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IMDbPro

Dallas

  • Serie TV
  • 1978–1991
  • T
  • 1h
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,1/10
17.639
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
POPOLARITÀ
902
3
Victoria Principal, Barbara Bel Geddes, Patrick Duffy, Larry Hagman, Charlene Tilton, Jim Davis, Linda Gray, and Steve Kanaly in Dallas (1978)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Riproduci trailer0: 16
12 video
99+ foto
Soap OperaDramaRomance

JR Ewing, un magnate del petrolio in Texas, non si ferma davanti a nulla per raggiungere i suoi obiettivi, personali e in affari, e spesso entra in conflitto con il fratello Bobby, il suo ne... Leggi tuttoJR Ewing, un magnate del petrolio in Texas, non si ferma davanti a nulla per raggiungere i suoi obiettivi, personali e in affari, e spesso entra in conflitto con il fratello Bobby, il suo nemico Cliff Barnes e la moglie Sue Ellen.JR Ewing, un magnate del petrolio in Texas, non si ferma davanti a nulla per raggiungere i suoi obiettivi, personali e in affari, e spesso entra in conflitto con il fratello Bobby, il suo nemico Cliff Barnes e la moglie Sue Ellen.

  • Creazione
    • David Jacobs
  • Star
    • Larry Hagman
    • Ken Kercheval
    • Patrick Duffy
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,1/10
    17.639
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    POPOLARITÀ
    902
    3
    • Creazione
      • David Jacobs
    • Star
      • Larry Hagman
      • Ken Kercheval
      • Patrick Duffy
    • 75Recensioni degli utenti
    • 28Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Vincitore di 4 Primetime Emmy
      • 48 vittorie e 82 candidature totali

    Episodi356

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    Video12

    Dallas - The Complete Fourth Season
    Trailer 0:16
    Dallas - The Complete Fourth Season
    Dallas: Season 1-4
    Trailer 0:22
    Dallas: Season 1-4
    Dallas: Season 1-4
    Trailer 0:22
    Dallas: Season 1-4
    Dallas: Long Before Your Mama
    Trailer 1:18
    Dallas: Long Before Your Mama
    Dallas: How It Was Intended
    Trailer 1:43
    Dallas: How It Was Intended
    Dallas: What's Best
    Trailer 2:01
    Dallas: What's Best
    Dallas: Season 13
    Trailer 2:03
    Dallas: Season 13

    Foto652

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    Interpreti principali99+

    Modifica
    Larry Hagman
    Larry Hagman
    • J.R. Ewing
    • 1978–1991
    Ken Kercheval
    Ken Kercheval
    • Cliff Barnes
    • 1978–1991
    Patrick Duffy
    Patrick Duffy
    • Bobby Ewing
    • 1978–1991
    Linda Gray
    Linda Gray
    • Sue Ellen Ewing…
    • 1978–1991
    Barbara Bel Geddes
    Barbara Bel Geddes
    • Miss Ellie Ewing…
    • 1978–1990
    Steve Kanaly
    Steve Kanaly
    • Ray Krebbs
    • 1978–1991
    Howard Keel
    Howard Keel
    • Clayton Farlow
    • 1981–1991
    Victoria Principal
    Victoria Principal
    • Pamela Barnes Ewing…
    • 1978–1987
    Charlene Tilton
    Charlene Tilton
    • Lucy Ewing Cooper…
    • 1978–1990
    Susan Howard
    Susan Howard
    • Donna Culver Krebbs…
    • 1979–1987
    Deborah Rennard
    Deborah Rennard
    • Sly…
    • 1981–1991
    Sherril Lynn Rettino
    • Jackie Dugan…
    • 1979–1991
    Omri Katz
    Omri Katz
    • John Ross Ewing
    • 1983–1991
    Priscilla Presley
    Priscilla Presley
    • Jenna Wade…
    • 1983–1988
    Deborah Tranelli
    Deborah Tranelli
    • Phyllis Wapner
    • 1981–1991
    Sheree J. Wilson
    Sheree J. Wilson
    • April Stevens…
    • 1986–1991
    Roseanna Christiansen
    • Teresa
    • 1982–1991
    Joshua Harris
    • Christopher Ewing
    • 1985–1991
    • Creazione
      • David Jacobs
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti75

    7,117.6K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    dgrahamwatson

    "Keep your friends close, but keep your enemies closer!" (J.R Ewing)

    Dallas has to be one of the greatest ever TV shows, because it had all of the attributes for entertainment. It had great characters, good writers and story lines that ranged from the ridiculous to the sublime. Oh how easy it was to run an an oil company! Watching Dallas was pure fantasy, it's simply what makes TV fun and relaxing, take out an hour from the real world and enjoy, for people who saw the show they know what I mean!

    So there we were introduced to the Ewing's who were in a bitter feud with the Barnes. However it was the biggest mismatch since George Foreman pounded Joe Frazier into the canvas 6 times in two rounds in the 1973 heavyweight title fight. The Ewing's led by JR body-slammed Cliff Barnes around for the first two seasons. In reality it was not a fair contest, a multimillion dollar family with connections up against a small town lawyer were always going to come out on top! However, that was to change as the series progressed. Of course the show quickly centered on JR (played by Larry Hagman) and the writers created a character that people would really hate; he had no problem playing fast and lose with other peoples lives.

