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Husbands

  • 1970
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 34min
NOTE IMDb
7,1/10
7,8 k
MA NOTE
Peter Falk, John Cassavetes, and Ben Gazzara in Husbands (1970)
After the death of a common friend, three married men leave their lives together, seeking pleasure and freedom and ultimately leaving for London.
Lire trailer3:46
1 Video
48 photos
Buddy ComedyDark ComedyComedyDrama

Après la mort d'un ami commun, trois hommes mariés abandonnent simultanément leur vie pour trouver le plaisir et la liberté, puis partent pour Londres.Après la mort d'un ami commun, trois hommes mariés abandonnent simultanément leur vie pour trouver le plaisir et la liberté, puis partent pour Londres.Après la mort d'un ami commun, trois hommes mariés abandonnent simultanément leur vie pour trouver le plaisir et la liberté, puis partent pour Londres.

  • Réalisation
    • John Cassavetes
  • Scénario
    • John Cassavetes
  • Casting principal
    • Ben Gazzara
    • Peter Falk
    • John Cassavetes
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,1/10
    7,8 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • John Cassavetes
    • Scénario
      • John Cassavetes
    • Casting principal
      • Ben Gazzara
      • Peter Falk
      • John Cassavetes
    • 56avis d'utilisateurs
    • 34avis des critiques
    • 66Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:46
    Trailer

    Photos48

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    + 41
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    Rôles principaux41

    Modifier
    Ben Gazzara
    Ben Gazzara
    • Harry
    Peter Falk
    Peter Falk
    • Archie Black
    John Cassavetes
    John Cassavetes
    • Gus Demetri
    Jenny Runacre
    Jenny Runacre
    • Mary Tynan
    Jenny Lee Wright
    Jenny Lee Wright
    • Pearl Billingham
    Noelle Kao
    • Julie
    John Kullers
    • Red
    Meta Shaw Stevens
    • Annie
    • (as Meta Shaw)
    Leola Harlow
    • Leola
    Delores Delmar
    • The Countess
    Eleanor Zee
    • Mrs. Hines
    Claire Malis
    • Stuart's Wife
    Peggy Lashbrook
    • Diana Mallabee
    Eleanor Cody Gould
    • 'Normandy' Singer
    • (as Eleanor Gould)
    Sarah Felcher
    • Sarah
    Bill Britten
      Arthur Clark
      Gwen Van Dam
      • Gwen - "Jeanie" Singer
      • Réalisation
        • John Cassavetes
      • Scénario
        • John Cassavetes
      • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
      • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

      Avis des utilisateurs56

      7,17.8K
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      Avis à la une

      Lechuguilla

      Mid-Life Male Bonding

      As a reaction to the death of a close buddy, three middle-age men, all married with kids, go on a wild psychological joyride that includes, among other things, getting drunk, gambling, and hooking up with some prostitutes. Their reaction is, in fact, overreaction to a mid-life crisis, wherein marriage, children, and jobs create the social chains that bind.

      The story's basic premise renders an interesting theme. Given some traumatic event, like the death of someone we know, it's natural to grieve and reflect on the choices we've made. We thus gain perspective. But these guys seem oblivious to that process. Their only interest is juvenile self-indulgence of the moment, which creates behavior that is boorish and crude. I could not get interested in them or their drama. Nor did I have any respect for them.

      The film's visuals are okay. But the runtime is way too long. A ninety-minute plot would have gotten the point across. Every minute beyond that is superfluous. Some segments are painfully drawn-out, like the one wherein they sit around a table in a bar getting drunk and listening to other people sing silly songs. And the script's dialogue is very talky. Basically, the entire plot can be summarized as three guys getting drunk, vomiting, and talking endlessly about themselves.

      Acting is borderline at best. Some scenes encourage improvisation in acting and dialogue. Visuals trend conventional. There are a lot of close-up shots.

      "Husbands" tries to be a social commentary on the ties that bind. But the plot and characters are rather awful. Direction and performances trend pretentious and self-conscious. And the whole bloated production seems misguided.
      8tomgillespie2002

      A depressing, brutal experience

      There's no doubting the film-making innovation of the pioneer of American independent cinema, John Cassavetes. But if any of his films were to be considered a stain on his CV, it would be Husbands. That is only because his filmography is so highly praised, and Husbands divided the critics between those who hailed it as one of the best films ever made, and those who found the whole experience relentlessly depressing and tediously long. I'm somewhere in the middle, finding the film occasionally dipping into awkward, slightly forced improvisations, while offering some quite distressing and powerful insights into men going through a midlife crisis.

      After the death of their friend, three middle-aged men - Harry (Ben Gazzara), Gus (Cassavetes) and Archie (Peter Falk) - find it difficult to cope. We follow them over the course of two days, where they drink heavily, play basketball together, and have a boisterous singing contest with friends and family. After returning home from his binge, Harry is thrown out by his wife, and shortly after announces he is flying to London. Seemingly with nothing better to do, Gus and Archie decide to join him, where they indulge is more drinking, gambling, and womanising. Gus finds himself with a much younger woman named Mary (Jenny Runacre), who is wild and unpredictable.

