VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,1/10
14.658
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Due dirigenti aziendali hanno deciso di vendicarsi del genere femminile cercando la ragazza più innocente e incorrotta che riescono a trovare per rovinarle la vita.Due dirigenti aziendali hanno deciso di vendicarsi del genere femminile cercando la ragazza più innocente e incorrotta che riescono a trovare per rovinarle la vita.Due dirigenti aziendali hanno deciso di vendicarsi del genere femminile cercando la ragazza più innocente e incorrotta che riescono a trovare per rovinarle la vita.
- Premi
- 14 vittorie e 12 candidature totali
Christopher P. Hayes
- Co-worker #2
- (as Chris Hayes)
Recensioni in evidenza
Chad (Aaron Eckhart) and Howard (Matt Malloy) are in a new town for 6 weeks on business. Frustrated by the women in their lives they decide to use the time to seduce an insecure woman and make her feel loved - only to destroy her before they leave. They pick Christine (Stacy Edwards), a deaf girl from their office and set the plan in motion.
This is a fascinating black comedy looking at the macho world of American businessmen - although it is a look at the shallowness and competitiveness of men generally. The plot may sound simple but it is very powerful and insightful - although the men are exaggerated versions of reality in order to make clear points. The film doesn't totally satisfy but it is a great character piece.
Almost to a man the leads are all excellent, Eckhart is almost pure evil as the man who we all recognise or know, while Malloy is great as the man who wants to be in the game but is getting to the point where he longs for simpler values. Edwards is beautiful as the vulnerable Christine who gradually opens up with confidence as she is made to feel more and more special.
Labate's direction is spot on for this - most of the action is dialogue based and the sets are made like theatre sets. As such the direction is quite static but the camera is often set in very interesting shots. Labate's writing is the real strength with the whole dialogue strong, perhaps exaggerated and yet totally believable.
A wonderfully harsh drama that will make you aware that will carry you along effortlessly.
This is a fascinating black comedy looking at the macho world of American businessmen - although it is a look at the shallowness and competitiveness of men generally. The plot may sound simple but it is very powerful and insightful - although the men are exaggerated versions of reality in order to make clear points. The film doesn't totally satisfy but it is a great character piece.
Almost to a man the leads are all excellent, Eckhart is almost pure evil as the man who we all recognise or know, while Malloy is great as the man who wants to be in the game but is getting to the point where he longs for simpler values. Edwards is beautiful as the vulnerable Christine who gradually opens up with confidence as she is made to feel more and more special.
Labate's direction is spot on for this - most of the action is dialogue based and the sets are made like theatre sets. As such the direction is quite static but the camera is often set in very interesting shots. Labate's writing is the real strength with the whole dialogue strong, perhaps exaggerated and yet totally believable.
A wonderfully harsh drama that will make you aware that will carry you along effortlessly.
I have to give this movie a lot of credit. The director accomplished what I think he set out to accomplish, or at least he did with me. I felt as though I had been exposed to one of the darkest corners of the human psyche, and I didn't like what I saw there. The movie was very unsettling, and I was grateful that we had rented another to watch after it that night, one to take my mind off of this one. There are plenty of very disturbing movies out there with unhappy endings that I can watch over and over again, like "Seven," for example, but I hope I never see this one again. At least I can partly identify with John Doe's outrage at the moral decay of the society around him (although his reaction was less than admirable), but Chad... he simply delights in the misery of others. He's an SS guard in a concentration camp using children for target practice. No reason for it. It's just fun for him. What's disturbing about the movie is that it reminds me that there really are people like him walking around out there, maybe even in my own company, one of my own co-workers or my own friends. I didn't like watching the movie, but I think the director got just the reaction out of me that he wanted, so I gave it 7/10.
Two middle management on a business trip talk about their relationships. Howard (Matt Malloy) is a meek sweet guy but Chad (Aaron Eckhart) is a bitter mean-spirited misogynist. Chad convinces Howard to get back at womenkind by finding a vulnerable woman to romance and dump. Christine (Stacy Edwards) is a new temp that fits the plan perfectly and she's deaf.
This is a disturbing movie. Chad is a psychopath and it's wonderful. It is original and compelling. Aaron Eckhart puts in a great performance as the douche. It's a shocking debut for Neil LaBute. He has written one of the most cynical disturbed ugliest human being on film that doesn't do anything that's actually illegal. Stacy Edwards is amazingly endearing and the reason why this works so well. But it's Eckhart's heartless performance that puts it over the top.
This is a disturbing movie. Chad is a psychopath and it's wonderful. It is original and compelling. Aaron Eckhart puts in a great performance as the douche. It's a shocking debut for Neil LaBute. He has written one of the most cynical disturbed ugliest human being on film that doesn't do anything that's actually illegal. Stacy Edwards is amazingly endearing and the reason why this works so well. But it's Eckhart's heartless performance that puts it over the top.
"In The Company Of Men" is a simple story that is told in a simple way. A lot of shots are still frames that last for about 10 minutes, which centers the dialog and gives the movie a realistic feeling. And as scary as it may seem, "In The Company Of Men" is very realistic.
There are people like Chad and Howard out there. Even though few are really quite as devilish as Chad is, many who have a certain amount of power and income behave that way. That's why this movie isn't easy to watch.
Aaron Eckhart, Stacy Edwards and Matt Malloy do a great job. The direction is appropriate in its simplicity and the topic is an important one. Whoever has worked for a company like the one in the movie one time, will recognize the precipices of the human mind. Everybody should see this and learn.
There are people like Chad and Howard out there. Even though few are really quite as devilish as Chad is, many who have a certain amount of power and income behave that way. That's why this movie isn't easy to watch.
Aaron Eckhart, Stacy Edwards and Matt Malloy do a great job. The direction is appropriate in its simplicity and the topic is an important one. Whoever has worked for a company like the one in the movie one time, will recognize the precipices of the human mind. Everybody should see this and learn.
When I first heard about this movie my main motivation for seeing it was related to the controversy that surrounded it. I had heard all sorts of things said about what a misogynistic piece of garbage this was, but not afraid of a few negative reviews I went and saw it.
It's hard to say what impressed me most about this movie. I thought the performances were excellent, the dialogue was sharp and inciteful and the story intense. Aaron Eckhart's narcissistic, callous performance was amazing.
I cannot understand how this movie is misogynistic in any way whatsoever, as the characters are so hideous there is no way known you could empathise with them or consider their behaviour as anything other than abhorrent. I thought that the snapshot of the corporate male dominated workplace was fantastic and the picture it painted of testosterone charged males excellent.
The ending was amazing and I recall leaving the cinema and not being able to speak for a full 10 minutes.
See this movie.
9/10.
It's hard to say what impressed me most about this movie. I thought the performances were excellent, the dialogue was sharp and inciteful and the story intense. Aaron Eckhart's narcissistic, callous performance was amazing.
I cannot understand how this movie is misogynistic in any way whatsoever, as the characters are so hideous there is no way known you could empathise with them or consider their behaviour as anything other than abhorrent. I thought that the snapshot of the corporate male dominated workplace was fantastic and the picture it painted of testosterone charged males excellent.
The ending was amazing and I recall leaving the cinema and not being able to speak for a full 10 minutes.
See this movie.
9/10.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizAaron Eckhart said in a podcast that after he went to see the film in theaters, an angry woman came up to him and slapped him across the face saying: "I hate you!" Eckhart tried to reaffirm that it was his character that she hated but she replied with "No! I hate YOU!"
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- In the Company of Men
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- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 25.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 2.804.473 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 100.006 USD
- 3 ago 1997
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 2.804.473 USD
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