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IMDbPro

Dilbert

  • Serie TV
  • 1999–2000
  • TV-PG
  • 30min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,3/10
6048
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Dilbert (1999)
Home Video Trailer from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Riproduci trailer2:05
3 video
48 foto
AnimazioneAnimazione disegnata a manoCommediaCommedia darkSitcom

L'abitante del cubicolo Dilbert lavora duramente a Path-E-Tech che produce prodotti indefiniti. L'attenzione si concentra sulla sua sopravvivenza tra un capo deficiente, colleghi ostili e il... Leggi tuttoL'abitante del cubicolo Dilbert lavora duramente a Path-E-Tech che produce prodotti indefiniti. L'attenzione si concentra sulla sua sopravvivenza tra un capo deficiente, colleghi ostili e il suo animale domestico malvagio, Dogbert.L'abitante del cubicolo Dilbert lavora duramente a Path-E-Tech che produce prodotti indefiniti. L'attenzione si concentra sulla sua sopravvivenza tra un capo deficiente, colleghi ostili e il suo animale domestico malvagio, Dogbert.

  • Creazione
    • Scott Adams
    • Larry Charles
  • Star
    • Daniel Stern
    • Larry Miller
    • Gordon Hunt
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,3/10
    6048
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Creazione
      • Scott Adams
      • Larry Charles
    • Star
      • Daniel Stern
      • Larry Miller
      • Gordon Hunt
    • 49Recensioni degli utenti
    • 10Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Vincitore di 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 2 vittorie totali

    Episodi30

    Sfoglia gli episodi
    InizioI più votati

    Video3

    Dilbert
    Trailer 2:05
    Dilbert
    Dilbert: Season 1
    Trailer 0:25
    Dilbert: Season 1
    Dilbert: Season 1
    Trailer 0:25
    Dilbert: Season 1
    Dilbert
    Trailer 2:01
    Dilbert

    Foto48

    Visualizza poster
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    + 42
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    Interpreti principali32

    Modifica
    Daniel Stern
    Daniel Stern
    • Dilbert
    • 1999–2000
    Larry Miller
    Larry Miller
    • Pointy-Haired Boss
    • 1999–2000
    Gordon Hunt
    • Wally
    • 1999–2000
    Chris Elliott
    Chris Elliott
    • Dogbert
    • 1999–2000
    Gary Kroeger
    Gary Kroeger
    • Various…
    • 1999–2000
    Jim Wise
    Jim Wise
    • Loud Howard
    • 1999–2000
    Jackie Hoffman
    Jackie Hoffman
    • Dilmom
    • 1999–2000
    Tom Kenny
    Tom Kenny
    • Asok…
    • 1999–2000
    Tress MacNeille
    Tress MacNeille
    • Various…
    • 1999–2000
    Maurice LaMarche
    Maurice LaMarche
    • Garbage Man…
    • 1999–2000
    Jason Alexander
    Jason Alexander
    • Catbert
    • 1999–2000
    Billy West
    Billy West
    • Marketing Guy…
    • 1999
    Jerry Seinfeld
    Jerry Seinfeld
    • Comp-U-Comp
    • 2000
    Jon Favreau
    Jon Favreau
    • Holden Callfielder
    • 2000
    Eugene Levy
    Eugene Levy
    • Plug Guard
    • 2000
    Harry Kalas
    • Announcer
    • 2000
    Adam Leslie
    • 2000
    Chazz Palminteri
    Chazz Palminteri
    • Leonardo da Vinci
    • 1999
    • Creazione
      • Scott Adams
      • Larry Charles
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti49

    7,36K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    matlock-6

    Why does this look so much like my life?

    The attractiveness and charm of the Dilbert comic lies in the ability of the white collar masses to relate to everything that goes on. As absurd as Dilbert's life at work is, it's often not far from the truth.

    That said, it made a very amusing and underrated animated TV show. The people chosen to do voice overs for the characters were absolutely perfect: I can think of nobody better to voice the pointy haired boss than Larry Miller.