    So what did JR do that upset so many people! Swindled and cheated the cartel on more than one occasion, blackmailed politician's and government officials into helping him with his crooked deals, had the police set people up on phony charges as he had much of Braddock and Dallas police dept in his payroll. However JR wasn't satisfied with just tormenting the powerful, his family were not spared either, he was instrumental in trying to break up both Bobby, Garry and his mothers marriage's on numerous occasions. Cheated on his wife so many times that he turned her into an alcoholic and had her committed to a sanitarium. Government regulations were also no obstacle to his ambitions. He defied a State department embargo and illegally sold oil to Cuba, instigated a military coup in some oil rich country in Asia and risked a middle east war by hiring mercenaries to blow up Saudi Arabian oil fields to jack up the price of oil, and finally had a run in with the CIA and the Justice Department.

    It was not just Cliff Barnes he wreaked havoc on, other people were fair game too. He betrayed, conned and left many of his subordinates, business associates and former lovers twisting in the wind, either in jail, broke or on the run from the police. As a consequence of his meddling, reputations were ruined family relationships were left in tatters and ambitions shattered as he turned his back or double crossed some of his closest confidants. It doesn't get any better than this! Not surprisingly the phrase "I'll get you JR if it's the last thing I'll do" or "you'll pay for this JR" both became fairly regular clichés as they all vowed revenge! As I write this I can count at least 5 attempts on JR's life as they tried to get even.

    Many would say that the golden years of Dallas were the 1978-82 seasons. That's probably true, all the characters were developed through those seasons and I think Dallas had it's highest ratings. However my personal favorites were the 1987-1990 (the last series was poor)! In 1986 with the series tottering on the edge, the writers took a chance and despite ridicule brought back the character Bobby by making the previous season all a dream. It was a risk but they resuscitated a series by binning the most boring and tired looking season in 1985/86 (and that's according to Larry Hagman too) as never happening and therefore having a fresh start to the series.

    To start with not everything went JRs way he lost Ewing oil, Sue Ellen started to get her act together and fight back on equal terms, Pam left the series and Bobby became a more aggressive character without her. It was a brave attempt by the creators to revive the series and they certainly pulled it off, Dallas never would have lasted as long if they had not done it! They filmed in locations such as Austria, France , Russia and gave a higher profile to the skin crawling Jeremy Wendell head of Weststar and after his exit he was followed by the lager than life Carter Mackay, who kept up the pressure on JR and the Ewing's far more than the cartel.

    Some of the story lines introduced scenarios from movies such as COOL HAND Luke when JR was sentenced to hard time on a chain gang , or ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOOS NEST when JR in bizarre scheme bribed a judge to commit him into a puzzle house to find out information from Clayton's mentally ill sister. Even Bobby was not spared, on his trip to Paris his wife April was kidnapped very much a story similar to the 1987 movie FRANTIC.

    With the proliferation of satellite and cable TV the major networks sensitive to their advertising revenue delved into trash TV and the half hour sitcoms which are cheap to make. Just over the horizon audience participation shows i.e. Opra, Rikki Lake and Springer and dopey half hour sit-come's were awaiting and if you were to fast forward looming ahead were the so called reality TV shows of the late 1990's.

    Dallas was the first of the glam soaps and the second last to be canceled (1991). Was it all more entertaining than what's on today, well you be the judge!
    BRBTVcom

    A groundbreaker, in so many ways

    "Dallas" created some HUGE TV moments ... J.R. Ewing's shooting, the "Dream Season" and Bobby returning in the shower ...

    Beyond that, though, I especially loved the writing of "Dallas," particularly in the working of J.R.'s various schemes, both at the Ewing Oil offices and offsite. He was just-plain the master manipulator, and while I don't encourage anyone to aspire to this kind of mastery(!), it sure was FUN to watch him in action! Yikes! The way he executed those deals seemed to set the show apart from rivals like "Dynasty."

    I enjoyed the way the show evolved in the later seasons. In the last two seasons, in particular, there seemed to be this sophisticated edge that avoided insulting the viewer (as sometimes the campiness of "Dynasty" could). While "Dynasty" was busy being flashy (and hey, I liked that, too -- I was a teen when it originally aired, after all), "Dallas" was playing the game just a bit cooler, calmer, a touch more complicated. Plus, Jeannie aside, Larry Hagman was BORN to do that role. Meow!
    jojofla

    Classic, influential show

    "Dallas" is without question one of the most compulsively enjoyable television programs of all time. I watched it when it was first telecast and still watch the reruns.

    Along with "Dynasty", "Dallas" defined '80s excess, Republican values, big hair and everything else. But "Dallas" was also a smartly written program, unlike "Dynasty", which was basically a cartoon (albeit a fun one). The miracle of "Dallas" was how it managed to retain it's major characters for nearly a decade, keep strong storyline pumping for them, unlike most soap operas, which drop characters left and right. But "Dallas" had some of the strongest-written characters in television history: ambitious J.R., dependant Sue Ellen, good-guy Bobby, prim-and-proper Pam, envious Cliff, unassuming Ray, and so many others, whose memory I cherish--Miss Ellie, Donna, Katherine, Mickey Trotter, etc....

