Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA mischievous high school sophomore faces a conflict of conscience vs. character when his best friend becomes linked to the death of a youth from another clique in suburban Middle America ci... Leer todoA mischievous high school sophomore faces a conflict of conscience vs. character when his best friend becomes linked to the death of a youth from another clique in suburban Middle America circa '76.A mischievous high school sophomore faces a conflict of conscience vs. character when his best friend becomes linked to the death of a youth from another clique in suburban Middle America circa '76.
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Opiniones destacadas
The writing and directing of Good Humour Man were top notch. Now if we can just get Tenney Fairchild and Vincent Chase in the same room...would that be something you're interested in?
The soundtrack, cinematography, and directing style of this movie were a refreshing departure from the CGI'd world.
Good Humour Man Trivia: Paul Mumford, who plays The Groom, was one of America's top sports car racers until he (along with Good Humour Man cameo, Chris Premer) died tragically in a plane crash outside of Corona, CA.
I believe Showtime is re-airing it a few times this month. Definitely a great way to chill out and have a few laughs.
The soundtrack, cinematography, and directing style of this movie were a refreshing departure from the CGI'd world.
Good Humour Man Trivia: Paul Mumford, who plays The Groom, was one of America's top sports car racers until he (along with Good Humour Man cameo, Chris Premer) died tragically in a plane crash outside of Corona, CA.
I believe Showtime is re-airing it a few times this month. Definitely a great way to chill out and have a few laughs.
I saw "The Good Humor Man" at Methodfest awhile back and then I heard it was going to be on TV. I watched it again and remembered just how good it was.
The overall feeling I had is that I was watching a film that had been lost in the 70's, gathering dust on a shelf in the back of an office, and someone found it and said, "maybe folks could relate to this today." It seems more as if it was made in that period rather than trying to evoke it. The production values definitely said "indie" to me (in a good way). I loved the transition from the well-lit, perfectly blocked and shot interiors to the grainy, almost home movie look of the exteriors. A less experienced director would have used a lot more hand-held and faster cuts. That would have been the easy way out. But Tenney Fairchild let the story dictate the shots and not the other way around. The script was brilliant, and I can see it becoming an instant "cult classic" in the most complimentary sense of the term. So many great lines -- I kept thinking, "I've got to remember that line," then there'd be another, and another...
Of course, the music had me from the word go, but I knew that it would going in. How can you go wrong with a score by Robin Trower? Everything about the look, of course -- the hair, clothes, cars, appliances, Pop-Tarts...
The juxtaposition of the raw, almost jarring language of the stoners (I didn't know there were that many slang terms for sex acts and body parts -- I should count next time -- actually, I'll bet someone has) with the tender, innocent, almost childlike relationship between the lovers was what made it like a perverse Afterschool Special. At its heart, it's really an old-fashioned romance.
I was rolling on the floor more than once -- at some point I started thinking, "man I wish I made this." I found myself wanting to rush things along at the start -- it felt a bit slow. By the end, I was looking at the clock thinking, "damn, that's it?" I didn't want it to end. I could stay with those kids another couple of hours.
The kids were great. It didn't feel scripted, for the most part. To me a great director doesn't "direct" so much as let the actors do what they do best. That's what I felt from opening to closing credits.
The overall feeling I had is that I was watching a film that had been lost in the 70's, gathering dust on a shelf in the back of an office, and someone found it and said, "maybe folks could relate to this today." It seems more as if it was made in that period rather than trying to evoke it. The production values definitely said "indie" to me (in a good way). I loved the transition from the well-lit, perfectly blocked and shot interiors to the grainy, almost home movie look of the exteriors. A less experienced director would have used a lot more hand-held and faster cuts. That would have been the easy way out. But Tenney Fairchild let the story dictate the shots and not the other way around. The script was brilliant, and I can see it becoming an instant "cult classic" in the most complimentary sense of the term. So many great lines -- I kept thinking, "I've got to remember that line," then there'd be another, and another...
Of course, the music had me from the word go, but I knew that it would going in. How can you go wrong with a score by Robin Trower? Everything about the look, of course -- the hair, clothes, cars, appliances, Pop-Tarts...
The juxtaposition of the raw, almost jarring language of the stoners (I didn't know there were that many slang terms for sex acts and body parts -- I should count next time -- actually, I'll bet someone has) with the tender, innocent, almost childlike relationship between the lovers was what made it like a perverse Afterschool Special. At its heart, it's really an old-fashioned romance.
