explore his more usual body horror stuff but this all came second to the much more interesting material that exists in the script. Cronenberg appears to be as fascinated as me by the characters and he directs with a cold eye, letting the creepy atmosphere come from not only the story but every shot, every set and every performance; not only this but this is one of his more accessible films without losing much of what makes Cronenberg Cronenberg.

    Of course a massive part of the film working is two perfect performances from Jeremy Irons, who I have not seen better in any other films. Using special effects as well as the old 'over the shoulder' technique, Irons is able to convincingly be on screen in two characters at the same time, but it is not the shot framing that makes it convincingly two characters, it is Irons' performance that does that. His Beverly is so feeble and has a convincing breakdown; while his Elliot appears much more together but suffers in a different way from the same struggle. Obviously being identical, it is due to Irons that the two characters come across so very different but yet seem just like the same person. In every little scene he manages to stay in character no matter what – it's hard for me to describe, you need to really see it for yourself. Bujold is good in support early on but, as the twins' story gets more complex, her characters feels a bit intrusive and uninteresting, but generally she is good. However, to talk about anyone beyond this is to suggest there is room for them in the film – there isn't. Instead the film is pretty much dominated by two people – and they are both Jeremy Irons, producing two great performances that were vital for the film to work.

    Overall this may be a little too weird for some viewers but many more will find it to be one of their favourite Cronenberg films on the basis that it has the qualities that makes him him but is also a lot more accessible as well. The body horror is there in the background but it is the psychological scarring and confusion that is of much more interest; the script is great even if the plot goes to the usual Cronenberg excesses but it is two perfect performances by Irons that makes it all come together in a compelling and interesting film.
    8christopher-underwood

    Irons in his two best screen performances!

    A very fine film that challenges and rewards just about equally and somehow has a downbeat ending that manages to be uplifting. I suppose we have been through a lot by the end and although there is an horrific sadness there is an awful inevitability and we like the twin brothers can finally see no other way out. Bujold plays a starlet who comes between two identical twins (Irons in his two best screen performances!) and whilst the tale begins playfully enough we are given enough signals to suggest all will not be well, although we like all three leads do hope so. We see ourselves in the three and if at first we are confounded to discover we are confused by who is who, just when we have got the two under some control, like Bujold indeed, it all goes wrong and the brothers switch personalities before our very eyes. This is all disturbing enough without the gynaecological instruments of torture and the playing with pain and pleasure leading us to some darkened room.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      The shots of the twins onscreen together were accomplished through one of the first uses of computer-controlled moving-matte photography.
    • Errores
      In a scene dated 1954, the twins seen are playing with The Visible Woman, Revell toy company's biological model of a woman that was not marketed until at least five years later.
    • Citas

      Elliot Mantle: Don't do this to me, Bev.

      Beverly Mantle: But I'm only doing it to me. Why don't you get along with your very own life?

      Elliot Mantle: Do you remember the first Siamese twins?

      Beverly Mantle: Chang and Eng were joined at the chest.

      Elliot Mantle: Remember how they died?

      Beverly Mantle: Chang died of a stroke in the middle of the night. He was always the sickly one. He was always the one who drank too much. When Eng woke up beside him to find that his brother was dead... he died of fright. Right there in the bed.

      Elliot Mantle: Does that answer your question?

      Beverly Mantle: Poor Eli.

      Elliot Mantle: Poor Bev.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Gorillas in the Mist/Patty Hearst/Sweet Hearts Dance/Miles from Home/Dead Ringers (1988)
    • Bandas sonoras
      In the Still of the Night (I'll Remember)
      Performed by The Five Satins

      under license from Arista Records, Inc.

      Copyrighted by Llee Corp.

      Composed by Fred Parris

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    Preguntas Frecuentes20

    • How long is Dead Ringers?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 23 de septiembre de 1988 (Canadá)
    • Países de origen
      • Canadá
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Pacto de amor
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Bell Trinity Square - 483 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canadá(location)
    • Productoras
      • Téléfilm Canada
      • Mantle Clinic II
      • Morgan Creek Entertainment
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • USD 13,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 8,038,508
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 3,012,180
      • 25 sep 1988
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 8,039,196
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 56min(116 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Stereo

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