      In the same vein as Faces (1968), Cassavetes adopts a cinema verite style, while taking the story and characters to almost hyper-reality. This is not quite the world we live in, only it feels like it. It's a more extreme world, where everything is just a little bit more depressing and the inhabitants are always loathsome in one way or another. It's as if Cassavetes wants us to take a real look at ourselves, whoever we are, and be repulsed. Harry, Gus and Archie are despicable, taking no second thoughts when committing adultery, and ultimately being loud, angry and disgusting when in the presence of others. They are also empty, devoid of any real emotion, only finding any real solitude in each other's company.

      Judging from the title, Cassavetes uses the film to summarise a broad idea as to why men must go through this at some point in their life. The trio are little more than wild children, only with sexual experience, and the camera, as usual, is close, capturing the slightest facial movement, almost to the point of infringement. It's a depressing, brutal experience, where scenes go on for much longer than they should, making us want to get away from these characters. But maybe that's the point, and Cassavetes takes it to the extreme to push his point across. The final scene is certainly worth the wait however, managing to depict a character in one simple close-up as both tragic and pathetic.

      www.the-wrath-of-blog.blogspot.com
      jlabine

      One Of The Most Brilliant Films Of All Time!

      John Cassavetes' 1970 masterpiece "Husbands" is by far one of my favourite films of all time! I'm aware that this film divides a lot of fans of John Cassavetes. Some love it, and some loathe it. And to be honest, I can understand both sides. But I find it extremely dramatic, funny, touching, brutal, and thought provoking. Some have complained that it is too long, misogynistic, contrived, pretentious, and badly acted. You're intitled to your opinion, but I don't share it. John Cassavetes' cinema was never to appeal to mass aproval or for enjoyment. It's meant to slap you in the face silly, wrench emotions out, throw you into uneasy laughter, put you ill at ease with an uncomfortable situation, drag out scenarios pass the point of tediousness, get into your skin, get into your brain, and have you walking out of the theatre feeling like you just got off a rollercoaster. If you haven't felt this by the end, then I'm afraid you should ask your designer to input an emotion chip in the android brain of yours. Lots of film directors make great, fun, entertaining, and dramatic films. But few take on the emotional coach role. Cassavetes has you running around nerve ends exposed, doing laps around your own personal plights, guilts, and loves. Maybe I've painted an over the top description of his films, but when I think back on his films, this is what comes to mind. I have a very hard time criticizing his films, because his films abandon typical cinema interpetation. He does not follow cinema rules, therefore I cannot follow typical rules of criticisim. Cassavetes had inserted a heart into celluloid, that burns before the eyes on the cinema screen. The film "Husbands" begins with three middle age males attending the funeral of a fourth friend. We have John Cassavetes (Gus), Peter Falk (Archie), and Ben Gazzara (Harry) returning to the man-child role, as they escape from middle age suburbia on a European bender. The bender includes scenes of drunkeness, singing, basketball, gambling, picking up girls, picking on people, and often making complete asses of themselves. This film is just too thick on topics to have a simple review give it any justice. But I urge everyone to experience his cinema with an open mind, and commitment. John Cassavetes has given us this commitment in making it. He is truly a genius of independent films, and is obviously (in my book) up there with Orson Wells, Francois Truffaut, and Alfred Hitchcock as one of the greatest directors in cinema history. Be prepared to not like everything you see, because I don't think he wanted you to. He wanted an emotional reaction that sticks on your brain. I've read that he said "We only have 2 hours to change someones life", and for me...he did! May John Cassavetes live on forever! I give this movie a 10!
      8Sardony

      "Jazz" acting

      A Cassavetes film is like good jazz music: both are largely improvisational with the actor/musicians playing off each other. With Cassavetes, a basic written theme is provided and the actors embellish upon it; rhythms, tempos and emotional counterpoint are deftly manipulated. In HUSBANDS, Cassavetes is the bandleader, and Peter Falk and Ben Gazzara prove themselves to be two of the best "jazz actors" ever. HUSBANDS is "a guy film." Women have their "girl films," but here's one for we men (and for women who want to understand men). Cassavetes, Falk and Gazzara play three best friends who have just lost their fourth to a sudden death. The surviving three, all 40-something, run away from their marriages, jobs and other shackles for a few days in search of themselves, meaning, purpose. Along the way, we are intimately exposed to their fears, dreams, passions, disgusts, and their love for each other (expertly depicted male bonding: guys who understand each others' emotions, with masculinity remaining intact). Perhaps no other filmmaker/actor combo than Cassavetes and his "company" of actors have ever succeeded as well at depicting so uncompromisingly life's emotional truth. Mind you, Cassavetes' style and camera paints in broad loose strokes, so be forewarned if you dislike a hand-held shaky camera and sometimes out-of-focus shots as the camera operator tries to follow the improvising actor. But HUSBANDS has far less of this than, say, Cassavetes' FACES. And this is not all a downer film; there's much humor, too, in its sometimes bittersweet mood (for example, the Countess scene: "take your hand off my hand") All in all, and though a little long, a great film; well worth the time.
      dj_bassett

      A Classic of it's Type

      Three men (Falk, Cassavettes, and Gazzara) mourn the death of a friend by going on a long-weekend bender, during which they talk about life, experience masculine pleasures, and try to understand the meaning of it all.

