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Lieto fine

Titolo originale: The Happy Ending
  • 1969
  • R
  • 1h 57min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,3/10
1360
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Lieto fine (1969)
A middle-aged woman walks out on her husband and family in an desperate attempt to find herself.
Riproduci trailer2:58
1 video
11 foto
TragediaDramma

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA middle-aged woman walks out on her husband and family in an desperate attempt to find herself.A middle-aged woman walks out on her husband and family in an desperate attempt to find herself.A middle-aged woman walks out on her husband and family in an desperate attempt to find herself.

  • Regia
    • Richard Brooks
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Richard Brooks
  • Star
    • Jean Simmons
    • John Forsythe
    • Shirley Jones
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,3/10
    1360
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Richard Brooks
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Richard Brooks
    • Star
      • Jean Simmons
      • John Forsythe
      • Shirley Jones
    • 29Recensioni degli utenti
    • 16Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Candidato a 2 Oscar
      • 5 candidature totali

    Video1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:58
    Trailer

    Foto10

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
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    Interpreti principali32

    Modifica
    Jean Simmons
    Jean Simmons
    • Mary Wilson
    John Forsythe
    John Forsythe
    • Fred Wilson
    Shirley Jones
    Shirley Jones
    • Flo Harrigan
    Lloyd Bridges
    Lloyd Bridges
    • Sam
    Teresa Wright
    Teresa Wright
    • Mrs. Spencer
    Dick Shawn
    Dick Shawn
    • Harry Bricker
    Nanette Fabray
    Nanette Fabray
    • Agnes
    Bobby Darin
    Bobby Darin
    • Franco
    • (as Robert Darin)
    Tina Louise
    Tina Louise
    • Helen Bricker
    Kathy Fields
    • Marge Wilson
    Karen Steele
    Karen Steele
    • Divorcee
    Gail Hensley
    • Betty
    Eve Brent
    Eve Brent
    • Ethel
    William O'Connell
    William O'Connell
    • Minister
    • (as Wm. O'Connell)
    Barry Cahill
    Barry Cahill
    • Handsome Man
    Miriam Blake
    • Cindy
    Ingrid Bergman
    Ingrid Bergman
    • Self - Actress in 'Casablanca'
    • (filmato d'archivio)
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Humphrey Bogart
    Humphrey Bogart
    • Self - actor in 'Casablanca'
    • (filmato d'archivio)
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Richard Brooks
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Richard Brooks
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti29

    6,31.3K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    6blanche-2

    If you like the song "What are you doing the rest of your life..."

    --this film is for you, as you'll hear that song constantly throughout the film.

    "The Happy Ending" stars Jean Simmons, John Forsythe, Teresa Wright, Shirley Jones, Nanetete Fabray and Lloyd Bridges, and is directed by Simmons' husband, Richard Brooks. Interestingly, Teresa Wright didn't like his directing and found it pedantic, adding, "but I can't say anything because of Jean."

    Jean Simmons is one of my favorite actresses and this story serves her well. After twenty years, the lust is gone from Mary Wilson's marriage to husband Fred (Forsythe); she drinks, she pops pills, and finally, after a huge spending spree, her husband takes her credit cards and charge accounts away from her.

    Her favorite thing is watching old movies which have happy endings; strangely, one of her favorites is Casablanca. Casablanca has a noble ending, even a satisfactory ending. But a happy ending? I mean, Bogie ends up with Louis.

    Finally, Mary manages to get her hands on some money, and she takes off for the Bahamas, where she is taken in by an old school friend (Shirley Jones), the "other woman" in several relationships who now finds herself involved with Lloyd Bridges, looking pretty darn good, I might add.

    The film seems to be a series of flashbacks and music videos; it is surprising how little dialogue there actually is. Jean Simmons at 40 is radiantly beautiful as usual and she does a great job as Mary.

    Simmons was a totally underrated actress, squeezed in as she was with the likes of Audrey Hepburn and Elizabeth Taylor. Brooks again has cast Shirley Jones as a bad girl, and again, she's effective. Teresa Wright plays Mary's mother, who can't quite understand her daughter's quest for happiness. Mary wants the fairytale.

