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IMDbPro

How to Get Ahead in Advertising

  • 1989
  • R
  • 1h 30min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.8/10
6.9 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Richard E. Grant in How to Get Ahead in Advertising (1989)
Trailer for How To Get Ahead In Advertising
Reproducir trailer1:52
2 videos
16 fotos
ComediaFantasíaSátira

Un ejecutivo cínico de publicidad sufre un bloqueo laboral que lo lleva a una crisis. Está fuera de control y, para empeorar las cosas, le sale un forúnculo parlante en el hombro.Un ejecutivo cínico de publicidad sufre un bloqueo laboral que lo lleva a una crisis. Está fuera de control y, para empeorar las cosas, le sale un forúnculo parlante en el hombro.Un ejecutivo cínico de publicidad sufre un bloqueo laboral que lo lleva a una crisis. Está fuera de control y, para empeorar las cosas, le sale un forúnculo parlante en el hombro.

  • Dirección
    • Bruce Robinson
  • Guionista
    • Bruce Robinson
  • Elenco
    • Richard E. Grant
    • Rachel Ward
    • Richard Wilson
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.8/10
    6.9 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Bruce Robinson
    • Guionista
      • Bruce Robinson
    • Elenco
      • Richard E. Grant
      • Rachel Ward
      • Richard Wilson
    • 43Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 46Opiniones de los críticos
    • 63Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 nominación en total

    Videos2

    How to Get Ahead in Advertising
    Trailer 1:52
    How to Get Ahead in Advertising
    How to Get Ahead in Advertising
    Trailer 2:16
    How to Get Ahead in Advertising
    How to Get Ahead in Advertising
    Trailer 2:16
    How to Get Ahead in Advertising

    Fotos16

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    Elenco principal31

    Editar
    Richard E. Grant
    Richard E. Grant
    • Bagley
    Rachel Ward
    Rachel Ward
    • Julia
    Richard Wilson
    Richard Wilson
    • Bristol
    Jacqueline Tong
    Jacqueline Tong
    • Penny Wheelstock
    John Shrapnel
    John Shrapnel
    • Psychiatrist
    Susan Wooldridge
    Susan Wooldridge
    • Monica
    Hugh Armstrong
    • Harry Wax
    Mick Ford
    Mick Ford
    • Richard
    Jacqueline Pearce
    Jacqueline Pearce
    • Maud
    Christopher Simon
    Christopher Simon
    • Waiter
    Gino Melvazzi
    Gino Melvazzi
    • Waiter
    Victor Lucas
    Victor Lucas
    • Tweedy Man
    Dawn Keeler
    • Tweedy Woman
    Kerryann White
    • Girl in Elevator
    Vivienne McKone
    • Sullivan Bristol Receptionist
    Donald Hoath
    • Businessman
    John Levitt
    • Businessman
    Gordon Gostelow
    • Priest
    • Dirección
      • Bruce Robinson
    • Guionista
      • Bruce Robinson
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios43

    6.86.8K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7SnoopyStyle

    British dark satire

    Denis Dimbleby Bagley (Richard E. Grant) is an amoral British ad executive. He's willing to sell anything to anyone. His next product pimple cream makes him obsessed with boils. His wife Julia Bagley (Rachel Ward) is concerned. He starts breaking down and growing a boil on his left shoulder. He's in the hospital to have it removed when it starts growing into a new head. His real head is lanced and the boil takes over his life as the new head.

    Bruce Robinson's previous directing/writing effort 'Withnail and I' is a British indie darling. Richard E. Grant returns with brilliant effect. It is a dark rant on the ills of consumerism and a little obvious. It would be great to have more plot rather than a diatribe. This would have been a great Twilight Zone episode. A story is needed around the zit cream. Otherwise, it's a good surreal effective satire.
    Ricky_Roma__

    Flawed but bloody funny

    In Withnail & I, Bruce Robinson made one of the funniest films there is. Therefore it's always going to be hard for anything else he's made to equal his debut. However, in How to Get Ahead in Advertising he comes mighty close.

    The reason why Robinson's second film fails to match Withnail & I is because at times it becomes too preachy. There are some great speeches in the film; some wonderful digs at consumerism, but occasionally it descends into uninteresting ranting. Yeah consumerism can turn us into unthinking automatons, and yeah big business is greedy, but you don't really need to point it out so blatantly. We already know this. The film works much better when illustrates the BS or when it jabs at it. It doesn't need to get on its soapbox.

