Agrega una trama en tu idiomaIn a retirement home, a surly man and a withdrawn woman come to terms over a game of cards.In a retirement home, a surly man and a withdrawn woman come to terms over a game of cards.In a retirement home, a surly man and a withdrawn woman come to terms over a game of cards.
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When I saw The Gin Game on Broadway in 1977 with Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy I thought for sure I had seen the best play ever.
Then when I saw Charles Durning and Julie Harris perform it again on Broadway 20 years later, with my fiancee, I said "Okay, this is it. This one is the best."
Then last night I was flipping channels. I saw the card table and I realized what it was: "Look, it's The Gin Game!" I said to my bride, "Are you kidding me, it's Dick Van Dyck and Mary Tyler Moore."
I loved it. I think you can do more with a dramatic play on television, believe it or not.
Cheery Dick Van Dyck was an almost convincing Weller, but Mary is too sweet for a Fonsia. I am quite certain I saw Julie Harris stand up, lean over the table, shove the cards in Charles Durning's face and bellow triumphantly "Gin, F*cking Gin!". There's no way our dear Mary Richards would ever say that! :-)
The portrayals in this version are more subtle. You catch more of it in this version: The excellent script doesn't get lost in the commotion.
A great show. Don't miss it!
Then when I saw Charles Durning and Julie Harris perform it again on Broadway 20 years later, with my fiancee, I said "Okay, this is it. This one is the best."
Then last night I was flipping channels. I saw the card table and I realized what it was: "Look, it's The Gin Game!" I said to my bride, "Are you kidding me, it's Dick Van Dyck and Mary Tyler Moore."
I loved it. I think you can do more with a dramatic play on television, believe it or not.
Cheery Dick Van Dyck was an almost convincing Weller, but Mary is too sweet for a Fonsia. I am quite certain I saw Julie Harris stand up, lean over the table, shove the cards in Charles Durning's face and bellow triumphantly "Gin, F*cking Gin!". There's no way our dear Mary Richards would ever say that! :-)
The portrayals in this version are more subtle. You catch more of it in this version: The excellent script doesn't get lost in the commotion.
A great show. Don't miss it!
Mary Tyler Moore and Dick Van Dyke were absolutely marvelous in this performance. The chemistry between them is remarkable. They play off of each other as if they had done it every day since the Dick Van Dyke show. A definite must see for fans of either.
Really more a filmed theatrical staging for PBS, than a true film per se, this two- hander is solidly acted by Dick Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore.
They play two very different types in an old age home: the extroverted, gregarious, but also somewhat volatile and misanthropic Weller and the introverted, prim Fonisa form a friendship over games of gin, which she has an uncanny knack for winning, even though she is a complete novice to the game.
In this production at least, the play feels sweet, funny, well written and occasionally touching, but also a bit familiar. And the characters' secrets aren't very surprising given the build up to their reveals.
But that said it can often invoke a smile, and the ending was surprisingly touching without resorting to the obvious or unsubtle.
While I didn't see the original production starring Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy, and directed by Mike Nichols, certainly the reviews I could find make it sound like a darker, more disturbing approach to the play and the characters, which I could imagine giving the whole thing more heft and power. While this never turned 'cute' it threatened to at moments.
But in the end, it was still fun to see these two excellent old pros go at it, and I was never bored or less than interested.
They play two very different types in an old age home: the extroverted, gregarious, but also somewhat volatile and misanthropic Weller and the introverted, prim Fonisa form a friendship over games of gin, which she has an uncanny knack for winning, even though she is a complete novice to the game.
In this production at least, the play feels sweet, funny, well written and occasionally touching, but also a bit familiar. And the characters' secrets aren't very surprising given the build up to their reveals.
But that said it can often invoke a smile, and the ending was surprisingly touching without resorting to the obvious or unsubtle.
While I didn't see the original production starring Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy, and directed by Mike Nichols, certainly the reviews I could find make it sound like a darker, more disturbing approach to the play and the characters, which I could imagine giving the whole thing more heft and power. While this never turned 'cute' it threatened to at moments.
