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Lola Darling

Titolo originale: She's Gotta Have It
  • 1986
  • VM14
  • 1h 24min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,8/10
17.154
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Spike Lee, Tommy Redmond Hicks, Tracy Camilla Johns, and John Canada Terrell in Lola Darling (1986)
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44 foto
CommediaCommedia romanticaParodiaRomanticismo

La storia di una bella, vitale e piena di sessualità donna di origine africana a New York, dove conduce una vita assolutamente libera con i suoi tre amanti.La storia di una bella, vitale e piena di sessualità donna di origine africana a New York, dove conduce una vita assolutamente libera con i suoi tre amanti.La storia di una bella, vitale e piena di sessualità donna di origine africana a New York, dove conduce una vita assolutamente libera con i suoi tre amanti.

  • Regia
    • Spike Lee
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Spike Lee
    • Zora Neale Hurston
  • Star
    • Tracy Camilla Johns
    • Tommy Redmond Hicks
    • John Canada Terrell
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,8/10
    17.154
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Spike Lee
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Spike Lee
      • Zora Neale Hurston
    • Star
      • Tracy Camilla Johns
      • Tommy Redmond Hicks
      • John Canada Terrell
    • 58Recensioni degli utenti
    • 53Recensioni della critica
    • 79Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 4 vittorie e 2 candidature totali

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    Trailer
    Trailer 2:11
    Trailer
    Spike Lee: Four Decades of 'Wake Up!'
    Clip 3:05
    Spike Lee: Four Decades of 'Wake Up!'
    Spike Lee: Four Decades of 'Wake Up!'
    Clip 3:05
    Spike Lee: Four Decades of 'Wake Up!'

    Foto44

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    Interpreti principali29

    Modifica
    Tracy Camilla Johns
    Tracy Camilla Johns
    • Nola Darling
    Tommy Redmond Hicks
    • Jamie Overstreet
    • (as Redmond Hicks)
    John Canada Terrell
    • Greer Childs
    • (as John Terrell)
    Spike Lee
    Spike Lee
    • Mars Blackmon
    Raye Dowell
    • Opal Gilstrap
    Joie Lee
    Joie Lee
    • Clorinda Bradford
    S. Epatha Merkerson
    S. Epatha Merkerson
    • Doctor Jamison
    • (as Epatha Merkerson)
    Bill Lee
    Bill Lee
    • Sonny Darling
    Cheryl Burr
    • Ava
    Aaron Dugger
    • Noble
    Stephanie Covington
    • Keva
    Renata Cobbs
    • Shawn
    Cheryl D. Singleton
    • Toby
    • (as Cheryl Singleton)
    Monty Ross
    Monty Ross
    • Dog #1
    Lewis Jordan
    • Dog #2
    Erik Dellums
    Erik Dellums
    • Dog #3
    Reginald Hudlin
    Reginald Hudlin
    • Dog #4
    • (as Reggie Hudlin)
    Eric Payne
    Eric Payne
    • Dog #5
    • Regia
      • Spike Lee
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Spike Lee
      • Zora Neale Hurston
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti58

    6,817.1K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7SnoopyStyle

    a new American voice

    In Brooklyn, Nola Darling dislikes commitment and she has three lovers at the same time. Jamie Overstreet is sweet and looking for a lifelong companion. Greer Childs is a self-obsessed model. Mars Blackmon (Spike Lee) is a loud-mouth childman. Nola, her friends and family narrate the movie talking directly into the camera. Opal Gilstrap is a lesbian who likes Nola. Her free-love policy runs into trouble when the three men discover each other's relationship with Nola.

    This is Spike Lee's first full-length feature as a writer/director and he is also a major supporting actor. This announces the arrival of a new American cinematic voice. It's inventive and different. Sure the actors are mostly amateurs but everybody has a good charismatic energy. Spike Lee is bringing a lot of different elements into this movie. Most impressively, he has turned the normal sexual relationship between man and woman upside-down. It is a great debut and an imaginative indie.
    mizkwebb

    A funny, feminist view of sex from Spike Lee

    This is a completely unique, humorous, sexy film from Spike Lee -- his first cinematic effort, using his friends from NYU film school as actors. He himself plays the role of eccentric Mars, one of heroine Nola darling's three lovers. Though I'm sure Lee wouldn't describe himself as a feminist, this film looks at so-called "promiscuity" from a distinctly liberated point of view. Perhaps women need more than one man, he wonders, because it takes several men to make up a complete person! The film is set in a rarely seen milieu, that of artistic, well-educated, middle-class, quirky urban African-Americans (like the view of black Chicago in "Love Jones"). It would be fascinating from that standpoint, even it if didn't display such ruefully witty characterizations of egotistical, clueless men.