    One of my favourite bits in the film is when Bagley (Richard E. Grant) – a cocky advertising executive who suddenly loses his magic touch when he has to sell boil cream – is listening to a bunch of idiots talking about a newspaper article. As a person who makes a living out of lying, he's appalled that they believe what the press tells them. They then begin to argue (there's a great bit when an Irish priest insists that a woman in a vice den had peanut butter smeared across her tits; it was in the paper so it must be true) and the conversation quickly turns to the boil cream that Bagley has become obsessed with. "They're incurable, all of them. I know that and so does everybody else. Until they get one. Then the rules suddenly change." And then he has a dig at the priest. "They want to believe something works. He knows that, which is why he gets a good look-in with the dying." It's a great scene; it's funny as hell and it also has a good point to make: people consume less out of desire and more out of a desperate sort of hope, or even fear; they hope this product or that product will fill the hole in their lives. They hope it will be the answer to all their problems. And thankfully this scene refrains from the preaching that affects the latter stages. Instead it goes right for the jugular.

    But my favourite scene of all is the one with the psychiatrist – Bagley has quit his job and developed a hideous boil of his own, one that talks to him and one that has a face. He's talking to the quack with a big bandage on his shoulder. He rants for a while about the way advertisers have ruined television, and then all of a sudden, after silence, the boil speaks. The way it's presented in the film, the boil (at first) has a separate voice to Bagley's. He's not portrayed as Gollum with a satanic pimple; he's not talking to himself. But at the same time you're never really sure whether you're seeing things from Bagley's perspective. He's gone totally crazy, so he may very well be the one saying all this crap. Plus the boil only speaks when Bagley's not looking the other person in the face. But what I love about the scene is the filth the boil speaks and Grant's reactions. His hysteria is hilarious (there's another magnificent bit of hysteria in the film – when the boil first 'speaks', Bagley is so shocked that he runs to the kitchen, shaking and spazzing like he's got St Vitus' dance. Grant is amazing at working himself up into a lather). And then the boil asks Bagley to tell the shrink about his grandfather. "My grandfather was caught molesting a wallaby in a private zoo in 1919." "A wallaby?" "It may have been a kangaroo. I'm not sure." "You mean sexually?" "I suppose so. He had his hand in its pouch." I haven't heard dialogue that funny in a long time.

    I also love the scene when Bagley is admitted to hospital to have the boil lanced. By now he's completely raving. He's going on and on about the evils of consumerism. So then the boil says, "You commies don't half talk a lot of s***." Magnificent! It's the sort of argument a Daily Mail reader would give. Criticise capitalism and you must be a goddamned Red. However, I can see where the boil is coming from. There are certainly times when Robinson is too militant. Like I said before, he really doesn't need to stand so high on his soapbox. But at the same time the film makes some excellent points. It's just that the film works better when it does it through comedy rather than rhetoric.

    Another great scene, one that takes a poke at society's hypocrisy, is when Bagley argues with a feminist who thinks men should bleed. "And I think you're a vegan who eats meat in secret. You see, she doesn't deny it. She's a vegan who eats meat in secret." "I do not eat meat!" "But you'll eat fish, you'll eat fish until the cows come home." "Fish is allowed!" Of course, this enrages Bagley.

    But although hypocritical lefties get a kicking too, the film, early on, raises an interesting point. If you're anti-consumerism, how do you spread your message without advertising? It's a bit of a kick in the teeth, that.

    However, Robinson is smart enough to know that consumerism is here to stay. The film doesn't end with any hope. All we can look forward to is more advertising, more spending and more products. The world is one magnificent shop, indeed.
    10funkyfry

    Great film on modern life

    Hilarious, bitter satire of adverising, humanity, and personality. Ad exec Dennis Bagley gets so hung up on boils developing a "boilbusters" ad campaign that he grows a malignant boil which takes on its own personality and eventually takes over the show. Grant is perfect in the lead role, the direction and photography are excellent, and the effects cheap but grotesque. There are so many hilarious scenes, I found myself laughing out loud through most of the film even though I saw it by myself! I love the scene where Bagley explains to his wife why the boil only talks to her when she turns away : "He's waiting for you to do it!" A classic, should be sought out by all fans of sadistic humour(especially British, i.e. League of Gentlemen, Monty Python) .
    capone666

    The Vidiot Reviews...

    How to Get Ahead in Advertising

    The best way to get ahead in advertising is to know the devil.

    Unfortunately, since the frazzled ad man in this comedy isn't acquitted with Lucifer, he will have to get a head literally.

    With a growing concern over the ethical nature of his profession, ad executive Bagley (Richard E. Grant) becomes mentally unhinged.

    While struggling to come up with a slogan for a zit cream, his mania is compounded by the appearance of a pustule on his shoulder that has begun to speak to him.