But in the end, it was still fun to see these two excellent old pros go at it, and I was never bored or less than interested.
The movie was good and I was enthralled by the connection between Moore and Dyke. The only problem I had with the film was the ending. The ending is very abrupt when you don't really expect it.
Yet over all it was an intriguing story of two elderly people.
Yet over all it was an intriguing story of two elderly people.
Seeing Dick Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore reunited in a retirement home (or seeing Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy onstage in the original Broadway production), no doubt the audience thought they were going to see a charming "old folks still got it" romance. I certainly thought so, but it isn't like that at all! It's a heavy drama, showing that old folks still have tempers and emotional issues carried through the decades of their lives. Why watch something like that, especially since it usually stars a couple you'd like to see having a sweet relationship together?
Mary starts the movie new to the retirement home, and she's lonely. With no visits from the outside and no friends on the inside, she's drawn in by the outgoing personality of Dick when he invites her to play a game of gin rummy. They start to play and get to know each other, but the new acquaintanceship seems to push each other's buttons almost immediately. Mary rolls her eyes when Dick focuses on counting cards rather than answering her question, and Dick is a sore loser when Mary has a lucky streak.
My problem with this movie is the same problem I had with Wrestling Ernest Hemingway. There were so many plot twists the story could have taken (one option would be Mary and Dick are ex-spouses who try to start over, another surprise could be that Dick is Mary's imaginary friend, and a third is that a brain tumor is causing Dick's temper), but playwright D. L. Coburn wrote a very straight-forward story. There are no surprises, only two incompatible people who shouldn't really try to be friends with each other. Is the point of the story that most residents in retirement homes are so far gone they're not able to develop friendships, so Mary should just be grateful for a cohesive conversation with Dick?
The message I was able to garner is that old folks, although not exploring romantic options in this play, do "still got it" in other ways. They still have old hurts, issues that trigger arguments, and tempers that scare people. They also still have the acting chops to take on meaty roles. There's no reason for actors and actresses with white hair to be relegated to "kooky granny" parts. They can, and should, still headline movies for as long as they want to. Old people are just young people with wrinkles, and the sooner young people understand that the better.
Mary starts the movie new to the retirement home, and she's lonely. With no visits from the outside and no friends on the inside, she's drawn in by the outgoing personality of Dick when he invites her to play a game of gin rummy. They start to play and get to know each other, but the new acquaintanceship seems to push each other's buttons almost immediately. Mary rolls her eyes when Dick focuses on counting cards rather than answering her question, and Dick is a sore loser when Mary has a lucky streak.
My problem with this movie is the same problem I had with Wrestling Ernest Hemingway. There were so many plot twists the story could have taken (one option would be Mary and Dick are ex-spouses who try to start over, another surprise could be that Dick is Mary's imaginary friend, and a third is that a brain tumor is causing Dick's temper), but playwright D. L. Coburn wrote a very straight-forward story. There are no surprises, only two incompatible people who shouldn't really try to be friends with each other. Is the point of the story that most residents in retirement homes are so far gone they're not able to develop friendships, so Mary should just be grateful for a cohesive conversation with Dick?
The message I was able to garner is that old folks, although not exploring romantic options in this play, do "still got it" in other ways. They still have old hurts, issues that trigger arguments, and tempers that scare people. They also still have the acting chops to take on meaty roles. There's no reason for actors and actresses with white hair to be relegated to "kooky granny" parts. They can, and should, still headline movies for as long as they want to. Old people are just young people with wrinkles, and the sooner young people understand that the better.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe Broadway production of "The Gin Game" by D.L. Coburn opened at the John Golden Theater in New York on October 6, 1977 and ran for 517 performances.
- ConexionesFeatured in 18th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards (2012)
- Bandas sonorasTake This Waltz
Written by Leonard Cohen and Garcia Lorca
Sung by Scott Trammell
Courtesry of Sony Atv Songs LLC (BMI)
Estana Srl (SGAE) Adm. EMI Blackwood Publishing (BMI)
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