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Il lungo addio

Titolo originale: The Long Goodbye
  • 1973
  • VM14
  • 1h 52min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,5/10
41.482
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
POPOLARITÀ
3089
205
Elliott Gould in Il lungo addio (1973)
Private investigator Philip Marlowe helps a friend out of a jam, but in doing so gets implicated in his wife's murder.
Riproduci trailer2: 31
2 video
99+ foto
CommediaCrimineDetective duroDrammaMisteroThriller

L'investigatore privato Philip Marlowe tira un amico fuori dai guai e viene coinvolto nell'omicidio di sua moglie.L'investigatore privato Philip Marlowe tira un amico fuori dai guai e viene coinvolto nell'omicidio di sua moglie.L'investigatore privato Philip Marlowe tira un amico fuori dai guai e viene coinvolto nell'omicidio di sua moglie.

  • Regia
    • Robert Altman
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Leigh Brackett
    • Raymond Chandler
  • Star
    • Elliott Gould
    • Nina van Pallandt
    • Sterling Hayden
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,5/10
    41.482
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    POPOLARITÀ
    3089
    205
    • Regia
      • Robert Altman
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Leigh Brackett
      • Raymond Chandler
    • Star
      • Elliott Gould
      • Nina van Pallandt
      • Sterling Hayden
    • 240Recensioni degli utenti
    • 134Recensioni della critica
    • 87Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 2 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale

    Video2

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:31
    Trailer

    Foto120

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    + 114
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    Interpreti principali37

    Modifica
    Elliott Gould
    Elliott Gould
    • Philip Marlowe
    Nina van Pallandt
    Nina van Pallandt
    • Eileen Wade
    Sterling Hayden
    Sterling Hayden
    • Roger Wade
    Mark Rydell
    Mark Rydell
    • Marty Augustine
    Henry Gibson
    Henry Gibson
    • Dr. Verringer
    David Arkin
    David Arkin
    • Harry
    Jim Bouton
    Jim Bouton
    • Terry Lennox
    Warren Berlinger
    Warren Berlinger
    • Morgan
    Jo Ann Brody
    • Jo Ann Eggenweiler
    Stephen Coit
    Stephen Coit
    • Detective Farmer
    • (as Steve Coit)
    Jack Knight
    Jack Knight
    • Mabel
    Pepe Callahan
    • Pepe
    Vincent Palmieri
    • Vince
    • (as Vince Palmieri)
    Pancho Córdova
    Pancho Córdova
    • Doctor
    • (as Pancho Cordoba)
    Enrique Lucero
    Enrique Lucero
    • Jefe
    Rutanya Alda
    Rutanya Alda
    • Rutanya Sweet
    Tammy Shaw
    • Dancer
    Jack Riley
    Jack Riley
    • Riley
    • Regia
      • Robert Altman
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Leigh Brackett
      • Raymond Chandler
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti240

    7,541.4K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    10faraaj-1

    No mixed feelings about this one....worked for me

    It's true. You can't have mixed feelings about The Long Good-bye; you'll either love it or hate it. I started the movie with what I pretended was an open mind, but a secret hope that I'd be fully justified in hating it. In my defense, The Maltese Falcon is my favorite movie and Bogie is my favorite actor. Noir is my favorite film genre and I love Howard Hawk's The Big Sleep wihich had Bogart as the definitive Marlowe.

    Altman's take on Chandler's other book with private eye Marlowe, The Long Good-bye, updates the action to the 1970's. He introduces a very 70's theme song and finds as different an actor as he can from Bogart for the role of Marlowe. From the opening frame, Elliot Gould plays Marlowe like a push-over. He's a man who constantly mutters to himself, suffers nervous tics, can't even fool his cat, is afraid of dog's and seems to be the only man not attracted to his sexy hippie neighbors despite their friendliness towards him and obvious promiscuousness.

    However, Gould really creates a unique persona with the way he walks, talks, wise-cracks and operates. He becomes a believable person - which is why the uncharacteristic ending is so impacting. The photography, especially the night scenes, are beautifully filmed. The theme music plays everywhere - a Mexican funeral, a doorbell, a car radio etc and with different singers. There are other layers of flesh added to the telling that really work - like the compound security guards impressions of James Stewart, Barbara Stanwyck, Cary Grant and best of all Walter Brennan aka Stumpy from Rio Bravo.

    This movie worked great for me and the plot, intricate though it was, was understandable. I will not compare this Marlowe to Bogart's, but do find it admirable that Altman just stuck to the goal of making a good movie without trying to ape or make obvious references to the noir genre.
    7guitaramore

    Fairly engrossing, with a pretty hard-edged cat

    I like the hard-to-solve mystery we get here. Actually, they don't even come close to giving us enough clues to solve it, hence the difficulty. But in that we feel we're up against it like the protagonist, detective Phil Marlowe, played by Elliot Gould.

