Tre coppie di amici si riuniscono per le vacanze stagionali. Quando un divorzio sconvolge l'equilibrio, emergono tensioni e critiche reciproche, ma il loro legame si rivela più forte delle d... Leggi tuttoTre coppie di amici si riuniscono per le vacanze stagionali. Quando un divorzio sconvolge l'equilibrio, emergono tensioni e critiche reciproche, ma il loro legame si rivela più forte delle divergenze.Tre coppie di amici si riuniscono per le vacanze stagionali. Quando un divorzio sconvolge l'equilibrio, emergono tensioni e critiche reciproche, ma il loro legame si rivela più forte delle divergenze.
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Recensioni in evidenza
Three couples--best friends--are seen on four trips together during the course of a year. Writer-director-star Alan Alda shows a surprisingly stylish eye for the beauty of the changing seasons, and as a writer he knows how to shake off the melodramatic doldrums and be funny, but his sense of style and pacing isn't helped by his need to be educational, to teach us all something about ourselves (this movie hints that maybe he's been in therapy too long). The film isn't whiny, but it has shapeless scenes that are overdrawn--and the longer they go, the more rambling they become. One couple separates and the man brings a new woman into the fold, but his ex-wife (the wonderful Sandy Dennis) is much more interesting and sympathetic than who we're left with. Two college-age daughters are introduced (played by Alda's real-life children), but they don't seem to be familiar with anyone at the table. The final act allows Alda's repressed character to finally react and blow off some steam, yet the responses he elicits (particularly from his wife, Carol Burnett) aren't believable--the characters all sound and act too much like each other for there to be nuances in their reactions. Burnett is tough to get a grip on here, and I don't know if it's the writing or just the tack she's taken here as an actress, but her rigid/passive/supporting-but-unhappy wifey doesn't showcase any particular feeling; Bess Armstrong, as the new friend, doesn't get a good strong scene until almost the end, and that's because Alda enjoys poking fun at her youthful idealism (even at the end, Armstrong is stuck with dippy dialogue like, "I'm going to take a run in the snow!"). The picture was a big hit, and it may spark conversations about friendships and our need to be around what is familiar--even if it nags at us--but Alda doesn't allow for solutions. He wants to create a mess, analyze the mess, and then throw up his hands and say "that's the way life is!" But this reality of his is plastic-coated, with TV-ready dialogue, and while he's an amiable filmmaker, he's never a self-satisfied one. **1/2 from ****
I actually saw this movie by chance... A friend of mine saw the VHS on a shelf, tucked away in the back of Cinema 1. She pointed it out, and I bought it immediately.
The storyline itself isn't realistic; very rarely would this happen in real life (if ever), but it's touching, funny and brilliantly acted. Alda and Burnette have incredibly great chemistry on-screen. It's a laugh a minute with those two. The characters are so finely drawn with their own little quirks and personalities that it's easy to believe they're real.
The film also shows just how easy it is for something so seemingly trivial can threaten a friendship--- In this case, it was the addition of Ginny.
The seasons seem to perfectly follow the character's moods. During the spring and summer, the atmosphere is pleasant and carefree; nothing can go wrong, the sky is the limit. And as the weather turns colder, the moods follow suit, reaching the `coldest' point during the winter, where their true colours begin to show.
Oddly enough, though I bought the movie to see Alan Alda, Anne Callan (played by Sandy Dennis), turned out to be the highlight of the film for me. In contrast to the ditzy and annoying Ginny, Anne is incredibly witty, albeit a little off-beat and *out there*. She has some hilarious lines, and Dennis delivers them perfectly-"The hell with Nick. Tell him it's a goddamn boa constrictor!" And her wacky memory (for example, remembering the day she got her tooth filled)- Too funny.
Whether or not you're a fan of any of the actors or actresses in this movie, I highly recommend it. You'll fall in love with it.
The storyline itself isn't realistic; very rarely would this happen in real life (if ever), but it's touching, funny and brilliantly acted. Alda and Burnette have incredibly great chemistry on-screen. It's a laugh a minute with those two. The characters are so finely drawn with their own little quirks and personalities that it's easy to believe they're real.
The film also shows just how easy it is for something so seemingly trivial can threaten a friendship--- In this case, it was the addition of Ginny.
The seasons seem to perfectly follow the character's moods. During the spring and summer, the atmosphere is pleasant and carefree; nothing can go wrong, the sky is the limit. And as the weather turns colder, the moods follow suit, reaching the `coldest' point during the winter, where their true colours begin to show.
Oddly enough, though I bought the movie to see Alan Alda, Anne Callan (played by Sandy Dennis), turned out to be the highlight of the film for me. In contrast to the ditzy and annoying Ginny, Anne is incredibly witty, albeit a little off-beat and *out there*. She has some hilarious lines, and Dennis delivers them perfectly-"The hell with Nick. Tell him it's a goddamn boa constrictor!" And her wacky memory (for example, remembering the day she got her tooth filled)- Too funny.
