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Cercando di uscire

Titolo originale: Lookin' to Get Out
  • 1982
  • R
  • 1h 45min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,1/10
953
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Ann-Margret, Jon Voight, and Burt Young in Cercando di uscire (1982)
Alex has had a good day at the track, a bad night at the poker game and hell have a worse time if the guys he owes catch up with him. So Alex and go-along pal Jerry split for Las Vegas...
Riproduci trailer2: 07
1 video
24 foto
Comedy

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAlex has had a good day at the track, a bad night at the poker game and hell have a worse time if the guys he owes catch up with him. So Alex and go-along pal Jerry split for Las Vegas...Alex has had a good day at the track, a bad night at the poker game and hell have a worse time if the guys he owes catch up with him. So Alex and go-along pal Jerry split for Las Vegas...Alex has had a good day at the track, a bad night at the poker game and hell have a worse time if the guys he owes catch up with him. So Alex and go-along pal Jerry split for Las Vegas...

  • Regia
    • Hal Ashby
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Al Schwartz
    • Jon Voight
  • Star
    • Jon Voight
    • Ann-Margret
    • Burt Young
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,1/10
    953
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Hal Ashby
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Al Schwartz
      • Jon Voight
    • Star
      • Jon Voight
      • Ann-Margret
      • Burt Young
    • 22Recensioni degli utenti
    • 26Recensioni della critica
    • 44Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Video1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:07
    Trailer

    Foto24

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    Interpreti principali87

    Modifica
    Jon Voight
    Jon Voight
    • Alex Kovac
    Ann-Margret
    Ann-Margret
    • Patti Warner
    Burt Young
    Burt Young
    • Jerry Feldman
    Bert Remsen
    Bert Remsen
    • Smitty
    Jude Farese
    • Harry
    • (as Jude Ferrese)
    Allen Keller
    • Joey
    Richard Bradford
    Richard Bradford
    • Bernie Gold
    Stacey Pickren
    • Rusty - The Red-Headed Hooker
    Samantha Harper
    Samantha Harper
    • Lillian - Jerry's Ex-Wife
    Fox Harris
    • Harvey - The Elevator Operator
    Marcheline Bertrand
    Marcheline Bertrand
    • Girl in Jeep
    Clyde Kusatsu
    Clyde Kusatsu
    • Parking Attendant - Gets the China Speech
    Larry Flash Jenkins
    Larry Flash Jenkins
    • Parking Attendant - Brings Up the Car
    • (as Larry 'Flash' Jenkins)
    Roger Rook
    • Poker Player
    Bill Borsella
    • Poker Player
    Howard Gray
    • Poker Player
    Hank Robinson
    Hank Robinson
    • Poker Player
    • (as Henry Robinson)
    Sig Frohlich
    • Poker Game Dealer
    • (as Sigmond Frohlick)
    • Regia
      • Hal Ashby
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Al Schwartz
      • Jon Voight
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti22

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    Recensioni in evidenza

    ZacharySmith

    This is the best Jon Voight movie EVER!!!!

    Novices will dismiss this gorgeous movie as drek, pointing out that the only "good" thing about it was Angelina Jolie when she was 4 years old. First of all, anyone who is an Angelina "fan" has problems of their own, and are in no position to criticize anything, much less art, like this great movie.

    Put simply, this is the best movie about friendship I have ever seen. The writing is spectacular, as Jon Voight really understood how to express to the audience the love these two guys had as friends. The subtleties in the acting are wonderful to watch, like when Alex (Voight's character) yells at Jerry (Burt Young's character) for losing all his money at the race track. He screams at him, but then remembers that his friend is his friend, faults and all, and walks up to Jerry, pats him on the back and says, "Come on, let's go get some breakfast." The physicality of the pat on the back was a lovely touch, just like the Italian brothers fighting on the beach in "Big Night". The brothers "fought" with love, not really hitting each other. The two guys in "Looking to get Out" accept each other with all their faults, like no other two characters I've ever seen in film or TV. One scene has Jerry telling a p***ed off casino owner that his friend (Alex) doesn't understand how impossible he (Alex)is, but that he (Jerry) does, and that's why he's his friend. To which a very indignant Alex (Voight) says to the casino owner, "How 'bout that?", and the two of them walk out together, having lost all their money, up to thier necks in deep ca-ca, but still having each other. Yet another wonderful moment in the film is when Alex has gotten them into more trouble, and Jerry says this about Alex... "You know, he's a great guy to have in a jam. Problem is that he's the one who got you into the jam in the first place." Great writing, wonderfully acted by all the cast.

