Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueGunnar Lindmark is a professor of psychology, while his wife Meret find here a reminiscent of an old extramarital love, ceased because of her lover's death. This crisis triggers jealousy of ... Tout lireGunnar Lindmark is a professor of psychology, while his wife Meret find here a reminiscent of an old extramarital love, ceased because of her lover's death. This crisis triggers jealousy of the professor who kills the Italian guy.Gunnar Lindmark is a professor of psychology, while his wife Meret find here a reminiscent of an old extramarital love, ceased because of her lover's death. This crisis triggers jealousy of the professor who kills the Italian guy.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Carabiniere
- (as Arturo Palladino)
- Monaco
- (as Moriones Francisco Javier)
Avis à la une
A young couple (Giuliano Gemma as Giulio and Rosemary Dexter as Laetitia) visits an island where they are befriended by an elderly couple (Gunnar Bjornstrand as Prof Gunnar Lindmark and Bibi Andersson as Margit Lindmark). On more than one occasion Prof Lindmark secretly watches Giulio and Laetitia making love on the beach. But why does he do that? Is he a sexual pervert? Does he have a voyeuristic interest in their lives? Or is he feeling jealous as he is impotent? All I can say is that the climax will leave you in a state of shock and you will keep thinking as to why some of the characters acted the way they did. I still remember my family members talking about the film and its ending after we had watched it. Unfortunately, I have never been able to watch it again.
Beautifully directed by Floresto Vancini on picturesque locales, "Blow Hot Blow Cold" will keep you on the edge of your seat right till the very last minute.
I saw the film much later on VHS. Coming to think of it, the film was surely bold for its time, at least for the Indian audience. It did not date well. In the early 1990s, it did not carry the sting that made the viewers rush to the theatres. Society had changed, and drastically too. The angle emphasized in the film was no longer a taboo..
But for sheer nostalgia, it deserves a 8/10.
Anyway, this is an interesting enough time capsule midway between arthouse drama and sexploitation thriller, with two well-off couples fatefully meeting at a Greek seaside resort. The older pair are a Swedish husband and wife who feel more like a self-important mid-career academic and his secretary/assistant--he's a pompous psychiatrist and she clearly barely tolerates his officiousness these days. The younger duo are Italians who can hardly help but catch their eye, as they are extremely attractive, openly amorous, and prone to get in public spats. The two couples sort of become "friends," in the way of short-lived fellow vacationers, though there are language barriers, and each side sort of judges the other. Nonetheless, the vitality and eroticism of the younger ones inevitably causes some envious (as well as stimulating) friction, leading rather predictably if not very convincingly to violence.
It's a good-looking, well-cast movie that's fine as far as it goes--and it must have felt like it went pretty far for 1969--but doesn't really have much psychological depth. In the end, there's nothing going on here beyond the stereotypes of frustrated older couple jealous of the young and carefree. Both couples have secrets (involving infidelity), but in the end the morality is simplistic generation-gap stuff, turning on irrational fury at the sexual freedom of youth. It's interesting if also a little off-putting that the young woman turns out to be a petulant brat, throwing tantrums over nothing, so we feel little for her current attachment--even less than we feel for the older pair, who are trapped in their marriage but no longer like (let alone love) each other, if they ever did. Maybe 55 years ago it was titillating enough to glimpse the failure of outwardly respectable relationships, but now it's just kinda dull, at least at this superficial level of insight and character writing.
Bibi Andersson is always compelling, though it feels like she's stuck playing a more trite version of figures she played for Bergman and others. Giuliano Gemma is a magnetic presence, physically and otherwise, faring best among the actors here at suggesting a whole developed personality we only grasp bits of; the other two leads are fine within the confines of their roles.
Unlike the similar dynamic in later films like "The Comfort of Strangers" or "Speak No Evil," the notion of one couple "preying" after another doesn't really turn into a full-blown suspense plot. Indeed, the main problem with "Blow Hot, Blow Cold" now is that there's not quite enough going on----watching these beautiful, variably repressed people at leisure in pretty places has a certain voyeuristic appeal, but soon it's clear there won't be much urgency of any kind, narrative or psychological. It's the classic case of an intriguing premise that promises much, but ends up feeling like a short story over-stretched to the screen equivalent of a novel's length.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBibi Andersson's only appearance in Italian film.
- Citations
Prof. Gunnar Lindmark: [repeated second to last line] It's over.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Cinema: Alguns Cortes - Censura III (2015)
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- How long is Blow Hot, Blow Cold?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
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- Blow Hot, Blow Cold
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- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 40 minutes