    Times have really changed for Marlowe since 1946, when he was played by Humphrey Bogart. Then he was cool, implacable, wore a fedora a lot, and wound up with babe Lauren Bacall. That was the only strain of the plot viewers could follow. There were some dead bodies, smoking guns, and tough questions from cops along the way.

    In this movie it's 1973, and Marlowe still think he's cool but that opinion is not so widespread this time - he's being played for a sucker by at least half the cast, including a longtime friend, and his own cat. He unravels the mystery mostly out of a lack of having anything better to do, which he clearly stood in need of.

    Director Robert Altman follows his own ideas about how to communicate visually. Like when he changes scene to a hospital, he doesn't do any kind of establishing long shot, he shows a closeup of a light over a patient's bed. His montages create a kind of equivalent of our human experience, where we use our minds to focus on detail. He usually winds up with scenes that feel like we're watching something actually happen. But he does know how to use visuals for dramatic power when he wants, as the ending makes clear.

    Some of the performances he gets from actors are amazing, like Mark Rydell as psychotically dangerous gangster Marty Augustine. The way he works himself into a rage with his rants changes gears from funny to frightening at high speed, and I can't believe it didn't influence Joe Pesci's performance in "Goodfellas."

    Not everything works here, like Gould smearing fingerprint ink on his face then breaking into Al Jolson at police headquarters, but on the whole a fairly engrossing take on detective mysteries.
    chaos-rampant

    A neo-noir haiku for a crumbling 70's Los Angeles.

    Much like the 30's jazz music that opens the movie, The Long Goodbye appears on the surface to take its cue from classic film noir. No surprise here, it is based after all on the Raymond Chandler novel by the same name, Chandler as iconic a figure in the noir realm as you're likely to get and responsible for some of the most distinctly classic moments of the genre (Double Indemnity, The Big Sleep, also Strangers on a Train for Hitchcock). But instead of rehashing styles and themes from a bygone era of film-making, Altman instead takes Chandler's film noir of wandering, and hangs on it his own unique take.

    Elliot Gould is Phillip Marlowe. Scruffy, sardonic and alienated private dick with a smart mouth and a cigarette eternally glued to his lips. Altman's twist? He's cool but not the suave kind that would impress dames in the 40's, the Bogart kind. He seems constantly out of place, a bit phased, doomed to observe and comment in his witty repartee on what's going on around him or just let the chips fall where they may. And they do.

    Chandler's story is one of his very best. All the staples of noir are present, simultaneously fulfilling the promise of a Phillip Marlowe film and in the same time preparing the ground for Altman's take on it; murder, missing money, unhappy marriages, a private eye hired to investigate. The works. Sprawling and convoluted like the best of noirs usually are. The dialogue crackling with inventiveness, shedding tough guy lingo for a sense of playfulness, rolling in and out of the picture in a stream-of-consciousness way.

    Some of the twists and characters seem to carry a sense of seething malice, a fleeting glimpse on the seamy underbelly of the Great American Beast, the scars and ugliness of Hollywood showing behind a faded facade of glamour, an escalating creepiness factor that recalls the later works of David Lynch, predating him by a good number of years as it does. The mousey Dr. Verringe and the whole clinic subplot reminded me of Lost Highway for example.

    What really elevates The Long Goodbye in another level is Altman's direction and he has Vilmos Zsigmond with him. This is only my second Altman picture (after McCabe and Mrs. Miller) but 2 hours in his presence were enough to leave an indelible sense that I'm watching the work of a master on top of his craft. Altman's camera is always on the move, slowly panning and floating in and out of the frame, picking up details, guiding the eye but never getting in the middle of the story or screaming for attention. The whole thing has a natural, subdued feel to it, what with the unobtrusive lighting and bleached-out, hazy look; no glitz or glamour here. Only the faded, long-gone impression of it. This is a world we are enmeshed in that surrounds from all sides with hazy reflection.

    The Long Goodbye is both a fantastic and somewhat hidden gem of 70's crime cinema and also one of the missing links in the evolution of noir, all the way from Sunset Blvd. to Mullholland Drive. You must visit at some point.
    waldorfsalad

    A Masterwork

    The first time I saw this movie was back in the seventies and this was the film that won me over to Robert Altman's great works in the American cinema.

