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Ba mùa

  • 1999
  • PG-13
  • 1h 53min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.2/10
3.4 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Ba mùa (1999)
Drama

En el Ho Chi Minh City moderno, cuatro personas con distintos sueños y aspiraciones entrelazan sus vidas, reflejando los cambios culturales y la evolución de una ciudad que se adentra en una... Leer todoEn el Ho Chi Minh City moderno, cuatro personas con distintos sueños y aspiraciones entrelazan sus vidas, reflejando los cambios culturales y la evolución de una ciudad que se adentra en una nueva época.En el Ho Chi Minh City moderno, cuatro personas con distintos sueños y aspiraciones entrelazan sus vidas, reflejando los cambios culturales y la evolución de una ciudad que se adentra en una nueva época.

  • Dirección
    • Tony Bui
  • Guionistas
    • Tony Bui
    • Timothy Linh Bui
  • Elenco
    • Ngoc Hiep Nguyen
    • Ngoc Minh
    • Phat Trieu Hoang
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.2/10
    3.4 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Tony Bui
    • Guionistas
      • Tony Bui
      • Timothy Linh Bui
    • Elenco
      • Ngoc Hiep Nguyen
      • Ngoc Minh
      • Phat Trieu Hoang
    • 46Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 22Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 7 premios ganados y 4 nominaciones en total

    Fotos10

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    Elenco principal34

    Editar
    Ngoc Hiep Nguyen
    • Kien An
    Ngoc Minh
    • Truck Driver
    Phat Trieu Hoang
    • Huy, Dao's Headman
    Diem Kieu
    • Singing Lotus Woman
    Hanh Kieu
    • Giang
    Duong Don
    Duong Don
    • Hai, Cyclo Driver
    Huu Duoc Nguyen
    • Woody, Child Street Peddler
    Hong Son Le
    • Binh, Cyclo Driver
    Ba Quang Nguyen
    • Don, Cyclo Driver
    Huu Su Tran
    • Ngon, Cyclo Driver
    Duc Hung Luong
    • Minh, Cyclo Driver
    Harvey Keitel
    Harvey Keitel
    • James Hager
    Zoe Bui
    • Lan the Hooker
    Hoang Trieu
    • Man Who Chases Lan #1
    Tran Long
    • Man Who Chases Lan #2
    Tuong Trac Bui
    • Man Who Buys Lotus Flower
    Huynh Kim Hong
    • Woman on Balcony (Bag of Nuts)
    Manh Cuong Tran
    • Teacher Dao
    • Dirección
      • Tony Bui
    • Guionistas
      • Tony Bui
      • Timothy Linh Bui
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios46

    7.23.4K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    10zulu934

    One of the best films of 1999!

    Please do yourself a favor and see this film. It is a beautiful and touching masterpiece. The film is set in a large city in modern day Vietnam. I believe it was Saigon. The film centers around the lives of several individuals. There is the ex-Marine (Harvey Keitel), hanging around an old GI bar (now a restaurant), hoping to find his daughter; The cyle taxi driver, who yearns to romance a local call girl; the flower girl who volunteers to write for a reclusive poet who lost his hands to leperacy; and the little boy who sells watches and cigarette lighters in hotels, bars, and the street. All these characters are weaved beautifully into the story like a boat moving slowly but surely up a river to a wonderful place. I have seen very very few movies in the past several years which qualify as true works of art. This movie is the real deal. .
    howard.schumann

    Visually striking tone poem

    Director Tony Bui left Vietnam to live in California when he was only two years old, then returned to take a look at postwar Vietnam in 1994. The result was his 1999 film Three Seasons that walked away with a prize for Lisa Rinzler's cinematography as well as the Best Dramatic Picture Award at the Sundance Film Festival. Performed in Vietnamese with Vietnamese actors, Three Seasons is a series of interweaving stories about loss and redemption in the lives of four characters living in Ho Chi Minh City (though the residents apparently still call it Saigon). Its strength lies, not in its plot or characters, but in the stunning images and dreamlike quality that transports the viewer into a world of sensuous music and soft colors where village women sing while they work, harvesting flowers on a lotus lake.

    The main and most effective story is about a cyclo driver Hai (Don Duong) who falls in love with a prostitute named Lan (Zoe Bui), He wants to "redeem" her innocence and dutifully waits for her each day as she leaves her hotel. When they go to a hotel together, he pays $50 from the money he won in a cyclo race merely to watch her sleep, a gesture that allows her to experience the feeling of being loved for the first time. The second story is about a young lotus picker Kien An, a female orphan (Ngoc Hiep Nguyen) who befriends her employer, Teacher Dao (Manh Cuong Tran), and lovingly copies his poems that he cannot record himself because of leprosy. This gesture allows both to touch the poetic quality of life, the teacher for perhaps the last time. The other stories involve a five-year old street urchin named Woody (Huu Duoc Nguen) who braves monsoon-like weather to sell trinkets to tourists in order to survive. When the box containing his wares is stolen, he sets out to find it. This brings him in contact with an American, James Hager (Harvey Keitel) in Vietnam to search for the daughter he left behind when the war was over. This last episode is the least developed of the four and Keitel's performance seems listless in spite of the fact that he is Executive Producer of the film. All four stories come together at the end in a way that ties up all loose ends.