    It seems that most people have a love/hate relationship with this series. I suspect that there is something lost between the comic strip and the show: most of the fans of the comic strip like it because they can relate to it, not because it's universally entertaining, like Popeye or Peanuts. That said, the movie is almost never as good as the book, so many people may feel the same in this case. For years, I hated the Dilbert comic strip. But after I finished college and got a white collar job very much like Dilbert's, in an office very much like the one on the comic, I finally "got it" and haven't stopped laughing.

    The show was perhaps meant to be a bit more mainstream? Who knows. I thought it was very entertaining and deserved a longer life than it got.
    ebebebrooks

    Rambling of my life lesson learned from Dilbert

    I just recently had the opportunity to watch Dilbert. My brother came home with the DVD Collection. It took me about a week to watch all 30 episodes but I was hooked from the very first one.

    When I was about to start high school, I applied to a special business high school and got in. But turned them down to go to regular high school with my peers. For years since I was so grateful that I decided not to go to that business school, I didn't want a office job when I got older, I didn't want a 9 to 5. But after watching Dilbert, I'm craving that experience. That life seems so exciting for some strange reason. So now coincidently I had made up my mind to be a Public Administration major before the show and its Cubical life and opted out. I'm so happy that I found Dilbert. Its weird but I look forward to it.

    Well my brother left, and took the collection with him. So I, on Sunday, scoured my newspaper and found the comics, searched for Dilbert and ripped it out. It's now hanging on my wall. I love the humor of Dilbert because its so honest. But my favorite thing of all is the opening sequence, it took me a while to figure it out, but Dilbert is what we become in life.

    I'll treasure my Dilbert learning experience for life.
    The Extra In The Background

    If only Scott Adams had chose Comedy Central...

    Before the review, a brief plot summary: Dilbert is a skilled and somewhat slow-witted enguineer living in an insane world. Everyone is either a genious or a moron. He lives with Dilmom, who is more advanced in technology then he is, Ratbert, an optomist rodent who longs to be loved, and Dogbert, a cynical, arrogant canine with a dream of ruling the world. Every day is garbage day, and the garbage man is the world's smartest. At work, where the name constantly changes from Path-Way to E-Tech to Path-E-Tech (pathetic), he toils away in his cubicle under a clueless pointy-haired boss, accompanied by the rude and sarcastic Wally and quick-tempered and powerful Alice. Others include Catbert, the Evil Director of Human Resources, Asok, the mild-mannered Indian intern, and Loud Howard, the big mouth. With clever humour, the show tells zany stories about how Dilbert tackles stock market problems, corporate insanity, junkie dwarfs, and realligned satellites.

    Scott Adams has been writing the "Dilbert" comic strip since 1989. He has since then added several colorful characters, and finally, with the help of Larry Miller, he brought it to the small screen. Unfortunatley, somehow it landed on one of the worst networks on TV: UPN. Not Comedy Central, not Fox Network, UPN. Adams and Miller provided it with it's only good series ever.

    The animation is clever and looks exactly like it was lifted from the comic books, except now Dilbert has a mouth. Oh, but when any of the characters' mouths are closed, they vanish. ;-) It combined the humour of "The Simpsons" and "Futurama" with the hilarious insanity of "Monty Python". To me, this is better then either of Matt Groening's overrated series. Dilbert is not a beer-swilling overweight idiot. He is an ordinary person in a twisted world- something we can all relate to. Plus the jokes are funny. Throughout the entire episode the plot is strung with wit and charm.

    Some of the jokes, in fact, aren't even funny. But it's just the way the characters say them that splits your sides. Daniel Stern (Marv in the first two "Home Alone" films) gives the title character a slightly nasal and questioning voice. Gordon Hunt (father of popular actress Helen Hunt) provides Wally with a thick nasal and sarcastic voice. Kathy Griffin ("Suddenly Susan") lends her voice to Alice, an angry, teeth-gritted voice. Chris Elliot ("Osmosis Jones") was originally to be thrown off the cast because his voice was so similair to Stern's, yet he does an awesome job at giving Dogbert an arrogant and calm demonaur. Maurice LaMarche (voice of another supersmart character, the Brain) and Jackie Hoffman (huh?) are also excellent at The Garbage Man and Dilmom. Tom Kenny (the mayor from "Powerpuff Girls") lends his voice to Ratbert and Asok, and Tress MacNeille is several supporting characters.