    You could spend an afternoon in far worse fashion than to rent this film, and view Lee's naked talent shining through in a film whose cost probably wouldn't pay the catering bill for one of his film projects these days. The fact that it is filmed almost entirely in black and white adds to its authenticity and charm.
    8AlsExGal

    Very well done first effort about a sexually liberated young woman BUT...

    ...for God's sake woman get rid of those candles! The idea of falling asleep with one hundred lit candles sitting directly on an extremely combustible wooden moon étagère would scare the crap out of me more than the idea of you needing more than one sexual partner! But I digress.

    This was Spike Lee's first directorial and writing effort. Since this was Spike Lee BEFORE he was a brand name, nobody was going to cut him any financial slack in his filmmaking. He had to cut corners everywhere. He got his family into the act - one plays main character Nola Darling's best friend, another plays Nola's dad. And Spike Lee even acted in the film himself as Mars, one of Nola's three lovers. He managed to shoot the whole thing for 175000 dollars and grossed almost eight million at the box office. Who knows what he's made off of it due to cable broadcasts and home video.

    The film explores the life of a young African American female artist, Nola Darling, living in Brooklyn, who has the same view towards sex and sexuality that many men have - she wants to play the field. She's not lying about anything, she just doesn't talk about any of the others to the one she is with at the time. Nola actually has three lovers - Mars - the fun and goofy one, Greer the sophisticate who hardly needs to eat because he is so full of himself, and Jamie, probably her soul mate. These guys rather meld into one entire man who is able to keep Nola happy. And then they find out about one another, with Jamie being the most wounded by the news.

    Years before "The Red Pill" and "Men Going Their Own Way", that seems to be exactly what is going on with Nola, minus the bitterness. In fact, during the film she is torn between cutting herself off from men sexually for awhile - going her own way - and this Red Pill life in which there is no dishonesty but many lovers. Nola LIKES sex in and of itself, isn't looking to settle down, likes her Bohemian lifestyle.

    For Law and Order fans, S. Epatha Merkerson shows up as Nola's therapist. The film was unique for its time because it had a completely African American perspective, was shot in black and white, had the characters talking to the camera about what they were feeling at the time, and had no pat answers, no neatly sewn up ending. As for me, I would have picked Mars. All he needed was a little career direction, and he was fun. But then I've always been a one man gal. I recommend it. I think you'll find it fascinating.
    8Quinoa1984

    a tale that takes a feminist critique of a situation, and gives it a male viewpoint too

    I read one review on here that labeled She's Gotta Have it as Spike Lee's 'feminist view'. I would agree with this in part because he doesn't show anything- the characters really- on any one side. We see her follies completely. But I think there is a male view going on with his look at these characters too; after we see how a woman can be all liberated and free of being too restricted with who she wants to love/fool around with, there's more of a sympathy going on for the men too as the situation starts to come down to an essential thing- what does Nola REALLY want? By the end of the picture, no one can really say for certain, Nola most of all, but all the while Lee has given us a look at romance that is ordinary only in how some of the typical characteristics of men and women are portrayed at times. But really, it's also out of the ordinary on showing the little things that wouldn't get into the common romantic comedy. It's a little too loosely structured and the style isn't altogether great, but it has as much ambition as Scorsese's Who's That Knocking or Bertolucci's Before the Revolution, at least in trying to convey subject matter primarily through style.

    Not to say the substance is left unchecked- in fact for the most part it's one of Lee's sharpest satires on the troubles of the sexes, and the main characters are a bit more believable than those of the main white/black couple of Jungle Fever. Lee boils it downs to seeming essentials at first- Nola (Tracy Camilla Johns, not bad at all if not as strong as the main 'heroine' could be) is a magazine painter, but really its her romantic life that keeps her usually occupied. We see the various attempts of various male 'pick-up lines' (which is pretty hilarious, if dated), and then we meet guy #1, Jamie (Tommy Hicks, maybe the best 'real' actor of the group), who is really the nice guy, the kind that any reasonable woman would consider probably marrying sooner or later. But she also has male #2, Greer (John Canada Turrell, with a great, shallow look to him if not overall performance), who is a male model who is meticulously egotistical even with folding up his clothes before sex. And then there's #3, Mars Blackmon (Lee himself, in uproariously huge glasses and his name etched out in gold across his neck, surely one of his most wonderful characters played by him), who is the jokester, and word-spinner, and always takes a while to get around in a conversation.