    I found this film just okay, at times confusing because of the seamlessness of the flashbacks, and frankly, I got sick of hearing "What are you doing...", a song a young man once sang to me and informed me that he had written it. Right.

    Anything with Simmons is worth seeing, but at times, this one is tough going.
    8DJBlackSwan

    Excellent Simmons fare

    I love movies that come down hard against conventional life. And the ones that feature nagging, chronically unhappy, never-satisfied married people go in my "horror" stack, along with Halloween, Videodrome, Suspiria, The Fog, etc. Watching that way of life is enough to fill anyone with ineffable dread.

    When you consider that lead actress Jean Simmons and director Richard Brooks (married 1960-1977) were on their way to divorce, that just adds to the terror.

    Though it echoes themes in Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper (1899), The Happy Ending is still seen as a proto-feminist text, which it well may be. I've long held that Jean Simmons (or at least the "Jean Simmons image") is not this quiet, polite, understated "demure beauty" that is somehow constantly breaking out of that particular mold. Ms. Simmons herself can be seen as a "proto-feminist" or strong female lead actress. She demonstrates this in Hamlet, Desiree, Young Bess, The Big Country, and certainly Elmer Gantry; one could actually make this case for many of her films available on video.

    Her part in The Happy Ending is really just an expansion of these roles, only this time, the unhappy marriage is brought to the fore instead of subsumed in Hollywood/Happy ending resolve.

    It's not just proto-feminist women who feel trapped by marriage; that men get cold feet and then have affairs is almost too cliché to mention or bother to put in quotes. How many movies about extramarital affairs have entertained millions? This film just happens to present the unthinkable horror of when a woman wants out of it. Good for them. 8/10, but be advised, this is coming from someone unable to resist movies about women who don't want to be married.

    To this end, see it as a double feature with Baby Doll (1956), or Possession (1981), mess up your mind, a little.
    8bkoganbing

    Who Was Ever Promised A Storybook Ending?

    Take a good look at the film credits of Jean Simmons especially during the Fifties and you'll find that woman has been in some of the best movies ever made. Yet nary an Oscar nomination for her until The Happy Ending and she lost that year to Maggie Smith for The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie.

    A great example of this would be Elmer Gantry where Jean did not get a nomination unlike the Oscars won by her co-stars Burt Lancaster and Shirley Jones. Yet she did walk off with the director Richard Brooks who became her second husband. It was Brooks who wrote and directed The Happy Ending about a woman tipping into forty something who still has a whole lot of silly romantic notions.

    Jean and husband John Forsythe are approaching their twentieth anniversary together and she feels in a rut. So she indulges in all kinds of bad behavior, runs up huge charge account bills, starts drinking like a fish, runs away to a vacation in the Bahamas where an old college pal, Shirley Jones, takes her in.

    Elia Kazan in the same year 1969 did a similar film from the man's point of view, The Arrangement which starred Kirk Douglas. The Happy Ending however is far better and it might really have been interesting if Deborah Kerr in that film had gone off the edge the way Jean does here.

    In The Happy Ending Jean loves watching Casablanca and I find it fascinating that she picks that as a great romantic film. If memory serves that's the one where Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman give up their personal happiness for what they conceive as the greater good.

    I do like Shirley Jones in this film as the old college sorority chum who eschewed marriage to just being a permanent 'other' woman. She's had three so far and she's accompanying a fourth to Nassau in the person of Lloyd Bridges. It's fascinating that only Richard Brooks cast Shirley in parts where she wasn't a goody goody and she won great acclaim and an Oscar for being prostitute in Elmer Gantry.

    Jean's partial solution to her problems in the end is a very typical feminist one which I will not reveal. As to whether she's damaged her relationship with Forsythe beyond repair, that's anyone's guess.

    You will also like Teresa Wright as Jean's mother, Bobby Darin as an about to go over the hill gigolo, and Tina Louise as the neighbor who's ready to take Jean's place with Forsythe any time.

    Besides Jean Simmons nomination, The Happy Ending also was nominated for Michel LeGrand's classic song, What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life, a question Jean is struggling to answer all the film long.