    The guest appearances are great. Billy West, like Tress MacNeille, guests throughout, only as the same character, a marketing guy. Stephen Hawking plays himself in "The Informercial", in which the Gruntmaster 6000 (a product named, designed and manufactured throughout the first season) is tested in Texas and creates a black hole. Jason Alexander ("Bob Patterson") appears throughout as Catbert. Buck Henry suprises Dilbert fans as Dadbert, who has been at the "all-you-can-eat" cafe in a mall resteraunt since 1979, and Jeri Ryan cameos in that episode as a Seven of Nine Alarm Clock. Wayne Knight is a security guard. Gilbert Gottfried is a troll. Steve Austin, Jay Leno, Jerry Seinfeld all guest, as well as several others.

    Unfortunatley, UPN made yet another mistake. Instead of keeping their only good show, they moved it to a horrible time slot which soon got it cancelled. Some of the episode descriptions are hilarious. Dilbert fans will recognize the small, muddy country of Elbonia in "Elbonian Trip" and "Hunger". In another, the company is overrun by downsized (literally) employees hooked on dry erase markers. When he drinks from the boss' cup, Dilbert loses "the knack" and throws all the satellites out of orbit, throwing the world back into medevil times. And when Dilbert must prevent Y2K, he learns the company's fate is in Wally's hands (and Loud Howard cries, "THAT'S IT! WE'RE ALL FARMERS!")

    Quotable, hilarious, and recommended. Adams, don't let it get to you. Just take the show to Comedy or Fox. Then it'll soar.
    9TOMNEL

    One of the best cartoons around, definitely the best theme song.

    Stars: Daniel Stern as Dilbert. Chris Elliot as Dogbert. Kathy Griffin as Alice. Gordon Hunt as Wally. Larry Miller as the Boss. Jackie Hoffman as Dilmom. Tom Kenny as Ratbert and Ashook. Jim Wise as Loud Howard. Jason Alexander as Catbert. Maurice La Marche as the Trash Man.

    This was one of those gem shows that for some reason only picked up a select cult audience. Because of that it was canceled, even though it was a great show. It was about workaholic Dilbert and his life in his cubicle. His closest friends are Dogbert, his talking pet dog that's smarter than him, Alice and Wally, his buddies from work and the mysterious trashman who always disappears after giving advice. I highly recommend you buy the DVD because this was a great show, and its a shame only 2 seasons were produced.

    My rating: 9 out of 10. 30 episodes. TV PG.
    10dee.reid

    "Dilbert"!

    This is a great, hilarious riot of an animated series. It's a shame that it got canceled after only two seasons, though. That's mighty unfair, I think. Although I don't have a lot of things in common with my father, one thing I do have in common with him is that I often love the same movies/TV shows he does - Clint Eastwood movies (he likes the westerns while I like his more modern-day urban stuff like "Dirty Harry"), "The Simpsons," "Family Guy," "King of the Hill," and this show are a few examples. "Dilbert," based on the popular satirical comic strip by Scott Adams, centers on the titular character, a stereotypical office drone and his bizarre and/or annoying co-workers. This same set-up may or may not have been influenced the popular comic strip "Milton," which in turn inspired the cult Mike Judge movie "Office Space" (1999). Have a laugh on "Dilbert." You won't regret it.

    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Dilbert and Dogbert don't have mouths in the comic strip, but the animators needed to give them mouths for their dialog. They compromised by giving them mouths only when they spoke. Since the show went off the air, a mouth has been drawn on Dilbert in the comics, usually to show either surprise, screaming, or anger. (Dogbert, however, continues to be drawn mouth-less.)
    • Citazioni

      Dogbert: They say only the good die young. If that works both ways, I'm immortal.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in Familiar Faces: Familiar Faces #25: Top 11 Forgotten Openings (2010)

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    • How many seasons does Dilbert have?Powered by Alexa
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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 25 gennaio 1999 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Дилберт
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Culver City, California, Stati Uniti
    • Aziende produttrici
      • United Media Productions
      • United Feature Syndicate (UFS)
      • Adelaide Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 30min
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.33 : 1

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