Desilusionado con el mundo del cine, Chili Palmer intenta labrarse un futuro en la industria musical ligando con la viuda de un ejecutivo.Desilusionado con el mundo del cine, Chili Palmer intenta labrarse un futuro en la industria musical ligando con la viuda de un ejecutivo.Desilusionado con el mundo del cine, Chili Palmer intenta labrarse un futuro en la industria musical ligando con la viuda de un ejecutivo.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 13 nominaciones en total
- Elliot Wilhelm
- (as The Rock)
- Sin LaSalle
- (as Cedric the Entertainer)
- Dabu
- (as André Benjamin)
- Darryl
- (as GregAlan Williams)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Some movies play with this idea, and "Get Shorty" was one of the most clever of these.
It had two elements: that notion of acting cool and the explicit self-reference of putting it in movies, complete with the command to "look at me."
Behind it was one of the coolest thinkers in cinema, Danny Devito who is a kind of patron saint of self-reference. He who made a film based on "Pale Fire" and whose "Death to Smoochy" is a pinnacle of sorts of introspective writing.
Now comes this, which starts out okay, along the same lines of heavy self-reference until we learn that Devito is to star in a biopic of Johnny Cash.
Then the grind of the inferior mind behind it begins.
Seems they had some idea that Uma Thurman fit into an intelligent enterprise somewhere.
Nope, none of the few things she can do fit into self-reference or folding in any way.
Seems they decided that a mere reference to performance wasn't enough, we had to have the whole pretty-girl-overcomes-adversity thing complete with several performances.
Nope, again.
And they figured that all the cool identity stuff would be carried by a white guy acting black and a black guy acting white.
Nope, nope , nope.
Go watch any Devito-inspired project rather than this.
Ted's Evaluation -- 1 of 3: You can find something better to do with this part of your life.
This was a comedy. And with comedy you allow for the nonsense. The nonsense makes us laugh. However, the comedy in this movie was clichéd. There was a white guy acting black, a gay aspiring actor, shady record producers and homicidal rappers. Of course John Travolta danced with Uma Thurman. Count the movies John Travolta doesn't dance in. And to boot, Cedric the Entertainer was not funny. It hurts me. The first introduction audiences had to Chili Palmer was unique. But in the sequel, we already knew Chili's cool as ice, no nonsense approach to project management. The only thing we had to look forward to was the immense supporting cast, most of whom were incredibly disappointing. I'm not going to say it was totally unfunny. I laughed. But also, I cried. I cried. It's strictly a numbers game. Put 75 people in the cast and someone is bound to make you laugh. As for the completely insulting product placements, note to Hollywood producers, AUDIENCE IS NOT SUPPOSED TO KNOW.
I feel bad now. Then again I don't. I've often said that sequels are never as good as the first. The Godfather II's are the exception, not the rule.
F. Gary Gray does a neat job. The jokes work excellently. The film is well-paced and the writing is consistent. Steinfeld does a good job of rewriting Leonard's book for the big screen. The humour works excellently. None of the jokes fall flat and the cast and crew seem to have had a blast making this film.
It's a shame that the film wasn't as big a success as it's prequel. Frankly, I enjoyed it more than 'Get Shorty'. Above all, 'Be Cool' is a splendid entertainer that will draw loads of laughs.
Chili is back but Rene Russo is gone without a peep. Unfortunately Chili's game was played out in the first movie and rather than find an interesting personal arc for him, they just have him stand around repeating lines from the first movie. It's pretty tepid. Travolta looks old here. It's like they move people around him because his bones are getting creaky. His pink lip gloss and the blue eye contacts are very weird. The 2nd bad role is Edie (played by Uma Thurman). She's a music producer, a role that requires her only to be the female Reuben Kincaid. ("Hey these kids have a great new sound.") In any scene she strikes the wrong pitch motivationally or emotionally or both. It's painful to watch. Despite it's plentiful problems, Be Cool gets better after a very unpromising start.
I certainly got my laughs out of it (Vince Vaughan running around on fire, Cedric the Entertainer, Ludicrous, the Rock, a t-shirt that says "widow" on it), but it offers no great memories after it's over. It's a helium-light love fest from the first frame. There's no one as pricelessly idiotic as Gene Hackman in the first movie. It's just about doing good in the world, for a couple of kids who deserve a chance (Beyonce & the Rock). Ho-hum. The first one wasn't preachy.
Working in (repeatedly) gags & lines from the first movie is annoying as is the dumb concession to the Rock's wrestling fans (he raises his eyebrow twice) as are the droll inside jokes: Steven Tyler saying "I'm not the kind of singer that make appearances in movies" ar ar.
The all-star spectacular line-up is part of the problem. The first movie wasn't burdened by "stars."
For a buck rental let's call it even.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaJohn Travolta suggested Uma Thurman for the role of Edie, wanting to re-create their chemistry from Tiempos violentos (1994).
- ErroresWhen Chili meets Steven Tyler after the basketball match, Tyler can be seen mouthing other actors' lines.
- Citas
Sin LaSalle: Have you lost your mind? I mean, how is it that you can disrespect a mans ethnicity when you know we've influenced nearly every facet of white America... from our music to our style of dress. Not to mention your basic imitation of our sense of cool; walk, talk, dress, mannerisms... we enrich your very existence, all the while contributing to the gross national product through our achievements in corporate America. It's these conceits that comfort me when I am faced with the ignorant, cowardly, bitter and bigoted, who *have* no talent, no guts? people like you who desecrate things they don't understand when the truth is - you should say thank-you, man? and go on about your way. But apparently you are incapable of doing that! So...
[shoots his gun]
Sin LaSalle: ... and don't tell me to be cool. I *am* cool!
- Créditos curiososIn the closing credits, the various cast members are seen dancing, even the Russian "corpse".
- ConexionesEdited into Solos por accidente (2005)
- Bandas sonorasSexy
Written by Antonio Carlos Jobim, Vinicius de Moraes, Will.i.am (as Will Adams)
Performed by The Black Eyed Peas
Courtesy of A&M Records
Under License from Universal Music Enterprises
Selecciones populares
- How long is Be Cool?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Be Cool
- Locaciones de filmación
- Canter's Deli - 419 N Fairfax Ave, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos(Raji's meeting with Joe Loop)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 53,000,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 56,046,979
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 23,450,212
- 6 mar 2005
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 95,763,716
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 58 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1