    So around and around she goes, and it's really only until the last twenty minutes when Nola finally has to come down and make the decision- and it perhaps will have to come down to the 'right' decision- but for what she just can't tell. Part of it is that she just loves sex, which becomes a problem when she invites over the three men for thanksgiving (not a totally successful scene, mainly due to the dialog and pacing, but still a nice job in awkward tension). And also a problem when Jamie, the nice guy, makes an ultimatum for Nola. At the same time in the background there is the unusual tension of a possible lesbian affair with Opal (Raye Dowell, very good in her scenes), but nothing comes to it. Scenes like those, where the sexual and relationship-type boundaries come into question, are really interesting. The self-conscious talking-to-the-camera interview bits range from excellent to just OK though, and sort of mark the quality of the film down a peg, even as the characters get to share some of their inner thoughts (Lee's being the funniest).

    What then makes Lee's film a big step above any other number of films out there, primarily in the Hollywood mainstream, about a woman who has trouble deciding what to do with herself? It's two things; one, that the men are probably just as interesting with what they have going on as her, if not more so for Jamie, and two, the cinematic techniques imposed by Lee and cinematographer Ernest Dickerson. The latter of those two helps make She's Gotta Have it even more of a light-hearted picture than it might have been if just filmed as the script is. We get the images first put to Lee's father Bill's score, which is definitely one of his best after Do the Right Thing. Then the images get a lot of invention on such a small budget, unusually intimate and creative camera angles (I loved the bit when we see in slow-motion the extreme close-ups of Mars getting close with Nola), the lighting often very expressionistic, and sometimes the editing going to playful, odd lengths like the sex scene between Nola and Greer. Sometimes the playfulness and first-time filmmaker amazement is a little much, like the color film sequence, which is beautiful but almost better self-contained than with the black & white grittiness of the rest of the film. I also could've done without the last bit after the denouement where all the actors say their names with the clapper. Nevertheless the stylistic merits add a lot to make it a richer film in context and structure.

    But if you can seek it out, especially in widescreen (I saw it on IFC, though I wish I could see the director's cut to see what was cut out, however explicit it might be), it's well worth it. It's a small film, yet one that brings up some intriguing bits about what it means to really love someone vs. desire them, and what mind-games go on between men & women, men & men, women & women, and where the middle-ground could be, if at all. A minor independent/debut classic. A-
    7JonTMarin

    The Beginning

    "She's Gotta Have It" was the beginning of an illustrious career for filmmaker Spike Lee. It starred Tracy Camilla Johns as the sex driven Nola Darling. Her three men were played by Tommy Redmond Hicks, John Canada Terrell and Spike Lee. All the three men had certain traits that stood out. Jamie Street (Hicks) is cool, calm and caring towards Nola. Greer Childs (Terrell) was the obnoxious, stuck up, rude pseudo black man that thought he was better than anyone else. And last but not least was Mars Blackmon (Lee), he was funny and outgoing. Annoying at times but his wit could win you over. This film is full of memorable one liners like "please baby baby baby please" and much more. This film was heavily criticized for it's depiction of women (like all of Spike's films), lesbians (the character Opal) and the reality of it. But nonetheless, "She's Gotta Have It" opened in 1986 to rave reviews and grossed 7 million dollars (not a lot but it is amazing compared to the thousands it took to make it). What made this film a gem is that you don't find characters like these anymore. They all had something about them that was hard to resist. Mars Blackmon became so famous that he was reprised by Lee in Nike Air Jordan commercials with the great Michael Jordan, airing from 1988 to 1995 (the Nola character also appeared in one Air Jordan commercial with Mars Blackmon, the commercial only aired once). "She's Gotta Have It" is a decent start for a young filmmaker and a must see for those that haven't seen it.

    She's Gotta Have It- Rated R *** out of ****

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      The movie was shot in 12 days. Because the budget was so tight, there were no retakes.
    • Citazioni

      Nola Darling: It's really about control, my body, my mind. Who was going to own it? Them? Or me? I'm not a one-man woman. Bottom line.

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      "This film contains no jerri curls!!! And no drugs!!!"
    • Versioni alternative
      The Director's Cut of the film on the Criterion Collection Laser Disc, features 4 minutes of additional footage.
    • Connessioni
      Edited into She's Gotta Have It: Nola (1986)
    • Colonne sonore
      Nola
      Words and Music by Bill Lee

      Performed by Ronnie Dyson

      Courtesy of New Version Music

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 20 febbraio 1987 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • She's Gotta Have It
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Fort Greene Park, Brooklyn, New York, Stati Uniti(Several main scenes outside the park with partial views os strolling people inside.)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks
      • The New York State Council of the Arts
      • New York Foundation for the Arts
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Budget
      • 175.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 7.137.502 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 28.473 USD
      • 10 ago 1986
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 7.137.502 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 24min(84 min)
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.66 : 1

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