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IMDbPro

Toys

  • 1992
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 58min
NOTE IMDb
5,1/10
35 k
MA NOTE
Robin Williams in Toys (1992)
Home Video Trailer from 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Lire trailer0:32
2 Videos
28 photos
AdventureComedyDramaFamilyFantasy

Lorsque le lieutenant général Leland Zevo hérite d'une entreprise de fabrication de jouets et commence à fabriquer des jouets de guerre, ses employés se regroupent pour l'arrêter avant qu'il... Tout lireLorsque le lieutenant général Leland Zevo hérite d'une entreprise de fabrication de jouets et commence à fabriquer des jouets de guerre, ses employés se regroupent pour l'arrêter avant qu'il ne ruine à jamais le nom de Zevo Toys.Lorsque le lieutenant général Leland Zevo hérite d'une entreprise de fabrication de jouets et commence à fabriquer des jouets de guerre, ses employés se regroupent pour l'arrêter avant qu'il ne ruine à jamais le nom de Zevo Toys.

  • Réalisation
    • Barry Levinson
  • Scénario
    • Valerie Curtin
    • Barry Levinson
  • Casting principal
    • Robin Williams
    • Michael Gambon
    • Joan Cusack
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,1/10
    35 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Barry Levinson
    • Scénario
      • Valerie Curtin
      • Barry Levinson
    • Casting principal
      • Robin Williams
      • Michael Gambon
      • Joan Cusack
    • 181avis d'utilisateurs
    • 30avis des critiques
    • 40Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 2 Oscars
      • 12 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Toys
    Trailer 0:32
    Toys
    Toys
    Trailer 0:32
    Toys
    Toys
    Trailer 0:32
    Toys

    Photos28

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 20
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    Rôles principaux59

    Modifier
    Robin Williams
    Robin Williams
    • Leslie Zevo
    Michael Gambon
    Michael Gambon
    • General Zevo
    Joan Cusack
    Joan Cusack
    • Alsatia Zevo
    Robin Wright
    Robin Wright
    • Gwen Tyler
    LL Cool J
    LL Cool J
    • Patrick Zevo
    Donald O'Connor
    Donald O'Connor
    • Kenneth Zevo
    Arthur Malet
    Arthur Malet
    • Owen Owens
    Jack Warden
    Jack Warden
    • Old General Zevo
    Debi Mazar
    Debi Mazar
    • Nurse Debbie
    Wendy Melvoin
    • Choir Soloist
    Julio Oscar Mechoso
    Julio Oscar Mechoso
    • Cortez
    Jamie Foxx
    Jamie Foxx
    • Baker
    Shelly Desai
    Shelly Desai
    • Shimera
    Blake Clark
    Blake Clark
    • Hogenstern
    Art Metrano
    Art Metrano
    • Guard at Desk
    Tommy Townsend
    • General Tegnell
    Clinton Allmon
    • General Magraw
    Kate Benton
    • Researcher
    • Réalisation
      • Barry Levinson
    • Scénario
      • Valerie Curtin
      • Barry Levinson
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs181

    5,134.5K
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    Avis à la une

    willHp

    Kubrick lives!

    *** and a half/****

    Toys comes very close to being perfect. First, it is the closest I have seen a director come to creating a Kubrick style of filmaking. However, the ending for this movie is terrible.

    Toys is about a man named Leslie Zevo whose father's toy company is taken over by his uncle, General Leland Zevo. The General tries to change the toy line from wind-up toys and dolls to military equipment and is trying to create a toy army operated by little children on remote the control. The plot sounds far fetched but it works.

    The beginning of this movie if flawless. The entire production design was definately Oscar worthy. Barry Levinson manages to create this incredible world. I actually did feel like I as watching a Stanley Kubrick film because of the camera and design. There's one chilling scene were Robin Williams is discussing some of the novelty items the company will produce and as he does it the walls of the room he is in slowly close in because the General needs more space to build his war toys. Out of all the films I've seen in the 90's this scene would rank as one of the most memorable amoung them.

    The performances are good. Michael Gambon and Robin Williams are both strong (I think Robin Wright was mis-cast though). However, Joan Cusack gives one of the most incredible performances I've ever seen. She plays a very child like adult, almost retarded but doesn't quite cross the line. The risks she takes and her characterization are all brilliant. There is one momennt when she is at her father's funeral and she just talks about how the word "tinhorns" stays with her. It's so beautiful and pure.

    Now, about the ending. There is a scene in the film where the General tries to kill a fly with a gun. The movie should have ended with him trying to shoot the fly, but then shooting himself. However, there is this whole cliche plotline about bad guys becoming good, there's a toy battle which goes against the thematic elements of the movie, and there's an unesecary love scene that ruins the Kubrickian mood. The ending actually reminded me of a movie called Baby Geniuses and anyone who has seen both movies (which I'm sure is unlikely) will agree with me.

