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IMDbPro

Carmen Jones

  • 1954
  • Approved
  • 1h 45min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,7/10
6202
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Carmen Jones (1954)
Home Video Trailer from 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Riproduci trailer2: 46
2 video
49 foto
Classic MusicalTragedyDramaMusicalRomance

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaContemporary version of the Bizet opera, with new lyrics and an African-American cast.Contemporary version of the Bizet opera, with new lyrics and an African-American cast.Contemporary version of the Bizet opera, with new lyrics and an African-American cast.

  • Regia
    • Otto Preminger
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Oscar Hammerstein II
    • Harry Kleiner
    • Prosper Mérimée
  • Star
    • Harry Belafonte
    • Dorothy Dandridge
    • Pearl Bailey
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,7/10
    6202
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Otto Preminger
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Oscar Hammerstein II
      • Harry Kleiner
      • Prosper Mérimée
    • Star
      • Harry Belafonte
      • Dorothy Dandridge
      • Pearl Bailey
    • 74Recensioni degli utenti
    • 45Recensioni della critica
    • 65Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Candidato a 2 Oscar
      • 6 vittorie e 8 candidature totali

    Video2

    Carmen Jones
    Trailer 2:46
    Carmen Jones
    Hollywood's Shared History with Broadway
    Video 6:12
    Hollywood's Shared History with Broadway
    Hollywood's Shared History with Broadway
    Video 6:12
    Hollywood's Shared History with Broadway

    Foto48

    Visualizza poster
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    + 42
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali27

    Modifica
    Harry Belafonte
    Harry Belafonte
    • Joe
    Dorothy Dandridge
    Dorothy Dandridge
    • Carmen Jones
    Pearl Bailey
    Pearl Bailey
    • Frankie
    Olga James
    • Cindy Lou
    Joe Adams
    • Husky Miller
    Brock Peters
    Brock Peters
    • Sergeant Brown
    • (as Broc Peters)
    Roy Glenn
    Roy Glenn
    • Rum Daniels
    Nick Stewart
    • Dink Franklin
    Diahann Carroll
    Diahann Carroll
    • Myrt
    LeVern Hutcherson
    • Joe
    • (voce)
    • (as Le Vern Hutcherson)
    Marilyn Horne
    Marilyn Horne
    • Carmen Jones
    • (voce)
    • (as Marilynn Horne)
    Marvin Hayes
    • Husky Miller
    • (voce)
    Alvin Ailey
    Alvin Ailey
    • Dance Soloist
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    DeForest Covan
    DeForest Covan
    • Trainer
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Joseph E. Crawford
    • Dink Franklin
    • (voce (canto))
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Carmen De Lavallade
    Carmen De Lavallade
    • Dance Soloist
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Bernie Hamilton
    Bernie Hamilton
    • Reporter
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Margaret Lancaster
    • Singing Voice
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Otto Preminger
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Oscar Hammerstein II
      • Harry Kleiner
      • Prosper Mérimée
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti74

    6,76.2K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    Snow Leopard

    Memorable Melodrama With A Standout Performance By Dorothy Dandridge

    This memorable melodrama is an interesting adaptation of the classic "Carmen" story and music with a new setting and new song lyrics. Most of it works quite well, but it is remembered most of all for Dorothy Dandridge's impressive performance as "Carmen Jones".

    The basic Carmen story itself is a perceptive and tragic look at the elemental passions and emotions that drive so much of what happens in human relationships. For the story to work most effectively, it takes a Carmen who not only has plenty of energy, but who also can be convincing in dominating all of the other characters. Dandridge excels at both, and she makes it easy to believe that she could get practically anything that she wanted from anyone.

    Except for Pearl Bailey, who makes her character lively and entertaining in her own right, most of the rest of the cast is solid but is clearly - as is no doubt meant to be the case - overshadowed by Dandridge and Carmen. One exception, though, is Olga James as Cindy Lou. Although her character is very meek, and has no chance against Carmen, James does a fine job of making her sympathetic without becoming overly weepy or maudlin, and her performance adds some additional depth to the drama of relationships.

