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Hollywood Ending

  • 2002
  • PG-13
  • 1h 52min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,5/10
28.708
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Hollywood Ending (2002)
Home Video Trailer from Dreamworks Home Entertainment
Riproduci trailer2: 22
1 video
99+ foto
ComedyRomance

Un regista viene costretto a lavorare con la sua ex moglie, che lo ha lasciato per il capo dello studio finanziando il suo nuovo film. Ma la sera prima del primo giorno di riprese, sviluppa ... Leggi tuttoUn regista viene costretto a lavorare con la sua ex moglie, che lo ha lasciato per il capo dello studio finanziando il suo nuovo film. Ma la sera prima del primo giorno di riprese, sviluppa un caso di cecità psicosomatica.Un regista viene costretto a lavorare con la sua ex moglie, che lo ha lasciato per il capo dello studio finanziando il suo nuovo film. Ma la sera prima del primo giorno di riprese, sviluppa un caso di cecità psicosomatica.

  • Regia
    • Woody Allen
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Woody Allen
  • Star
    • Woody Allen
    • Téa Leoni
    • Bob Dorian
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,5/10
    28.708
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Woody Allen
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Woody Allen
    • Star
      • Woody Allen
      • Téa Leoni
      • Bob Dorian
    • 166Recensioni degli utenti
    • 83Recensioni della critica
    • 46Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 candidatura in totale

    Video1

    Hollywood Ending
    Trailer 2:22
    Hollywood Ending

    Foto110

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    + 104
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    Interpreti principali54

    Modifica
    Woody Allen
    Woody Allen
    • Val
    Téa Leoni
    Téa Leoni
    • Ellie
    Bob Dorian
    Bob Dorian
    • Galaxie Executive
    Ivan Martin
    Ivan Martin
    • Galaxie Executive
    Gregg Edelman
    Gregg Edelman
    • Galaxie Executive
    George Hamilton
    George Hamilton
    • Ed
    Treat Williams
    Treat Williams
    • Hal
    Debra Messing
    Debra Messing
    • Lori
    Neal Huff
    Neal Huff
    • Commercial A.D.
    Mark Rydell
    Mark Rydell
    • Al
    Douglas McGrath
    Douglas McGrath
    • Barbeque Guest
    Stephanie Roth Haberle
    Stephanie Roth Haberle
    • Barbeque Guest
    Bill Gerber
    • Barbeque Guest
    Roxanne Perry
    • Barbeque Guest
    Barbara Carroll
    Barbara Carroll
    • Carlyle Pianist
    Howard Erskine
    • Carlyle Patron
    Yu Lu
    Yu Lu
    • Cameraman
    • (as Lu Yu)
    Barney Cheng
    Barney Cheng
    • Translator
    • Regia
      • Woody Allen
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Woody Allen
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti166

    6,528.7K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    bob the moo

    Some of it is witty Allen stuff but the blindness joke is stretched and the narrative poor

    Following a string of flops and a "difficult" reputation, director Val Waxman is now paying the bills doing adverts or anything else he can get. When his ex-wife gets her project greenlit by producer boyfriend Hal Jaeger, she fights for Val to get the job. Despite the personal issues and conflicts Val knows it is his last chance to get his career back and takes the job. The personal problems are only the start of things going wrong whenever Val is suddenly struck down with psychosomatic blindness. Knowing that this would get him fired and ruined, Val and his agent try to conceal the fact and continue the film.

    With poor reviews and no good signs about it, it was no surprise that this film never came to any cinemas near me (was it even released in the UK?) and to be honest I wasn't that bothered that I missed it. A visit to Austria recently found it playing in cinema in Vienna and, although I didn't see it then, it put it in my mind to watch it at home and see if it was worth the ongoing cinema screenings that the Austrians were giving it. The start of the film suggests a fairly good film as it is full of the usual Allen wit even if it felt a bit like him on autopilot. However with the "blindness" section things seem to falter and fail a bit – at first it is funny but quickly it gets tired and there is nothing injected into the film to shore it up. The reason for the blindness is suggested as interesting but it is barely done and not taken anywhere other than the most basic development in order to provide a conclusion. The idea is good and the real life parallels are interesting (Allen, handicapped by the American system but still appreciated in Europe even if he doesn't totally understand why) but these are not taken beyond the original concept and never brought out in the script. Instead we have plenty of OK jokes and quips but nothing that approaches an engaging narrative or a developed plot. It is still OK but it is unlikely that any audiences other than real Allen fans will get much fro it; as one I laughed and enjoyed it a bit but am not blind to the massive weaknesses.