    Oh well, if you see Toys watch up to the scene with the General and the fly and then stop. If you do this, you will have one of the most enjoyable cinematic experiences of your life.
    hausrathman

    Ultimately Contradictory

    An eccentric, pacifistic toymaker, Robin Williams, learns to take responsibility and assert himself after his father leaves the family toy factory to his uncle, Michael Gambon, a retired army general, who violates the company philosophy by making war toys. Director Barry Levinson, a sometimes brilliant writer, used his considerable prestige to make this very big film built around this very simple analogy: War is bad/innocence (toys) is good. This film would have had more relevance in 1972 than 1992. As it is, it is two decades too late and two tons too heavy. Worse still, the climax is directly contradicts the theme of the film. Robin Williams is only able to gain the maturity to take control of the company by waging a toy war. Hmmmm, maybe war isn't so bad after all. Still, the film is not a total washout. The sets are quite imaginative, and the film does manage to generate an interesting atmosphere - if you're in the mood for such things. The most interesting thing, however, is the casting of rapper LL Cool J as Michael Gambon's son and Robin Williams' cousin. No explanation is given for the fact that he's African-American. That's a nice touch.
    9smatexas

    Genius

    I know several people who think this movie is horrible. I saw a contestant on "Jeopardy" who professed himself to be a movie expert who said that this movie was the worst of all time. I think that "Toys" is a masterpiece of surreal cinema, and I rank it among the greatest 100 movies ever made (My list, of course). The cast is amazing, and LL Cool J is great..I love people who don't like their food to touch! What are the detractors thinking? Maybe they are the morons! Toys RULES, especially the opening scene...I think that this movie's detractors need to view this movie again with open eyes, and see the amazing vision that this movie imparts. It is pure genius.
    5IonicBreezeMachine

    An absolute visual marvel, but not much substance

    If there's anything to be said for Toys, it's a wonderful movie to look at. In terms of its tone, visuals, atmosphere, and set designs Toys knows exactly what type of world it wants to create. Unfortunately while we do have a beautiful looking world on display, we don't have much of a story taking us through it. After an eccentric toy inventor dies, feeling his son(Robin Williams) is not yet ready for the responsibility of running the factory, he instead arranges for his embittered career military man brother(Michael Gambon) to take over instead despite him only doing so because he can't get promoted past his current rank. From here it the movie the movie builds itself upon the conflict between Williams and Gambon where Williams wants the factory to continue build toys the fit the soft, playful, and creative philosophy of his late father, while Gambon wants to use the factory to build military hardware and arcade games where kids who think they're shooting enemies are actually wiping out entire cities........you read that correctly. The movie tries to use Williams' character as a representation of "classic" more "innocent times" while Gambon is supposed to be a commentary on the toy industry becoming more based on war and action tropes around the 80s with heavy emphasis on war, weapons, and other aspects of a similar nature. It's not like there isn't ground to be explored on the topic of how our portrayals of war affect societies attitudes towards it, especially in how it's marketed to youth, but it never fully commits to this idea and instead lends more focus to Williams comedy or the oddness of the set design. Even taking its lack of focus into account, the movie's fantastical nature works against what it's trying to explore because it's so divorced from our own reality feeling more in line with Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory or Babes in Toyland in terms of its tone and visuals that whatever statement it wanted to make on the nature of war toys or shooting gallery video games loses its impact. Toys is not a bad movie, it's clumsily written and feels like it wants to make a statement on a topic without fully understanding or exploring it, but it is well intentioned and made with genuinely craft and care. It's worth seeing maybe once for the visuals, but there's not much beyond the visuals that'll stick with you past the end credits.
    6TonyDood

    How I Love to Hate This Movie!

    I've seen this film dozens of times over the years, even though I hate it; it's become an annual Christmas tradition at this point. Why? Certainly the production design is a delight to the eyes, even all these years after the fact, maybe even moreso in a CG-saturated world. Robin Williams' performance has taken on new depth in the wake of his demise; we shall not see his like again. The film contains interesting ideas about war, and war toys, and innocence loss and gained, topics that seem uncomfortably forward-thinking in retrospect (or something). There are some clever set pieces and thought-provoking visual moments, without question.