    Though I am grateful for any look into Vietnam, Three Seasons left me wanting more. It is almost as if Bui was being overly cautious, afraid to say anything about what he saw because of the censors following him around. As a result, his film does not convey a strong sense of time and place, and the neon street signs and glamorous hotels patronized by the rich could be anywhere in the world. Perhaps it is true that the city's culture is being overrun by rampant commercialism, but the director observes this without comment and seems content to offer only a highly romanticized tone poem. Even the city's textures, squalid areas, and chaotic energy are so muted by the use of camera filters that it robs them of their steamy authenticity. Three Seasons is visually striking but left me feeling like a distant observer. I found the characters to be neither fresh nor engaging and the film overly composed, lacking in the poetic vision that turns an average film experience into a great one.
    10Becky-42

    Beautifully simple and culturally significant

    There are not very many movies that can put the viewer into the trance that this one did. It left me wondering why more American films can't be made like this, with subtlety and an eye for simplistic beauty and peace in nature. The many scenes at night in the rain-soaked city only provide a stark contrast to the scenes with lotus flowers and singing, thus making them more effective and fresh. Above this, the characters were intriguing. None had a life even remotely like mine, and this is probably likewise for 99% of Americans, who live in a fast-track, needlessly complicated, and mostly material world. Materialism exists in Three Seasons, but is seen as the enemy (the plastic lotus flowers) or (in the case of the prostitute) something to overcome. I left the theatre feeling somewhat wistful that there are not more films like this being produced today.
    8claudio_carvalho

    Three Bitter and Beautiful Metaphoric Tales in the Contemporary Ho Chi Minh

    In the contemporary Ho Chi Minh, former Saigon, Kien An (Ngoc Hiep Nguyen) is a worker hired to gather and sell lotus for her master, Professor Dao (Manh Cuong Tran). Dao was a handsome poet, who is dying of leprosy. He lost his fingers, and Kien offers herself to write his poetries for him. Hai (Don Duong) is a tricycle-taxi driver, who falls in love for the expensive hooker Lan (Diep Bui). Woody is a homeless little child, working as street peddler of watches, cigarette lighters and other minor goods, who has his wallet stolen. He believes that the thief is James Hager (Harvey Keitel), a former marine who is looking for his daughter with a Vietnamese woman during the war. These three parallel bitter and beautiful stories present in a metaphoric view, the transition of the political and economical system of Vietnam. Professor Dao represents the traditional system, the communism, rotten and dying. Lan is a metaphoric view of the transition to the capitalism, corrupted, aimed and unattainable for most of the poor population. Woody and the little girl represent the next generations of excluded of the new wild system, fighting for the survival and having no perspective in life. James Hager would be the return of the American interests in Vietnam. I am intrigued with the title of this film: "Three Seasons". The lotus means the spring, the hard rain means the winter; the fallen leaves, the autumn. Where is the summer and why is it missing? "Three Seasons" is a highly recommended movie, open to the most different interpretations by the viewers. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "Três Estações" ("Three Seasons")
    suzanne-5

    An unusual marriage of the visual supporting the emotional elements in this very moving exploration of love and a country grappling with the integration of old and new cultures.

    The maturity of this young film maker was startling to me. The obviously gorgeous and varied visual feast for one's eyes combined with small subtlteties such as the nipple of the whore's breast showing through the pink nightgown that the cyclo driver gave her.. just a second.. but a revealing moment since all the clothes she dressed in as a whore never revealed her as much. Another example was in the story of the lotus flower girl and the leper.. the more she wrote his poetry the more his face appeared out of the shadows and became lit. The marriage of the visual and lighting movement reflecting the feelings of the characters is rare to see and something to be studied again in this film. And a moving performance by Keitel clearly searching for his humanity. And a perfect bit of casting with the woman who played his grown daughter. The director's sense of timing- not rushed, letting each story unfold, carrying one on the precarious wave of the confused mix of the country's old and the new, the thought provoking issues of the various different kinds of love portrayed..parental love,romantic love, poetic love, the love of beaty where it realy lies....all rare in film making today. Profoundly disturbing scenes of the street children. Nothing like this from a young American film makers that I've seen. And as a worldwide distributor of film, TV and video who tries to support new filmmakers I've seen a fair amount. I would like to know where the poetry came from and how to find it for myself to read and savor it even more.Bravo Tony Bui. Bravo Timothy Bui.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      Harvey Keitel was cast as Captain Benjamin L. Willard in Apocalipsis (1979), but was replaced by Martin Sheen after the first week of filming. In this movie, he sits in a bar called "Apocalypse Now" (written in the same font as the film).
    • Citas

      James Hager: I made many mistakes in my life. That was a long time ago. Have I met the same man I was then? A lot of times past. When a chance comes around to make a wrong a right it's a special thing. But I hoped to make one thing right.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Entrapment/Three Seasons/The Winslow Boy/Idle Hands/Get Real (1999)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Good Ol' Rock-N-Roll
      Written & Performed by Eugene Chrysler

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is Three Seasons?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 30 de abril de 1999 (Estados Unidos)
    • Países de origen
      • Vietnam
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Vietnamita
    • También se conoce como
      • Three Seasons
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Vietnam
    • Productoras
      • Giai Phong Film Studio
      • October Films
      • Open City Films
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 2,021,698
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 47,542
      • 2 may 1999
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 2,021,698
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 53 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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