I was rolling on the floor more than once -- at some point I started thinking, "man I wish I made this." I found myself wanting to rush things along at the start -- it felt a bit slow. By the end, I was looking at the clock thinking, "damn, that's it?" I didn't want it to end. I could stay with those kids another couple of hours.
The kids were great. It didn't feel scripted, for the most part. To me a great director doesn't "direct" so much as let the actors do what they do best. That's what I felt from opening to closing credits.
"The Good Humor Man" is a movie that takes place in the suburbs during the spring of 1976 and is about a smart high schooler whose parents question his choice in friends. Judging from the cover art of the DVD, it looks like a comedy very similar to its predecessors like "Dazed & Confused " (1993) , "Detroit Rock City" (1999), and the short-lived but legendary TV series "Freaks & Geeks" (1999-2000). The first 30 minutes of the movie feel like a comedy too, especially with Jorge Garcia playing a character nicknamed "Mt. Rushmore". It's not hard to compare Garcia to John Belushi. Not only does his facial features bear a striking resemblance to Saturday Night Live's fallen angel, but his Mt. Rushmore character lives for drinking and using drugs the same way Bluto Blutarsky did in "Animal House" (1978). Garcia echos Belushi in a unique way that miraculously doesn't translate as a rip off, and Garcia has a commanding presence on screen. Every time he's in a scene, he owns it big time.
Garcia is a supporting character in this film, the Falstaff to the Henry V that is Jay, played by Nathan Stevens. Jay is the central character, and Mt. Rushmore is the bad influence of a friend his yuppie parents (Elise Robertson and Kelsey Grammar) wish he would stop hanging out with. Jay also takes an interest in Wendy (the gorgeous Cameron Richardson), a girl in his class who is supposedly out of his league both financially and in terms of popularity. In high school, popularity is its own social class scale with blurry lines drawn that only high schoolers can see, and it's evident in this film perhaps better than in other high school movies.
So the setup for a high school comedy is here, but not even one quarter of the way through does the film take a strangely dark and dramatic turn while not letting go of its comedic ideals. Jay, Mt. Rushmore, and two other stoner buddies crash a wedding for the free booze and food. Mt. Rushmore and Jay mostly succeed in remaining incognito, but one of their friends makes anti semitic remarks to a guy their age wearing a yarmulke. Eventually, a fight breaks out resulting in more than just a damaged wedding cake. Ultimately, Mt. Rushmore gets into a fight with a popular jock at the wedding, goes from using fists to bringing out a knife, and unintentionally kills him.
This point is where the film pushed the envelope and sacrificed its comedic potential, but not its credibility. It still told a very intriguing story as Mt. Rushmore somehow manages to successfully hide from the police despite his size and his penchant for hanging out in the park with Jay and other acquaintances. Meanwhile, Jay refuses to tell the police about Mt. Rushmore's whereabouts in the only unrealistic part of the movie. Jay's reasons not to rat his friend out are understandable. In reality, it would seem as though the police would arrest him for holding evidence. Here, they shake their heads in dismay and leave, something that's unlikely to happen in real life.
Probably the scene I liked best involved Mt. Rushmore breaking into the basement of the guy he incidentally killed. There's no expression of remorse on his face, but his following actions scream through his skin that is thick both literally and figuratively. Garcia here really masters the storytelling rule of showing, not telling, and the result is quite powerful. Again, it takes the film in an unexpectedly dark direction, but not an inappropriate one.
Similarly, Jason Segel took a turn from what one would expect to be a comedic role as Smelly Bob, a 25-year-old ex-convict who for reasons unexplained likes to hang out with the stoner high school crowd. He's significantly older than the others, but doesn't look out of place and makes Matthew McConaughey's character in "Dazed & Confused" look noble. Plus, he plays a guy who's a far cry from the nice guy he would later make a name for himself as in "Forgetting Sarah Marshall" (2007) & "I Love You, Man" (2009).
Credit to this film also lies in Stevens' and Richardson's undeniable on-screen chemistry and poignant love scenes other filmmakers may have exploited for a cheap sex gag. This effective plot point added to the 70's decor that naturally fits into the film and the appropriately grainy picture that gives the film depth makes the film unique and original enough to recommend. It's just best to know that although this film has its funny moments, it's more dramatic than the cover art suggests. It may not be the filmmakers fault, although the name of this film doesn't quite fit with the story either. A part about ice cream is mentioned in the end, but you never know who the Good Humor Man is or why. Maybe that's the point of this film, but who knows?