    The Happy Ending is a good and mature film that could only have been made once the sacred Code was abandoned. Too bad though that it could not have resulted in an Oscar for its star.
    6moonspinner55

    In typically ironic '60s fashion, nobody here has the capacity for happiness

    Pauline Kael, film critic for the New Yorker, quipped about this film, "It's the kind of liberation movie that never liberated anyone." That's a clever line, but it isn't exactly true. Writer-director Richard Brooks shows the upwardly mobile as stiff dullards with drinks in their hands, the upper middle class as stifling bores. There's wry wit in these vignettes, but the trouble with Brooks' film is the central character. As played by Jean Simmons, she's one of those bored and lonely housewives who desires MORE! Simmons is repressed of her emotions, yet even when she makes her escape, she's still a pinchy drag. The supporting characters aren't written any better, but the performers themselves are more interesting: Bobby Darin is terrific as a phony gigolo, Tina Louise excellent as an acerbic society wife, Shirley Jones lovely as a single woman trying to remain casual about her married lover. John Forsythe gives his standard controlled performance as Simmons' confused spouse (he doesn't know how to reach her, which is a sympathetic quality since we don't either). The title means to tell us that we make our own happy endings--that we can't find them through other people--and the final scene between husband and wife is a tricky little chess-move that leaves us up in the air. I liked many things in "The Happy Ending", but its parts are better than the sum. **1/2 from ****
    9django-1

    well-acted study of a dead marriage

    THE HAPPY ENDING might not seem special today, and may well seem very dated in some ways, but we must remember this is the pre-DIARY OF A MAD HOUSEWIFE era. I'm sure the film seemed pioneering in its day, questioning the role of the traditional housewife and demanding that women are entitled to the same satisfaction and autonomy that men expected. Writer-director Richard Brooks often dealt with social issues and political themes--that he took on women's issues is no surprise. The film is especially an acting tour-de-force: Jean Simmons as the unsatisfied woman; John Forsythe as the non-understanding but well-meaning husband; Teresa Wright as Simmons' mother; Dick Shawn and Tina Louise as a miserable couple; Shirley Jones as the woman who survived by having affairs with married men; Lloyd Bridges as a married man with Jones as his mistress; Bobby Darin as a lost and lonely gigolo looking for that one big score. I was also impressed by the film's structure--with two parallel stories a year apart and various flashbacks all presented in such a way that the details of the relationship's coming apart are given to us a little at a time, and we are gradually brought to the point where we understand WHY the present state has become what it is. It's quite well-paced and creates tension throughout. Also, the unexpected and non-traditional ending is perfect. It's tempting to wonder what these rich people are whining about when people in the same community are working two jobs, sixteen hours a day, or starving, or dying of cancer, but Ms. Simmons' performance makes us care about and sympathize with her character. The film would perhaps also be of value as an educational tool for future generations who want to understand the ending of the pre-feminist era. Those who enjoy the teaming of stars Jean Simmons and Shirley Jones and director Richard Brooks should also check out his excellent film version of Sinclair Lewis' ELMER GANTRY. Those who know Shirley Jones only from The Partridge Family might be shocked to see what a fine dramatic actress she is!

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Jean Simmons has said that the film was a very painful one for her, as she herself was having problems with alcohol at the time. According to Simmons, her then-husband Richard Brooks wrote the film especially for and about her: he hoped that playing Mary might help her to more clearly see her own problems.
    • Blooper
      During the opening-credit sequence, many late-model 1960's cars are seen in flashback scenes supposedly set 15 years earlier.
    • Citazioni

      [last lines]

      Mary Wilson: If... if right now we were not married, if you were free, would you marry me again ?

    • Versioni alternative
      The film was originally submitted to the MPAA for an R rating. After United Artists found Richard Brooks' intended cut too depressing, the studio forced to cut the film into a "moviegoer friendly" cut that was rated M. Brooks' R-rated cut was released in other countries as intended but was not released in the United States until 2016.
    • Connessioni
      Features Cortigiana (1931)
    • Colonne sonore
      What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?
      Music by Michel Legrand

      Lyrics by Alan Bergman and Marilyn Bergman

      Sung by Michael Dees

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 22 maggio 1970 (Irlanda)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Happy Ending
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • City Park, Downtown, Colfax Avenue, Denver, Colorado, Stati Uniti
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Pax Enterprises
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 57min(117 min)
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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