Un milionario morente trasferisce la sua anima in una donna più giovane. Tuttavia, qualcosa va storto, e lei si ritrova nel corpo del suo avvocato - insieme all'avvocato.Un milionario morente trasferisce la sua anima in una donna più giovane. Tuttavia, qualcosa va storto, e lei si ritrova nel corpo del suo avvocato - insieme all'avvocato.Un milionario morente trasferisce la sua anima in una donna più giovane. Tuttavia, qualcosa va storto, e lei si ritrova nel corpo del suo avvocato - insieme all'avvocato.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 2 vittorie e 3 candidature totali
- Peggy Schuyler
- (as Madolyn Smith)
Recensioni in evidenza
This is a great movie, & was made when Steve Martin was still funny (remember "The Man with Two Brains"? In that sort of vein of comedy, not the abortive attempts of LA Story, Sgt Bilko, etc, etc, etc).
Great performances from Steve Martin, Lily Tomlinson is absolutely fantastic & Victoria Tennent as the pretty but evil conniving bitch is great fun to watch.
Not the best comedy of all time, but one of Steve Martin's best movies! Check it out just for the court room scene!!!
"You mean, you'll put down your rock and I'll put down my sword, and we'll try to kill each other like civilized people?"
The plot and its treatment may be light as a feather, but we can relate to virtually all of the intentions of the characters. There is, for instance, the millionaire bachelorette Lily Tomlin, who wants to live forever and thinks she has discovered a way to do that. There is the discontented lawyer Steve Martin, who is distractedly depressed with his work and will do anything to get a promotion, even indulge nut-case clients like Tomlin. There is the wicked Victoria Tennant, who plans to viciously swindle Tomlin, and there is the extraordinarily hilarious Prahka, who innocently expects to transmit Tomlin's soul into a brass pot, and the put it in Tennant's body. There is, nonetheless, a dreadful psychic blunder, and when Tomlin dies, she transmigrates instead into Martin's body.
The second the premise begins to fire off laughs is the second it's executed: the first time Martin has to contend with this foreign female being inside his brain. He keeps command of the left side of his body. She commands the right. They are struggling to cross the sidewalk together, each in their own way, and this sets up a frenzied tug-of-war only a razor-sharp physical comedian like Martin could pull off. Tomlin vanishes into Martin's body, but she does not vanish from the movie. Her reflection can be seen in mirrors, and there is some superb timing concerned with the way they play scenes with one another's mirror images. For another thing, there is a genuine feeling of her presence even when Martin is alone on the screen. And lighthearted as the movie may be, it scores a lot of points by speculating on the ways in which a man and a woman could learn to coexist thusly.
Frankly, even above Martin's masterful antics, my favorite might be Richard Libertini as the indecipherably Indian Prahka, who repeats words he doesn't understand in a tone of complete agreement. Yet, although All of Me is the last of the four Martin/Reiner collaborations, it gives Martin one of his all-time best screen opportunities to highlight his brilliant kind of physical slapstick. Watch Roger/Edwina have a go at walking down the street, or going to the bathroom, or making love with the surprisingly sexy Tennant. Each action is an awe-inspiring exhibition of fractured dexterity. Watch right-side Edwina assume responsibility in a courtroom, as left-side Roger falls asleep and the ever-so-feminine Edwina moves their body in a bizarrely macho swagger. The actor's challenge is hopelessly problematical---Steve Martin playing Lily Tomlin playing Roger Cobb---and superbly accomplished.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizTeddy Edwards: The tenor saxophonist legend in the funeral scene as a band leader on bass drum leading the Dixieland Band.
- BlooperAfter Edwina enters Roger's body and they use the bathroom for the first time, there are stalls behind Edwina. Behind Roger there is a wall. The same thing should be seen since he's looking into a mirror.
- Citazioni
Edwina Cutwater: What is so important about sex?
Roger Cobb: What's so important about sex? That's like "What's important about laughing?" Or," "Duke Ellington" or the "World Series"? It's one of those things that makes you feel like you're really - living, Iike you're glad to be alive!
Edwina Cutwater: I am already glad to be alive. I don't need to play 'tonsil hockey' with some English tart to feel good. I already feel good. I feel wonderful In fact, I feel - quite tingly!
Roger Cobb: Yeah, that's right. Those are my tingles you're feeling.
Edwina Cutwater: What do you mean?
Roger Cobb: It's called "sexual - excitement".
Edwina Cutwater: It is?
Roger Cobb: Yes. If you think this feels good, wait'll you feel what hot, passionate boffing feels like.
Edwina Cutwater: And what happens? Bigger tingles?
Roger Cobb: Oh! Major tingles.
Edwina Cutwater: But, will she still respect us tomorrow?
Roger Cobb: She doesn't respect us now!
Edwina Cutwater: Let's boff.
- Versioni alternativeABC edited 3 minutes from this film for its 1987 network television premiere.
- Colonne sonoreAll of Me
Written by Seymour Simons and Gerald Marks
Performed by Joe Williams
Arranged by Billy May
Courtesy of Bourne Company
Played in closing credits
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- Lingue
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Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 36.403.064 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 5.803.848 USD
- 23 set 1984
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 36.403.064 USD