    Allen does his usual stuff to good effect and if you like him you'll like him here. Leoni acts in his shadow and can't make the role her own – she stays very much an Allen creation. Williams is enjoyable; Hamilton is fun and the support cast all do well enough with their various parts. None of them really shine but the script still shares the laughs around and nobody actually gave a bad performance as such – just a shame that none of them have a character to speak of either.

    Overall this is an OK film but nothing more than that. Even fans of Woody Allen will be at a stretch to forgive a script that has no development, characters or reason. The laughs come in fits and starts and the film rarely satisfies; fun but nothing to write home about and I'm glad I didn't spent my limited time in Austria watching this.
    5phd_travel

    Not one of his better ones

    For Woody Allen fans - this is one of the last ones with him acting so it is worth a watch. Unfortunately it's one of his weaker pictures. There are some laugh out loud moments esp his scene with Tea Leoni in the bar. The hypochondria isn't that funny. The main premise is interesting psychosomatic blindness but wears thin after a while. The supporting cast is not well utilized. Everyone is made to talk in that Woody Allen way. Tiffany Thiessen has such a small part. George Hamilton just a few lines. The Chinese cameraman and interpreter are quite funny at first. But overall it still is worth a watch for the pleasant neat storyline and the laughs in between. Just isn't that funny after all.
    Buddy-51

    time-marking comedy from a master filmmaker

    Did your mother ever tell you that it wasn't polite to make fun of blind people? Well, apparently, Woody Allen's mother didn't, since this is exactly what he does for a good hour or more in his latest film, `Hollywood Ending.' (Or, perhaps, he just doesn't WANT to be polite). Whatever the case, Allen himself stars as Val Waxman, a once brilliant film director who has fallen on hard times, partly due to his own temperamental nature and partly to his own tendency for obsessive/compulsive behavior and chronic hypochondria, all of which have made him anathema to Hollywood's major producers. Tea Leoni plays Val's ex-wife, Ellie, who convinces her current fiancé, studio boss Hal (played by Treat Williams), to take a chance on Val and turn a multimillion dollar film project over to the iconoclastic director. All is going well until, right on the eve of production, Val develops a case of psychosomatic blindness, a condition he and a few close allies try to keep a secret during the making of the film. The majority of `Hollywood Ending' revolves around Val's attempts to keep people from finding out the truth and delivering a creditable motion picture to the studio heads at the same time.

    In many ways, this pallid comedy combines the slapstick elements of Allen's early works (`Bananas' and `Sleeper') with the cynicism of his later, more mature explorations of modern urban romantic life (`Annie Hall,' `Manhattan'). Unfortunately, `Hollywood Ending' winds up as an uneasy hybrid of the two forms, mixing lowbrow comic mugging and pratfalls with the customary angst-ridden dithering that Allen has been indulging in (often quite effectively) for well nigh a quarter of a century now. Well, the bloom is definitely off the rose here. Part of the problem is that Allen's neurotic tics are amusing only when he has some serious points to make under all the humor. In this film, however, he is providing no insights to go along with the chatter so that he comes across as whiney and self-absorbed rather than witty and ironical. Val always seems to be blathering a mile a minute, so much so that we finally just want him to shut up and give us a moment's silence. To make matters worse, the scenes of broad physical comedy – Allen bumping into furniture, Allen breaking glasses, Allen falling off platforms – are not particularly well executed, lacking the kind of adept, split second timing essential to make such scenes comically effective. Thus, the film fails on two levels: both as a work of slapstick and as a verbal comedy of ideas. The film could, potentially, have scored as an acerbic satire on the ludicrous commercial values that define the American film industry, yet even most of these `inside' jokes seem strangely unoriginal and old hat, especially coming from a man as attuned to the industry as Woody Allen.