    Most of the musical numbers work well, and there is good variety in them, as there is also in the settings and the material. The climactic sequence in the arena is nicely crafted, with the prizefight taking place in full view while, hidden from sight, the characters' passions are reaching the boiling point. It caps off an effective and interesting movie.
    8Nazi_Fighter_David

    A powerful display of Dandrige's appeal...

    Dorothy Dandrige's roles went beyond that of sex symbol to being a parody of female sexuality… Carmen Jones is a powerful display of her appeal…

    Based on Bizet's operatic masterpiece, Otto Preminger's film is the story of a GI about to go to flying school (Harry Belafonte), a noble young man who loves the cigarette-maker Carmen very dearly…

    Filled with passionate songs and a first-rate supporting cast, the movie is filled with exciting musical numbers that are necessary to the film… But as impeccable and skillful the supporting cast is, this is Dandrige's magnetic star of enduring international appeal… Her Carmen is a flame of fire, isolating in a few moments the essence of her attraction… Her enigma sustained throughout a career notable for its startling changes of tempo and direction…Her shapely figure, blazing eyes, with the air of the unexpected add up a touch of melancholy to even the most routine sequences… Her performance was a parable of love and its power to destroy if misused
    7Dfredsparks

    Cant believe it took me so long

    to see this amazing film. I thought Halle Berry did a great job in the Dandridge biopic, but after seeing Carmen Jones I don't know if she could do Dorothy justice. This woman was amazing in this film. she RADIATED sex appeal and I could see why her performance was groundbreaking. Otto Preminger directed and shot a beautiful film, and contemporary actors, especially black actors, should set the performances in this movie as highwater marks to shoot for. Pearl Bailey was amazing in addition to the two leads, Belafonte and Dandridge. Joe Adams as the boxer and the woman who played Cindy Lou also gave great performance.

    Again to see black actors in this time period given a chance to perform a full range of characters was really amazing. In a lot of ways this film is more progressive than the drivel of black genre films coming out of Hollywood today
    marcslope

    Nice try, Otto...

    Preminger filmed this very quickly -- 17 days, I'm told -- in real or real-looking locations in the South, in widescreen. He cast top African-American talent and dubbed most of the cast, even those who could sing, to heighten the operatic effect.

    Dandridge and Belafonte must be one of the most spectacularly beautiful couples in all the movies, and they play out the juicy old melodramatic plot for all it's worth (though his lack of acting training shows). The Hammerstein lyrics are mostly brilliant, and the original Merimee story is cleverly transplanted to a different time and place. The film's main trouble is its inconsistency of style -- it lurches from melodrama to comedy to musical comedy to opera, sometimes within a couple of scenes. The acting styles go from natural to hyper depending on what kind of scene is being played, so nothing really hangs together. In the better musicals, the moment where dialogue turns into song is subtly handled, so you're not really aware of the transition from realism to fantasy, but here there are huge bumps from one style to the next.

    Still, it's good over-the-top entertainment, and, as noted elsewhere, a respite from the underuse and mishandling of African-American talent on the screen. And it is, for its time, low on condescension and stereotypes.
    7secondtake

    Dandridge, the photography, and the intention are all amazing enough to justify the rest

    Carmen (1954)

    First of all, this is a gorgeous movie. The WWII-era sets, the fluid photography with a lot of long takes, the lighting and costumes and overall feel are elegant and un-compromised, first frame to last.

    Second, the idea is fabulous, an all-Black cast and an African-American adaptation of the classic Carmen opera (by the French composure Bizet). The vernacular and the stereotypes might seem worn, or even insulting if you take them wrong (or just take them out of context) but in fact it's in line with that even better, earlier opera, Gershwin's Porgy and Bess. The stereotypes are ones that made sanitized sense equally to White and Black America just as other musicals made sanitized sense to the same audiences. If I sound like an apologist, I'm only responding to attacks on the film ("farcical" "gruesome" or "dreadful"), as being untrue or insensitive to Blacks, by saying that nearly all musicals are incredibly stylized and false, and nearly all movies of this era played with safe, simplified versions of life.

    No, to be fair to this really interesting movie you need to treat it like you would your own favorite movies from the 1950s, accepting the limitations just as the movie makers did. It's got its own syntax and style, it's own inner set of rules.