    In addition to the power of verbalization, over time, the abnormal abscess develops a mouth, eyes and a face, which is strikingly similar to his own, save for the moustache.

    A stimulating and surreal British satire, How To Get Ahead in Advertising is a paradigm of the psychological mindset needed to survive in marketing.

    Furthermore, having two heads means there's always someone to make-out with. (Green Light)
    6michael-1151

    Not exactly satire, not exactly farce

    If you want nuance, you'll not find it here, subtlety, pah!!! No, it's laid on with a shovel as advertising executive Richard E Grant discovers advertising is more shallow than a paddling pool, and like said pool, if a toddler was unable to contain a lavatorial need, full of....well,you know what! The trouble is, although we see Grant having his breakdown, becoming obsessive and growing a boil which becomes his alter-ego, we do not see his journey, he's dubbed a success by everyone, but we do not see him succeed. We merely witness the repercussions of his desultory realisation that he's been part of the problem, rather than the solution.

    The idea of the talking boil is fun, but the scriptwriter/director didn't know whether to make it surreal, knockabout or farce, in the end sticking to what he perceives as satire. I'd have liked the themes to have been developed more - together with the two differing characters within the same body. We each see thousands of commercials on television, commercialisation is everywhere, referees and umpires have ads on their sleeves, I'm expecting the police to have sponsors' names on their trousers when they finally come to get me.

    This needed a little more subtlety, more comedy with the beautiful wife, who seemed discomforted by having sex with the brash alter-ego - that could have produced an amusing scene or three.

    It's much better that Robert Altman's unsuccessful parody of fashion, Pret-a-Porter, but uses a sledgehammer to lance a boil.

    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      Writer/director Bruce Robinson provided the voice of the boil.
    • Errores
      After Bagley has lunch with his wife, she drops him back at the advertising firm's office building, but it is a different building to the one used for the interior scenes, which is the tall red building several hundred yards up the street (visible in the crane shot of their car pulling up), right next to the Lambeth bridge, as we can see from the window view in the scenes in Bagley's and Bristol's offices.
    • Citas

      [first lines]

      Denis Dimbleby Bagley: Let me try and clarify some of this for you. Best Company Supermarkets are not interested in selling wholesome foods. They are not worried about the nation's health. What is concerning them, is that the nation appears to be getting worried about its health, and that is what's worrying Best Co., because Best Co. wants to go on selling them what it always has, i.e. white breads, baked beans, canned foods, and that suppurating, fat squirting little heart attack traditionally known as the British sausage. So, how can we help them with that? Clearly, we are looking for a label. We need a label brimming with health, and everything from a nosh pot to a white sliced will wear one with pride. And although I'm aware of the difficulties of coming to terms with this, it must be appreciated from the beginning, that even the nosh pot must be low in something, and if it isn't, it must be high in something else, and that is its health-giving ingredient we will sell. Which brings me to my final question: who are we trying to sell this to? Answer: we are trying to sell this to the archetypal average housewife, she who fills her basket. What you have here is a 22 year old pretty girl. What you need is taut slob, something on foot deodorisers in a brassiere.

      Larry Frisk: I, uh, I'm not quite sure we can go along with that, Mr. Bagley. I mean, if you look at, like, the market research...

      Denis Dimbleby Bagley: I don't need to look at the market research. I've lived with 13 and a half million housewives for 15 years and I know everything about them. She's 37 years old, she has 2.3 children, 1.6 of which will be girls, she uses 16 feet 6 inches of toilet tissue a week and fucks no more than 4.2 times a month. She has 7 radiators and is worried about her weight, which is why we have her on a diet, and because we have her on a diet we also encourage her to reward herself with the little treats. And she deserves them, because anyone existing on 1200 calories of artificial synthetic orange-flavoured waffle a day deserves a little treat. We know it's naughty but you do deserve it, go on, darling, swallow a bun! And she does, and the instant she does, the guilt cuts in. So here we are again with our diet. It's a vicious, but quite wonderful circle, and it adheres to only one rule: whatever it is, sell it. And if you want to stay in advertising, by God, you'd better learn that!

    • Conexiones
      Edited into Video Macumba (1991)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Oscillate Wildly
      (uncredited)

      Written by Johnny Marr

      Performed by The Smiths

      Courtesy of Rough Trade

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is How to Get Ahead in Advertising?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 28 de julio de 1989 (Reino Unido)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Sitio oficial
      • Handmade Films Website
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Ein erfolgreicher Mann
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Datchet Railway Station, Datchet, Berkshire, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(scene where train pulls into station)
    • Productora
      • HandMade Films
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 418,053
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 418,053
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 30 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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