    This film is rich. Rich with one-liners, rich with wonderful characters all the way around, and rich in humanity. This is a gorgeous film, and if you're ever lucky enough to see it, grab it, and never let it go. Of all of Jon Voight's movies, this would be the one I'd like to talk with him about. What a gem! "Coming Home", "Midnight Cowboy", "Table For Five", yes, they're good, but "Looking To Get Out" stands alone. Of course you have to understand film and writing to appreciate it. You can't just be in the Angelina Jolie fan club.
    9seagem

    Ann-Margret at her hottest

    I thought this film was excellent! I saw the extended version on DVD so uncertain what the clipped version looks like.

    Jon Voight is superlative as the annoying wise guy gambler. Burt Young doesn't appear to be acting as the NYC street wise buddy - he is that good or at least well cast. Ann-Margret nails it as the old girl-friend who can't quite get Voight's character Alex out of her system. She is smoldering every time she is on screen and she really keeps the viewer enthralled with all the male actors vying for attention. Her extended kiss as Patti Warner with Alex will jolt male and female viewers alike with its tenderness and anticipation!

    Should be required viewing for anyone with, or knows someone with a gambling addiction!

    Really combines some of the best elements of Ocean's 11, The Sting and Don Quixote. Don't miss the last 15 minutes to see who is conning who.

    The scene with real life father Jon Voight and daughter Angelina Jolie is not to be missed as it came off surreal to me. Watch and see what I mean.
    7pauleskridge

    Burt Young steals the show.

    Seven stars. A weak seven, but good enough to round up. Hal Ashby had, possibly, the best six-consecutive film run in history from Harold and Maude through Being There. This film clearly does not match that amazing run, but it's still a lot of fun. Jon Voigt, an actor I've been a fan of for 50 years now, turns in an excellent performance as a more-wily-than-smart gambler trying to square a big debt. Ann-Margret does fine as his ex, who figures out he's running a con at the Vegas spot where she now works. But for my money, the show is stolen by Burt Young. He did tons of movie and TV work, and was a tremendous actor. But he was too dumpy looking to be a star. In a career of character parts, this was one of his biggest shots, and he just nailed the loyal, not as dumb as everyone thinks, sidekick.

    Ashby's career as a director was pretty short, and he really faded from prominence in the last few years of his life. But he was still making quirky, intelligent, entertaining films. The film from his big six that is closest to this is probably The Last Detail. If you liked that one, take a look a this. 20 September 2022.
    8EdgarST

    Fine comedy drama

    It is a widespread practice: it is enough that a false authority (most entertainment reporters who are no film critics, only regular spectators) dislikes something, for a choir of followers to repeat his opinion and create undeserved bad reputation for a cultural product. Such is the case of (among others) «Born to Win», «The Hotel New Hampshire», and «Lookin' to Get Out», all the three curiously made in the 1980s, a challenging time in the history of the United States, under Ronald Reagan's dominant image.

    Respectively directed by Czech Ivan Passer, British Tony Richardson, and American Hal Ashby, the three films had something valuable to say about US individuals, institutions, and customs: be it the disintegration of the couple due to drug abuse, the dysfunction of nuclear families, consumerism, and a certain vulgarity that may describe Las Vegas too well. None of the three films is a masterpiece, but they rise above the low scores and bad opinions that surround them.

    In particular, «Lookin' to Get Out» (the director's cut) did not diminish at all the great admiration I have for Ashby, one of the most underrated American filmmakers, with a magnificent body of work that includes «The Landlord», «Harold and Maude», «The Last Detail», «Shampoo», «Bound for Glory», «Coming Home», «Being There», and the documentary «Let's Spend the Night Together», all containing his privileged perception of his fellow Americans and their cultures. Anyone who has ever made any two titles of those, has the liberty to make lesser films as «8 Million Ways to Die» or «Lookin' to Get Out», which are not bad at all.

    Written by Al Schwartz and Jon Voight, «Lookin' to Get Out» is a typical American film comedy drama about gambling buddies, prostituted women, exaggerated bad taste, and a peculiar cultural way of reacting to troubles, stuff that has being the basis of dozens of dramatic comedies, much worse than this. Voight and Burt Young play friends who are trying to get out of trouble, when they have to pay 10 thousand dollars in 24 hours, and the only solution they come up with is going to gamble in Las Vegas, where Ann-Margret crosses their path with a different agenda.