    Although Allen, in his old age, has degenerated into little more than a wan parody of himself, Tea Leoni sparkles as Ellie, creating a character who is simultaneously strong, sensible, insecure and vulnerable. Leoni's performance is, literally, the anchor that keeps this otherwise lighter-than-air trifle from floating away completely. Barney Cheng does a nice job playing a Chinese translator whom Val uses to help him carry off this impossible charade; Mark Rydell provides some memorable moments as Val's helpful agent; and Debra Messing glows as Val's beautiful but bubble headed `significant other,' who is far more concerned about losing her part in the movie than losing her role as bedmate to the neurotic director.

    It would be unfair, as well as untruthful, to say that `Hollywood Ending' did not afford a couple of pretty impressive laughs along the way. This IS a Woody Allen film, after all. And even Woody on a bad day is better than many of our Hollywood humorists on a good day. But with so many great films in his oeuvre, one naturally goes into this film with high expectations. When a final assessment is made of all of Allen's prodigious cinematic output, `Hollywood Ending' will wind up somewhere very near the bottom of the list.
    7mattymatt4ever

    I thought it was funny

    Before the film came out, I read some reviews saying that they felt Woody was back in top form, but now I'm reading reviews that say otherwise. I guess many people feel that in the case of a greatly talented filmmaker like Woody, after wooing audiences with his earlier works like "Annie Hall" and "Manhattan," there's nowhere left to go but down. So whenever people bash his films, they don't bash them in the same way they would the next SNL-inspired dud. They bash them even more brutally simply because he's Woody and they can't help but expect more from him.

    "Hollywood Ending" is no gem, with moments that obviously drag, but I felt it worked. It's an excellent premise for a farcical comedy, and it played out fluently. My only criticism about the "blind" element of the film dealt with Woody's performance. Each scene where he talks to someone, he purposely turns away from that person. He was obviously trying way too hard to stress the fact that his character's blind (I guess in case the audience somehow forgot halfway through). People who are blind actually have a strong sense of hearing. Like the comic book character of Daredevil, their other four senses are heightened. When they're first faced with the blindness, it's hard to cope, but after a short while they get used to it.

    Like most of Woody's films, the cast is an ensemble of multi-talented actors who each contribute more than their own five cents into the work. There was even an funny unbilled cameo by Isaac Mizrahi. A lot of people project snobbery upon Woody's recent work, but I happened to enjoy this movie very much, and the same goes with "Small-Time Crooks" and "Curse of the Jade Scorpion." As long as you don't proceed with gigantic expectations, you should have a lot of fun.

    My score: 7 (out of 10)
    5Quinoa1984

    One liners steal the show

    Allen is a director, and here he plays one as well, who becomes psycho-psematically blind right before he starts shooting his latest picture for 60 million dollars. And so, his agent tags along to make sure he stays on the picture in one piece. The one liners here are classic Allen as there is not one scene that doesn't have them and while they don't all work, when they do it's laugh out loud. The film is also a good dish for movie buffs. The ending itself, by the way, is absolutely appropriate. Favorite lines- the black plague (he calls this as a disease in an early restaurant scene), call Dr. Kevorkian (after the first screening of the movie), and- you should put a full page ad in the DGA cause you'll never stop working (after Thiessen shows Allen her assets). A-

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      The relationship between the Chinese cinematographer, his translator, and Woody Allen's character is loosely based on the relationship between Allen and cinematographer Zhao Fei, who worked together on Sweet and Lowdown (1999), Small Time Crooks (2000), and The Curse of the Jade Scorpion (2001). Allen exaggerated the comic aspect of the relationship.
    • Blooper
      In the scene where they pitch the film to Val (about 16:30 into the film) the boom is visible in the mirror.
    • Citazioni

      Ellie: We didn't communicate.

      Val: We had sex!

      Ellie: Yes, we had sex. But we never talked.

      Val: Sex is better than talk. Ask anybody in this bar. Talk is what you suffer through so you can get to sex.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in Woody Allen: A Life in Film (2002)
    • Colonne sonore
      Going Hollywood
      Written by Arthur Freed & Nacio Herb Brown

      Performed by Bing Crosby

      Courtesy of Jasmine Records

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 31 ottobre 2002 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Mandarino
    • Celebre anche come
      • Chuyện Hollywood có hậu
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Central Park, Manhattan, New York, New York, Stati Uniti
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Dreamworks Pictures
      • Gravier Productions
      • Perdido Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Budget
      • 16.000.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 4.850.753 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 2.017.981 USD
      • 5 mag 2002
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 14.569.744 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 52 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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