    Additionally, with the "Who Shot J.R.?" cliffhanger in 1980, "Dallas" created a new marketing tool the television continues to use to this day to retain audiences. Not just soap operas use the season ending cliffhanger; it's been effectively used by such shows as "Friends" and "Will & Grace" recently.

    "Dallas" was for many years the most watched program on TV, and continues to be watched by devoted fans, many of them discovering its greatness thru reruns. One episode, and you'll be hooked, too.
    MickeyTo

    Sex! Oil! Family! Everything Television should be!!

    Dallas garners its own chapter in the history of television for several reasons. In its heyday this show was very popular! (The Who Shot JR episode remains one of the most watched programs of all time.) Dallas defined the 80's as the 'ME' generation, big hair and Republican values! JR Ewing takes his place as one of fictions most notorious villains. And the show itself conquered new territory. It was trashy television ... with bite!

    The story centers around the Ewing family. Their lives center around oil and power (two things that mixed well in the 1980's). Their nemisis is the family Barnes, bitter rivals continuously looking for their fair share of an empire that they claim they helped to build.

    The series opens up as Bobby Ewing brings home his new wife Pamela, first daughter to the Barnes family. The soap opera takes off and the sparks fly.

    Over a 13 year run the show deals with all sorts of issues. Alcoholism (Sue Ellen is fabulous when she is sloppy!), infidelity, (JR sleeps with just about anyone with a skirt), drugs, impotence, politics, down syndrome, sibling rivalry, neurofibromatosis, breast cancer, divorce, child custody, homosexuality and physical abuse. And what's so great is that it deals with none of these topics well.

    Dallas is not a show to be taken seriously, at least not on a cerebral level. If you want serious drama, watch Hill Street Blues. If you want something preachy, watch Facts of Life. Dallas is best watched with brain waves turned down to their lowest level, with a grain of salt and with an ear for catty drama!

    Best storyline: Sue Ellen's drinking causes her to have the baby prematurely. No one knows for sure who the baby's real father is (Cliff or JR) - but Pam had better find out soon as she has just learned that she and Cliff are carrying a gene that could kill any children they intend to have. Complicated? Yes. But you gotta love it!
    jrewingfan

    Once In A Lifetime

    Dallas is a once in a lifetime show and experience. From 1978 to 1991 the series ran on CBS. Larry Hagman was by far the standout actor. His portrayal of J.R. Ewing is without comparison. Hagman takes the role and chews it up. This series was so much better than any other prime time soap. Dynasty jumped the shark with its alien arc, Dallas never went that route. All of its plot lines were very feasible and probable. The death of Jim Davis (Jock Ewing) drove storyline for many, many more years. I am saddened at the recent death of Barbara Bel Geddes, (Miss Ellie). For anyone looking for a good, drama driven, emotion filled TV series this is the show for you. I am ANXIOUSLY awaiting the DVD release of the remaining seasons. I have worn out Seasons 1 and 2, and just received Season 3. Once In A Lifetime and Classic. Enjoy!!

    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Originally, the show was intended as a starring vehicle for Victoria Principal, due to the fact that Pam would act as a buffer between the Ewings and the Barneses. J.R. was intended to be more of a supporting character. However, the producers were so impressed by Larry Hagman's portrayal of the immoral J.R., that he soon became the show's main character. Victoria stayed the hero though, and pretty soon it become angel Pam vs. Devil JR.
    • Blooper
      The size and layout of Southfork Ranch cannot possibly hold the number of bedrooms the series suggests it has. When the show first starts, four bedrooms would be needed (one for Miss Ellie and Jock, one for JR and Sue Ellen, one for Bobby and Pam, and one for Lucy). The following year, a nursery is added along with a guest room for John Ross's live-in nurse, totalling six. In later years, Sue Ellen has her own room for a while, and during episodes of the 1984-85 season, there would need to be at least eight bedrooms to accommodate the family and various guests. Additionally, many of the bedrooms have their own bathrooms and walk-in dressing rooms, which cannot possibly match up with the exterior of the house.
    • Citazioni

      [repeated line]

      JR Ewing: You wouldn't be trying to blackmail old J.R., would you?

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      The actors are supposed to be billed "in alphabetical order." Barbara Bel Geddes is billed as if she's a 'B' while Priscilla Beaulieu Presley as a 'P'.
    • Versioni alternative
      Three episodes that aired as two-hour episodes "The Family Ewing" (Season 9), "Return to Camelot" (Season 10), and Conundrum (Season 14), are edited into two separate episodes for syndication.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in The 31st Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1979)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 4 febbraio 1981 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Oil
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Calder House - 4800 Park Lane, Dallas, Texas, Stati Uniti(interiors: southfork Ranch in season 1)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Lorimar Productions
      • Lorimar Telepictures
      • Lorimar Television
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