    The plot, which does not aspire for an award to originality, benefits however from the performances of the central cast (Voight, Young, Ann-Margret, Bert Remsen and Richard Bradford), and the contribution of a group of unknown faces that add weight to the story being told; from maestro Haskell Wexler's cinematography and mainly -in my opinion- from Ashby's hand, from his subtle and affectionate style to capture the fragility of the demented characters, to handle with caution the grotesque and violent, but without suppressing those events and attitudes that offend human dignity, day after day.

    If you find a copy of Ashby's cut, do not miss it. You will add another title to the gallery of good performances by Voight, Ann-Margret and Young, your appreciation of Ashby will not be affected a bit (unless you have overrated «Harold and Maude») and, as a bonus, you'll see Angelina Jolie (Voight) at six, playing her talented father's little girl. The extended version edition includes a reunion of the actors, who evoke Ashby's memories and his working method.
    lor_

    False, semi-improvised comedy vehicle for Jon Voight

    My review was written in September 1982 after a Columbus Circle screening.

    Hal Ashby's "Lookin' to Get Out" is an ill-conceived vehicle for actor (and co-writer) Jon Voight to showcase his character comedy talents in a loose, semi-improvised environment. Harking back uncomfortably to the buddy pictures of a decade ago (particularly the Elaine May flop for Paramount "Mikey and Nicky"), the film only gels intermittently and despite its star names faces a grim commercial future.

    Its tortuous production history saw "Lookin'" enter principal photography in May 1980 as a Lorimar production for United Artists release, later acquired in a package deal by Paramount. Five months of shooting was interrupted by the actors' strike, with reshooting and re-editing to follow. End product reflects little of the $17,000,000-plus negative cost on screen in this intimate tale of two vagabond gamblers.

    Akex (Jon Voight) and Jerry (Burt Young) are the central figures, who flee New York to Las Vegas to escape thugs Harry (Jude Farese) and Joey (Alan Keller) whose $10,000 Alex has dropped in a poker game. In an increasingly contrived and unconvincing series of coincidence and turns of luck, duo set up shop in the "Dr. Zhivago" suite of the MGM Grand Hotel and use a false identity to obtain unlimited credit from the casino.

    Return of casino owner Bernie Gold (Richard Bradford) ends their free-loading, but not before they have staked an ex-gambler (now a waiter at the hotel) Smitty (Bert Remsen) to a high-stakes blackjack game with ironic results.

    Occasionally amusing, picture often has the feel of being improvised, with director Ashby giving Voight a loose rein to inject physical business and odd dialog into a scene. Interplay between Voight and Young is the film's raison d'etre, with each return to functional plot development or "surprise" twist coming off as artificial and annoying.

    For example -star-billed Ann-Margret is injected (and written out at will) into the film as Alex's ex-girlfriend who just happens to be Gold's current flame, and in a preposterous curtain revelation by Gold, the mother of Alex's daughter which Alex has never met. Instead of farcical, this scene is irritating since, as usual, the viewer is way ahead of the screenplay. Oft-underlined theme of the joys and perils of acting upon impulse is negated by the unconvincing workings of fate.

    Sporting a distracting no-bra look Ann-Margret is decorative but has no character to play. Remsen is effective, though his presence recalls an earlier (and far better) film he made in the same gambling milieu, Robert Altman's "California Split". Stars Voight and Young are an entertaining team, but presented in an untenable vehicle.

    Tech credits are fine, including shameless plugging for the MGM leisure palace and its entertainment shows (particularly Siegfried and Roy's magic acts). Johnny Mandel's electronic rock score covers the awkward lapses between scenes, but without that bare musical bridge the film seems like out-takes of actors "winging it".

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Debut theatrical feature film of Angelina Jolie, who appeared in the movie at age five.
    • Citazioni

      Smitty: Gamblers always end up losing.

    • Versioni alternative
      An extended version of the film was released on DVD on June 30, 2009. It runs 15 minutes longer than the theatrical cut, at 120 minutes.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in At the Movies: Dueling Critics (1983)
    • Colonne sonore
      Lookin' to Get Out
      Music & Lyrics by Johnny Mandel, George Doering & Jo Ellen Doering

      Sung by Tommie Lee Bradley, David Palmer, Paul Delf, Mark Burger

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 30 giugno 1983 (Australia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Lookin' to Get Out
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Nevada, Stati Uniti
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Lorimar Productions
      • Northstar International
      • Voight / Schaffel Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 17.000.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 946.461 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 528.559 USD
      • 10 ott 1982
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 946.461 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 45 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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