    And within those the performance of the character Carmen by Dorothy Dandridge is incredible. She's on fire, introspective, nuanced, and outrageous. The cast around her is excellent but inevitably uneven, and she stands easily above them in pure performance energy, even over the other big star, Harry Belafonte.

    All of this said, the beautiful, finely made, early widescreen movie here, "Carmen Jones," is lacking some kind of necessary intensity to work. I can't pin down why. From little strains of Bizet that perk it up (like a boxing worker whistling the most famous theme as he works) to the truly perfect photography and editing (maybe too perfect?), the movie has a steady, compelling flow. It's based on a Broadway musical from 1943 (the year the movie is set, as well), and it has the bones of a great drama, if a familiar one (it's still Bizet).

    What might be the biggest problem is the understandable decision to film it in a realistic way, with song (and minimal dance) numbers inserted relatively seamlessly along the way. This is the standard musical approach from from the early Astaire-Rogers films to the relatively contemporaneous Arthur Freed productions of the early 1950s like "Singin' in the Rain." But Carmen, the opera and stage musical, is not a lighthearted romantic comedy. It isn't just escapist entertainment. And the gravitas and drama in it, at the end in particular, doesn't quite work the way it does on the opera stage. You watch Belafonte and Dandridge acting their hearts out, but it has that perfect 1950s movie-making production to remind us that it's a movie, and we are detached in a far different way than watching a stage version, with real people and false settings.

    But never mind all that--you'll see for yourself how absorbed you get and why not more so.

    A couple last things. First, the singing voices of the two leads are dubbed (yes!), surprising in Belafonte's case in particular because he was (and is) an accomplished singer. Second, Dandridge and director Preminger were having a longterm affair during the filming and after, and she pulls off what might be the best performance of her life here. Third, the movie was shown to the head of the NAACP before release to check on any problems that might be seen from an African-American point of view (this is 1954, remember) and no objections were raised. By this point, Preminger had been working with an all Black cast and was in close quarters with the leading lady so he must have had some sense that what he was after was on target for the time.

    Watch it if you have interest in any of these things--WWII civilian life, Dandridge or Belafonte, opera adaptations into movies, early big budget African-American movies, Preminger movies, or terrific early Cinemascope photography. That should cover a lot of viewers, but not all. For me, I liked it a lot, and liked parts of it enormously (like the short clip of Max Roach drumming away on a barroom stage). But I felt slightly restless too often to get totally absorbed. One last suggestion--see it on the biggest screen you can, so it will be immersive.

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    L'uomo dal braccio d'oro
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    Pinky la negra bianca
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    La città del vizio
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    Santa Giovanna
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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Eartha Kitt was offered the role of Carmen, but the studio wanted her singing voice to be dubbed, so that her character would have an operatic voice. The same offer was made to Harry Belafonte and Diahann Carroll who accepted, but Kitt refused, wanting to use her natural voice. Dubbing was not required for Pearl Bailey, whose own voice suited her comedic songs.
    • Blooper
      The story takes place circa 1944, but all of the women's fashions and hairstyles are strictly 1954; when Carmen and Frankie are talking outside the Chicago Pawn Shop, 1950s-era automobiles passing by can clearly be seen reflected in the showcase window.
    • Citazioni

      Carmen Jones: I always did want to see the big town.

      Frankie: You got your wish, honey. Somethin' tells me Chicago's gonna be real good for you.

      Myrt: Somethin' tells me you gonna be real *bad* for Chicago.

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      The opening credits and end title are set around a flaming rose.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Small Steps, Big Strides: The Black Experience in Hollywood (1998)
    • Colonne sonore
      Send Them Along
      (uncredited)

      Music by Georges Bizet

      Lyrics Oscar Hammerstein II

      Sung by chorus

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 28 ottobre 1954 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Oscar Hammerstein's Carmen Jones
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Southern Pacific railroad crossing at 8746 E Los Angeles Avenue, aka California Highway 118, Moorpark, California, Stati Uniti(scene where Carmen attempts escape from the Jeep)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Otto Preminger Films
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Budget
      • 750.000 USD (previsto)
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 45 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.55 : 1

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