Whether or not you're a fan of any of the actors or actresses in this movie, I highly recommend it. You'll fall in love with it.
Another film I never get tired of re-watching, THE FOUR SEASONS is an entertaining, albeit predictable comedy-drama about three affluent couples who vacation together, whose perfect circle of friendship is forever altered when one couple decides to divorce and the man tries to bring his new girlfriend into the circle. There is a lot of funny stuff that goes on here and a lot of unpleasant stuff as well, especially the way the circle treats the new girlfriend, but most of it rings true and the emotions expressed among these friends about losing the wife who was rejected for a younger woman, are quite real. My only problem with this film is that all the characters talk like Alan Alda. Yes, Alda wrote and directed the film, but he should have given the characters their own personalities, not his. Alda and Carol Burnett make a very believable long-married couple, Jack and Kate as do Jack Weston and Rita Moreno as Danny and Claudia. Len Cariou makes the most of an unpleasant role as Nick, the husband who divorces his wife (Sandy Dennis, in a lovely and heartbreaking performance)and tries to bring his new girlfriend (Bess Armstrong) into the circle. There is slapstick and sentiment and pathos and I have to admit to cheering the first time I saw the scene where Armstrong tells the group off for treating her like an outsider. It's not Chekhov, but it is a charming film with likable characters, realistic situations, beautiful scenery and a lovely musical score. If you hate Alan Alda, beware.
Alan Alda the actor has come up with a few worthwhile projects over the years as a writer and director. This movie, his feature directorial debut, is quite enjoyable.
Three upper-middle class couples are seen during the four vacations they take annually. They enjoy each others' company, but a fissure in the friendships begins to grows when one man tires of life with his wife and introduces his new, younger girlfriend into the group, and things go from there. Alda manages very successfully the balance between comedy and drama, aided by the excellent cast of veterans. All the principals here (the first seven listed in the credits) do fine work.
Three upper-middle class couples are seen during the four vacations they take annually. They enjoy each others' company, but a fissure in the friendships begins to grows when one man tires of life with his wife and introduces his new, younger girlfriend into the group, and things go from there. Alda manages very successfully the balance between comedy and drama, aided by the excellent cast of veterans. All the principals here (the first seven listed in the credits) do fine work.
Ever since I watched her as a kid on The Electric Company and The Rockford Files, I have always loved Rita Moreno. She is one of the best actresses EVER! and most people don't even realize this. She is the only entertainer in history to have won the highest award in all four mediums of entertainment. She has won an Oscar for her movie work, an Emmy for her tv work, a Tony for her stage work and a Grammy for her singing. She is in the Guiness Book of World Records as a matter of fact. People do not realize that Alan Alda wrote many of the episodes of MASH (as they also don't realize Michael Landon wrote many episodes of Little House). He is both a great comic and a great comic writer who is wonderful and witty with words. He also directed this film and did an outstanding job. It is a beautiful film to look at with the lovely scenery and the change of seasons, symbolic of the conflicts the three couples are going through. Alda created six wonderful characters that you really care about and feel bad for and perhaps you see a little bit of yourself in them. Alda's character thinks that he is so in control, Jack Weston's character is a hammy, blustering hypochondriac (Alda says at one point that he is "the Muhammad Ali of mental illness"). Bess Armstrong was just getting her start in films at the time and she is really wonderful as Len Carou's ditzy girlfriend. Sandy Dennis's career had gotten off to an amazing start when she was in "Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf" but it never really took off the way it should have and she died so young of cancer. She gives a wonderful performance in this film. It is rather low key, but you feel this woman's pain as her husband leaves her for this bimbo. You really feel angry for her. Carol Burnett is a wonderful comic, but a fine actress as well (she was great in Annie), she gives a really sensitive performance especially in the scene where she tells Alda to s*&t or get off the pot! How touching Carol! Seriously Rita Moreno is my favorite in this film. I love Claudia, she is kind and sweet and affectionate and so very very ITALIAN! Rita Moreno should have gotten an Oscar for her performance. She even has a brief nude scene in the film. I don't mean to sound sexist but she looked fantastic! God bless you Rita!
Lo sapevi?
- BlooperAfter Jack's outburst, Kate is holding him on the couch. As the shots shift from them to other characters and back, Kate is sometimes stretching the neckline of Jack's sweater and sometimes not.
- Citazioni
Kate Burroughs: Is this the fun part? Are we having fun yet?
- Versioni alternativeCBS edited 10 minutes from this film for its 1984 network television premiere.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson: Alan Alda/David Brenner (1981)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- The Four Seasons
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Stowe, Vermont, Stati Uniti(snow scenes, winter scenes)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 50.427.646 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 4.365.643 USD
- 25 mag 1981
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 50.427.646 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 47 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1
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