    Granted, at the time of the movie's release Raymond Chandler purists naturally didn't appreciate the transformation his knight errant private eye underwent. But nowadays, the viewer must see the film for its great direction, terrific performances, Leigh Brackett's excellent screenplay and the fine cinematography. Not to mention simply the challenge of understanding a truly baffling plot. As in all of Altman's works, this one is peppered with offbeat characters and subtle (and some not-so subtle) situations that positively take you by surprise. As a maverick figure in Hollywood, Altman made sure "iconoclast" was stamped all over this film, it's a true nose-thumbing at every institution that Hollywood reveres; idealistic movie heroes, neat happy-ever-after endings, big budget spectacles, dependable money-making conventions and all around ass-kissing.

    But the real treat here is, of course, Elliott Gould, and I don't believe that it's the best thing he's ever done on screen, as many think. He's certainly turned out even better performances than this one throughout the past 3 decades. But yet, in The Long Goodbye, Gould is just so much fun to watch, especially when he's being interrogated by the police or just muttering lines like, "He's got a girl, I got a cat" or "a melon convention" when he gives up trying to get his topless next-door neighbors' attention.

    An interesting thing to note at the end of the film - we see the back shot of Marlowe walking away and that to me, was the private eye's closing shot, but then we have a front shot of Elliott Gould who begins playing his harmonica and then continues on up the road doing his little number, dancing a jig, etc. And to me that shows where Marlowe left off and where Gould takes over. So they weren't one and the same after all. Once again, a statement to those who would be too quick to take the Marlowe myth seriously.

    The Long Goodbye is vintage Altman, a masterwork to be savoured forever.
    bob the moo

    Not one for those looking for a gripping detective story, but still interesting

    Phillip Marlowe is out getting food for his cat at 3am when friend Terry Lennox pops over and asks for a lift to Mexico. Marlowe obliges but returns to his home to find the police waiting for him with stories of Terry murdering his wife and Marlowe being an accessory. Three days later he is released from a holding cell whereupon he learns the news of his friend's suicide and all charges are dropped. Determined to get to the bottom of this open and shut case, Marlowe finds himself involved in the stormy marriage of Roger and Eileen Wade and the criminal activities of Marty Augustine.

    Hailed as a classic, this film is actually a bit of hard work crossed with cool style in a plot that gets somewhere but seems to take a long time and a million back roads to get there. It won't be to everyone's tastes as a result because, even though I quite liked it, I must confess that the narrative is hard to follow and hard to particularly care much about. The wit of it is watching Marlowe updated – a device that will annoy as many as it pleases. In Gould's laidback and shabby detective we have the opposite of the tough and snappy detectives of the genre, but it sits well within the modern setting of the modern generation (as was) with its hedonism and fads. This is interesting but not the same as a good detective story, which sadly this isn't. If you're not won over by the overall approach then it is unlikely that you will find a lot more to fill the time.

    Altman's direction is focused on the style and, although he is fairly respectful to the material in regards what happens, he doesn't go out of his way to make it engaging. Gould fits the role well and enjoys his character. I would have liked more of the complexity underneath to come through to contrast with this surface. He is the film but he is well supported by a hammy show from Sterling and solid turns from Rydell, Pallandt, Gibson and Bouton.

    Overall then a difficult film to really like. It has enough of its own style to be interesting but not enough of a hook in the narrative to please a mass audience. Altman's hands are all over the film and I understand why some viewers don't like it for that reason. Not one for those looking for a gripping detective story, but still interesting.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      The location for Roger Wade - Sterling Hayden's home was actually Robert Altman's home at the time.
    • Blooper
      During the scene where Marlowe is chasing Mrs. Wade in her top-down Mercedes 450 SL convertible, the car goes from having head rests to having no head rests in various shots.
    • Citazioni

      Philip Marlowe: Nobody cares but me.

      Terry Lennox: Well that's you, Marlowe. You'll never learn, you're a born loser.

      Philip Marlowe: Yeah, I even lost my cat.

    • Connessioni
      Edited into El adios largos (2013)
    • Colonne sonore
      The Long Goodbye
      by John Williams and Johnny Mercer

      Performed by The Dave Grusin Trio, Jack Sheldon, Clydie King, Jack Riley, Morgan Ames, Aluminum Band, The Tepoztlan Municipal Band

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    Domande frequenti21

    • How long is The Long Goodbye?Powered by Alexa
    • Why did Wade commit suicide after he paid Verringer?
    • Why did Verringer have such an outsized influence over Wade? If his fee was not for providing an alibi, then was it just for treatment?

    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 9 aprile 1974 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Spagnolo
    • Celebre anche come
      • Un largo adiós
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • 2178 High Tower Drive, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti(Marlowe's residence)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Lion's Gate Films
      • E-K
      • United Artists
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 1.700.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 27.504 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 52 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.39 : 1

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