Garcia is a supporting character in this film, the Falstaff to the Henry V that is Jay, played by Nathan Stevens. Jay is the central character, and Mt. Rushmore is the bad influence of a friend his yuppie parents (Elise Robertson and Kelsey Grammar) wish he would stop hanging out with. Jay also takes an interest in Wendy (the gorgeous Cameron Richardson), a girl in his class who is supposedly out of his league both financially and in terms of popularity. In high school, popularity is its own social class scale with blurry lines drawn that only high schoolers can see, and it's evident in this film perhaps better than in other high school movies.
So the setup for a high school comedy is here, but not even one quarter of the way through does the film take a strangely dark and dramatic turn while not letting go of its comedic ideals. Jay, Mt. Rushmore, and two other stoner buddies crash a wedding for the free booze and food. Mt. Rushmore and Jay mostly succeed in remaining incognito, but one of their friends makes anti semitic remarks to a guy their age wearing a yarmulke. Eventually, a fight breaks out resulting in more than just a damaged wedding cake. Ultimately, Mt. Rushmore gets into a fight with a popular jock at the wedding, goes from using fists to bringing out a knife, and unintentionally kills him.
This point is where the film pushed the envelope and sacrificed its comedic potential, but not its credibility. It still told a very intriguing story as Mt. Rushmore somehow manages to successfully hide from the police despite his size and his penchant for hanging out in the park with Jay and other acquaintances. Meanwhile, Jay refuses to tell the police about Mt. Rushmore's whereabouts in the only unrealistic part of the movie. Jay's reasons not to rat his friend out are understandable. In reality, it would seem as though the police would arrest him for holding evidence. Here, they shake their heads in dismay and leave, something that's unlikely to happen in real life.
Probably the scene I liked best involved Mt. Rushmore breaking into the basement of the guy he incidentally killed. There's no expression of remorse on his face, but his following actions scream through his skin that is thick both literally and figuratively. Garcia here really masters the storytelling rule of showing, not telling, and the result is quite powerful. Again, it takes the film in an unexpectedly dark direction, but not an inappropriate one.
Similarly, Jason Segel took a turn from what one would expect to be a comedic role as Smelly Bob, a 25-year-old ex-convict who for reasons unexplained likes to hang out with the stoner high school crowd. He's significantly older than the others, but doesn't look out of place and makes Matthew McConaughey's character in "Dazed & Confused" look noble. Plus, he plays a guy who's a far cry from the nice guy he would later make a name for himself as in "Forgetting Sarah Marshall" (2007) & "I Love You, Man" (2009).
Credit to this film also lies in Stevens' and Richardson's undeniable on-screen chemistry and poignant love scenes other filmmakers may have exploited for a cheap sex gag. This effective plot point added to the 70's decor that naturally fits into the film and the appropriately grainy picture that gives the film depth makes the film unique and original enough to recommend. It's just best to know that although this film has its funny moments, it's more dramatic than the cover art suggests. It may not be the filmmakers fault, although the name of this film doesn't quite fit with the story either. A part about ice cream is mentioned in the end, but you never know who the Good Humor Man is or why. Maybe that's the point of this film, but who knows?
The good humor man was a very interesting movie I have never seen a movie like that it was a love story some what but also it had a lot of drama in it. Things you would have not expected happened I liked the movie it was very real it was not a fairy tail at all it was very raw and to the point. Its just like real life cause things like that really happen. So those who have not seen it I'm not going to say to much but I recommend it. It just basically going into the life of teenagers and how they are separated into different clique's like Jocks and Burn outs. I like the romance about that because Wendy was able to look past the fact that her and Jay were from different backgrounds and thats what I liked about it the most.
I loved this movie. It is one of those small movies that is a great find. I have watched it several times and I figure out something new each time. I hope the director continues to make more movies because this one is very entertaining. I really liked the friendship between the character's "Jay" and "John". I think you could really see why they were the two guys in the group to be close. Then there was the good relationship "Jay" had with "Wendy" and his relationship with his parents. This was a great movie to discuss with friends. The movie also had some great lines. When Jay told his mom he would try to be a better "guest". I cracked up.
¿Sabías que…?
- ErroresThe movie is set in 1976, but the Chevrolet van-based ambulance which takes Jay to the hospital has a grill which indicates that it is a 1978 or later model year vehicle.
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 1,000,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 52 minutos
- Color
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By what name was The Good Humor Man (2005) officially released in Canada in English?
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