      This was the first Cassavettes movie I've ever seen. I liked it, which was surprising because this is not the sort of movie I'm generally interested in. There's almost no plot to speak of, most of the movie feels improvised (although improvised along certain set themes -- one does feel the heavy hand of the director here and there). It's a slice of life movie that still feels pretty rough and daring; I imagine in 1970, when this came out, people couldn't make hide nor hare of it.

      Like most movies of this type, the big flaw is structure. The movie takes forever to get going, and doesn't really seem to know when to quit: the last reel, in particular, felt a little long to me. Plus, as I said, there is here and there a sense of a structure being imposed from without: the guys don't just do anything, they do certain set things for "character revelation" sake.

      The acting, which is the crucial thing in a movie like this, of course, doesn't disappoint. All three men are very believable: they delineate their macho world quite well, with it's romanticism, bathos, insecurities and obnoxiousness. They're similar types of guys, which bothered me a lot at first but upon reflection made a lot of sense, since in real life we tend to be friends with people like us. Still, there are gradations and variations: Falk is inarticulate and sensitive, Gazzara despairing, Cassavettes is fumbling toward some kind of self-recognition.

      The cinematography is absolutely stunning -- I might have seen a particularly nice print but this took me by surprise. Most of the movie is shot in warm, earthy, romantic tones, which sets the mood of nostalgia and dreams well, I think. Every now and then, though, we get a cold, full-on daytime shot where everyone looks naked and blinking under a frigid sun; it's a good counterpoint.

      This is an important film by an important director. He'll never be a favorite of mine, but I'll definitely check out other work of his. You'll be doing yourself a favor if you do the same.

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      Histoire

      Modifier

      Le saviez-vous

      Modifier
      • Anecdotes
        Screenwriter John Cassavetes wrote the film's dialogue after doing improvisations with actors Ben Gazzara and Peter Falk. Reportedly, Cassavetes built the film's three main central characterizations around the real-life personalities of the film's three main actors one of whom included himself.
      • Citations

        Archie Black: [Arriving at the funeral] I suppose this is proper, all these big cars and chauffeurs. Black shiny cars. Seems dopey for a guy like that. Well, I guess that's what they do. People get symbolic over death. They get very formal, and it's really ridiculous. Because it's probably the most humiliating thing in the world. But I feel very relaxed. People die of tensions. That's all they die of, Gus. That's the truth. Did you know that? I know it, and it's something I'm never gonna forget.

        Gus Demetri: Don't believe truth. Just don't believe truth. Archie, I'm telling you, don't believe truth.

        Archie Black: That is the truth now. You see, the truth will never kill you. Lies will. Not cigarettes, not alcohol. Lies, Gus. Lies and tensions. That'll kill you. That'll kill you before cancer in the heart. Did you know that?

      • Crédits fous
        There are no closing credits and no "THE END" title card. The screen just goes black. In the opening credits, everyone involved in the film (even the "little people") are credited on two "tell all" title cards, right on down from the actors to the grips, a total of 82 credits.
      • Versions alternatives
        The original theatrical release ran 154 minutes. The out-of-print VHS release from Columbia/Tristar runs 132 minutes.
      • Connexions
        Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Cousins/The Mighty Quinn/True Believer/Tap (1989)
      • Bandes originales
        Show Me the Way to Go Home
        (1925) (uncredited)

        Written by Irving King

        Sung a cappella by Ben Gazzara, Peter Falk and John Cassavetes

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      FAQ16

      • How long is Husbands?Alimenté par Alexa

      Détails

      Modifier
      • Date de sortie
        • 17 mars 1972 (France)
      • Pays d’origine
        • États-Unis
      • Langues
        • Anglais
        • Français
        • Italien
        • Cantonais
      • Aussi connu sous le nom de
        • Les Maris
      • Lieux de tournage
        • Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
      • Société de production
        • Faces Music
      • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

      Box-office

      Modifier
      • Budget
        • 1 000 000 $US (estimé)
      • Montant brut mondial
        • 2 735 $US
      Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

      Spécifications techniques

      Modifier
      • Durée
        2 heures 34 minutes
      • Couleur
        • Color
      • Mixage
        • Mono
      • Rapport de forme
        • 1.85 : 1

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      Peter Falk, John Cassavetes, and Ben Gazzara in Husbands (1970)
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