VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,6/10
702
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA free-spirited, womanizing L.A. pool cleaner finds his lifestyle challenged by a new love interest.A free-spirited, womanizing L.A. pool cleaner finds his lifestyle challenged by a new love interest.A free-spirited, womanizing L.A. pool cleaner finds his lifestyle challenged by a new love interest.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Bart Braverman
- Larry Kampion
- (as Bartley Braverman)
Recensioni in evidenza
Come on, kirstie alley as a love interest was far fetched enough but adding katherine moffat was the highlight of the chest show ... all the usual dirtbag clowns were there like patrick labyorteaux, robert vaughn, dean cameron and don swayze for comic relief that wasn't funny ... pool boy indeed ... mark harmon won't ever grow up .. he'll always be a wisecracking smart mouthed jerk
9qfal
Made for TV, this movie was good enough to get released as a video as well. I think it, along with "Thief of Hearts" are 2 movies that come to mind as being good representatives of life in California in the early 80s -- for the "cool" people anyway. You'll enjoy this movie if you watch it without too-high expectations. The movie has no real message, but does make some points about relationships. I liked the relationship the protagonist, played by Mark Harmon, had with the waitress, or rather, the relationship she had with him. She knew he was "too good" for her to be in a full-time relationship with but she was willing to let him use her sexually (not in a mean way) just to have a piece of his time. And she never complained, nor was she surprised, when he walked away. Such is real life.
Romantic comedy from the American television station ABC with Mark Harmon and Kirstie Alley
This "Movie Of The Week", which was broadcast by ABC on January 20, 1986, only made it onto West German television in the 1980s because of the attractive and then very well-known actors. Mark Harmon, who became popular through the short-lived NBC prime-time soap "Flamingo Road", plays a good-looking pool cleaner who sleeps with his wealthy clients one after the other and also knows how to enjoy life under the California sun. It is only when he meets the wealthy artist Jamie, played by Kirstie Alley (the fantastic Virgilia Hazard Grady from the ABC mini-series "North and South"), that the potent charmer changes his busy, dissolute life. So in terms of content, nothing special! Perhaps worth noting only because of the stars at a very young age!
In a supporting role is the older (early 20s!) Matthew Labyorteaux, who is best known as the young Andrew from the charming family series "Little Home in the Prairie" with Michael Landon and Melissa Gilbert.
This "Movie Of The Week", which was broadcast by ABC on January 20, 1986, only made it onto West German television in the 1980s because of the attractive and then very well-known actors. Mark Harmon, who became popular through the short-lived NBC prime-time soap "Flamingo Road", plays a good-looking pool cleaner who sleeps with his wealthy clients one after the other and also knows how to enjoy life under the California sun. It is only when he meets the wealthy artist Jamie, played by Kirstie Alley (the fantastic Virgilia Hazard Grady from the ABC mini-series "North and South"), that the potent charmer changes his busy, dissolute life. So in terms of content, nothing special! Perhaps worth noting only because of the stars at a very young age!
In a supporting role is the older (early 20s!) Matthew Labyorteaux, who is best known as the young Andrew from the charming family series "Little Home in the Prairie" with Michael Landon and Melissa Gilbert.
Robin Prince (Mark Harmon) believes the world is his oyster. He owns and operates a pool cleaning business, which he loves. After all, not only does he get to work in the sun, he has access to some of the rich but desperate housewives of Bel Air. They certainly do love their pool man and he returns the affection. In his off hours, Robin hangs out with his best buds and romances single women, too. However, he is getting to be a bit old for the perpetual surfer image he has concocted. And, his head turns counterclockwise when he meets lovely Jamie (Kirstie Alley), a talented artist with scruples. What will be ultimately important to him, his lifestyle or his great affection for Jamie? This movie has some nice statements to make about choices and changes. Not all men will turn into gentlemen, it's true, but stories about the ones who do are very welcome. Harmon and Alley are lovely and humorous folks and add much to the film's enjoyment. Vaughn does a good job as a loathsome businessman. The California setting is utterly gorgeous and so are the costumes. Jamie's artwork is also quite stunning. If you think you've seen every romantic drama out there but have missed this one, do take time to view it. Although it was made nearly 20 years ago, its themes are as fresh as daisies and its tale of romance absolutely winning.
Although "Prince Of Bel Air" was made twenty-five years ago, surprisingly the movie hasn't aged that badly. The fashions, lingo, and other culture traits the movie uses could for the most part be passed off the same way today. The movie is watchable for other reasons as well. One thing I liked about the movie was that all the characters come across as very likable. Sure, Harmon's character is kind of a womanizer, but he does have genuine feelings to the women he interacts with, and in the end he learns that being in a solid relationship is more fulfilling than just bouncing from one conquest to another. There isn't a lot of plot here, but the movie is made in a breezy fashion that carries you along to the end. It's decent entertainment when you are not in the mood to think very hard.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizMark Harmon, Kirstie Alley, Patrick Labyorteaux, and Dean Cameron would all reunite a year later in the theatrical comedy Summer School - Una vacanza da ripetenti (1987). As in this film, Alley's character (Robin Bishop) would play the hard to get love interest to Harmon's character (Freddie Shoop).
- Versioni alternativeIn the video version, there is some brief nudity and strong language thus making it rated R.
- Colonne sonoreWalk of Life
Performed by Dire Straits (Mark Knopfler, Alan Clark, Guy Fletcher, John Illsley and Omar Hakim)
Written by Mark Knopfler (uncredited)
Produced by Neil Dorfsman (uncredited) and Mark Knopfler (uncredited)
Courtesy of Phonogram, Ltd. / Warner Bros. Records, Inc., by arrangement with Warner Special Products
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- Celebre anche come
- Prince of Bel Air
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti(filming locations)
- Azienda produttrice
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