    I detested this film when I first saw it on laser disc around Christmas 1993. I fast-forwarded through the entire end battle scene because I found it so dull. I thought the film was messy, unfocused, icky, indulgent and passionless--cookie-cutter. It was part of a wave of bloated fantasy films from the late 80s and early 90s ("Willow", "Mario Brothers"), some good, some bad. It was marketed as being weird-but-quaint, an appeal to those of us raised with Willy Wonka, with all-star cameos sifted in for good measure. It reeked of commercialism and pre-packaging and I was probably too old for it when I saw it. My younger brother saw it first-run in a theater and could only mutter later, "It isn't what you might think it would be."

    It's a poorly made film, without a doubt--the opening and ending scenes seem to have been imported in from another project entirely; the coverage in the opening scenes alone is all over the place, a mish-mosh of angles and under-developed ideas that suggests a Christmas pageant of some kind (the only Christmas reference in the film, entirely superflous as it turns out). Later, while Michael Gambon is touring the toy factory it seems clear second-unit footage of an actual scene of dialog was used (dialog muted), randomly cut in to an already-busy and unconsidered moment. Characters come and go with no purpose, random whims spark and are gone ("This is my noise-making suit" "I really like Yolanda and Steve!"), tonally the film shifts from sentimental childish muck to an out-of-nowhere sex scene to the exploding (murdering) of charming kids' toys. Mr. Gambon is a bad-guy caricature filmed from below so you're forced to look up his nose and deal with his bloated, wide-eyed face at all times. Williams and Cuzack seem to be making up their performances as they go, playing creepy adult children, with the latter really hamming it up in "quirky" mode. Set designs exist for no purpose other than to be "cool" (and they truly are), the music, while wonderful, is shoe-horned in to the film at regular intervals (Tori Amos' "Happy Workers" is particularly cringe-worthy, even though the song itself is neato--it's painfully obvious a choreographer was hired and then had to be put to use somehow). It's difficult to care about the characters and their situations or even know what's going on half the time, and the whole bloody thing just goes on and on, until it finally comes to a sputtering stop, ending with a dreamlike, if inexplicable, credit sequence with a flying elephant statue that blows bubbles.

    As I said, I really couldn't stand this movie initially, but I kept thinking about it over the years. At some point (probably when I chanced to watched the film on pain meds some time ago now) I began to get into the movie somehow. My co-workers at the time, who had all been kids when the movie was on cable, loved it, they said. Looking at it now, the film reminds me of another time--the score (including Thomas Dolby? In 1992?) and many of the pop culture nods (like a groan-worthy MTV product-placement moment halfway through) were already old and tired when it came out but represent a specific time of historical arrogance in the US, a time long gone.

    After having seen the movie at least once, one doesn't expect any more than what it has to offer in terms of narrative, freeing the viewer from the need for a story and allowing one to peek into another world, a pre-9/11 place where the hubris of Hollywood was at an all-time high. It's like Spielberg's "1941" or "Hook," it's fun to watch people tossing money about and indulging in their artistic whims, even at the cost of the audience's patience (and lack of financial support). I get a little wistful nowadays, thinking of the old concept of the "tentpole" movie and how audiences used to flock to a film just because someone like Williams was in it. "Toys" is a good example of the kind of films that were made once upon a time, for better or worse, and whatever else the movie may be about (I honestly couldn't tell you, after all these years, what it's actually "about") it works as a fairytale on that level alone.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The scene with Leslie Zevo (Robin Williams) addressing his troops was ad-libbed. Levinson kept a camera rolling everytime Williams was on-set.
    • Gaffes
      In the arcade scene, a cabinet of the Konami shoot 'em up Lightning Fighters is shown. However, upon seeing the game itself, it is actually the Sega flight simulator Strike Fighter.
    • Citations

      Patrick Zevo: I can't even eat. The food keeps touching. I like military plates, I'm a military man, I want a military meal. I want my string beans to be quarantined! I like a little fortress around my mashed potatoes so the meatloaf doesn't invade my mashed potatoes and cause mixing in my plate! I HATE IT when food touches! I'm a military man, you understand that? And don't let your food touch either, please?

    • Crédits fous
      During the credits, we see a dreamlike sequence of the elephant statue from Kenneth's grave flying over the hills.
    • Versions alternatives
      The1993 UK VHS versions omit a sexual reference of around 5 seconds to obtain a 'PG' rating.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: A Few Good Men/The Muppet Christmas Carol/Leap of Faith/Passion Fish (1992)
    • Bandes originales
      Winter Reveries (excerpts from SYMPHONY NO. 1)
      Composed by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

      Arranged and Edited by Trevor Horn

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Toys?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 28 avril 1993 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • O'yinchoqlar
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Rosalia, Washington, États-Unis
    • Sociétés de production
      • Baltimore Pictures
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 43 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 23 278 931 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 4 810 027 $US
      • 20 déc. 1992
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 23 278 931 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 58 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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