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IMDbPro

Amore estremo - Tough Love

Titolo originale: Gigli
  • 2003
  • T
  • 2h 1min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
2,7/10
51.585
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck in Amore estremo - Tough Love (2003)
Trailer 1
Riproduci trailer2: 31
9 video
99+ foto
Dark ComedyRomantic ComedyComedyCrimeRomance

Larry Gigli deve rapire il fratello di un procuratore distrettuale per conto di un boss; una bella donna nota solo come Ricki gli viene affiancata per assicurarsi che le cose vadano liscie.Larry Gigli deve rapire il fratello di un procuratore distrettuale per conto di un boss; una bella donna nota solo come Ricki gli viene affiancata per assicurarsi che le cose vadano liscie.Larry Gigli deve rapire il fratello di un procuratore distrettuale per conto di un boss; una bella donna nota solo come Ricki gli viene affiancata per assicurarsi che le cose vadano liscie.

  • Regia
    • Martin Brest
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Martin Brest
  • Star
    • Ben Affleck
    • Jennifer Lopez
    • Justin Bartha
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    2,7/10
    51.585
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Martin Brest
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Martin Brest
    • Star
      • Ben Affleck
      • Jennifer Lopez
      • Justin Bartha
    • 455Recensioni degli utenti
    • 112Recensioni della critica
    • 18Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 12 vittorie e 13 candidature totali

    Video9

    Gigli
    Trailer 2:31
    Gigli
    Gigli Soundbite: Additional Soundbies
    Clip 10:51
    Gigli Soundbite: Additional Soundbies
    Gigli Soundbite: Additional Soundbies
    Clip 10:51
    Gigli Soundbite: Additional Soundbies
    Gigli Scene: Can I Use Your Phone
    Clip 1:19
    Gigli Scene: Can I Use Your Phone
    Gigli Scene: I Want To Meet Your Mother
    Clip 1:15
    Gigli Scene: I Want To Meet Your Mother
    Gigli Scene: You're Not My Type
    Clip 0:53
    Gigli Scene: You're Not My Type
    Gigli Scene: He May Be
    Clip 1:14
    Gigli Scene: He May Be

    Foto151

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    + 145
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali58

    Modifica
    Ben Affleck
    Ben Affleck
    • Larry Gigli
    Jennifer Lopez
    Jennifer Lopez
    • Ricki
    Justin Bartha
    Justin Bartha
    • Brian
    Terry Camilleri
    Terry Camilleri
    • Man in Dryer
    • (as Terrence Camilleri)
    David Backus
    • Laundry Customer
    Lenny Venito
    Lenny Venito
    • Louis
    Robert Silver
    • Man in Debt
    Luis Alberto Martínez
    • Adult Care Resident
    Christopher Walken
    Christopher Walken
    • Det. Stanley Jacobellis
    Todd Giebenhain
    Todd Giebenhain
    • High School Kid #1
    Brian Sites
    Brian Sites
    • High School Kid #2
    Brian Casey
    • High School Kid #3
    Les Bradford
    • High School Kid #4
    David Bonfadini
    • High School Kid #5
    Dwight Ketchum
    • High School Kid #6
    • (as Dwight P. Ketchum)
    Lainie Kazan
    Lainie Kazan
    • Mother
    Missy Crider
    • Robin
    Peter Van Norden
    Peter Van Norden
    • Morgue Attendant
    • Regia
      • Martin Brest
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Martin Brest
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti455

    2,751.5K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    rossperry-18019

    Nowhere as bad as everyone claims.

    This was one laughed at movie. Jokes abounded on how astonishingly bad Gigli was. Is it true? The advance word on this film was so vicious that I had to see for myself if it's as bad as its early reputation suggested. The verdict: Gigli doesn't live up to (or should that be down to?) its hype. The worst film of all time? Give me a break. Gigli isn't even the worst film of the summer, and won't come close to the year's Bottom 10 list. I'm not going to defend the movie. I don't recommend it and, for the most part, it's an example of inept filmmaking, but it is watchable. I have to wonder if those who are coming down so hard on the motion picture have a secondary agenda. Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez are adequate- not Bogart/Hepburn but not too terrible either.
    1lindzeyhh

    I lost two hours of my life.

    Things I would rather do than watch this movie ever again:

    1.) Smash my head on a boulder. 2.) Lick a gas station toilet seat.

    3.) Be attacked by a zombie. 4.) Send my paycheck to a Nigerian "prince" I met online. 5.) Make out with a chicken's butthole. 6.) Give myself a non-medicated root canal. 7.) Face off with a T-rex. 8.) Bathe with buffalo diarrhea. 9.) Swim in an active volcano. 10.) Eat aforementioned buffalo diarrhea.

    It's long. It's horrible. Just. Don't. Gosh dang it, I have to add more stuff because I have to add at least 10 lines of text. Hmmm.... TWO AND A HALF FREAKING HOURS WASTED! OH the things I could have accomplished. But no... It was wasted on this horrible, awful, insulting, narcissistic-filled piece of crap. J-Lo is a lesbian in the beginning, but of course, Ben Asshat "turns" her straight. GTFO here, Ben. Did they really have to go there? Really... I am going to leave it at that. This film has taken enough of my time, and by typing this review, I am just reliving the garbage memories.
    2Jeremy_Urquhart

    While not the literal worst movie of all time, it's undeniable that this should be much better

    Maybe one of the most notorious flops of the 21st century so far, Gigli is a movie I finally watched, and did so right after watching another famous "bad" movie from 2003, The Room.

    The Room might have too many problems to keep track of them all, but it's a thoroughly engaging and funny watch, when you watch it at an interactive screening (as I've done about 10 times now). Gigli just doesn't have the magic that The Room does. For the most part, it's bad because almost all of its comedy flops, and it's just a weirdly lifeless, boring movie...

    ...with a couple of exceptions, thanks to Christopher Walken and Al Pacino. They're both in the movie briefly for some reason, but each being an energy that's kind of compelling and fun. Walken especially might be the one thing preventing this from being truly irredeemable.

    I think it really has the reputation it does because of the talent involved, and the careers it sank, because reading about this on paper, you'd expect better. Beyond the cast, Martin Brest has made some very good films, particularly comparable crime-comedies like Beverley Hills Cop, Midnight Run, and the original/excellent/underrated Going In Style. Since Gigli's release in 2003, Brest hasn't made another movie, which is a shame. Unless of course he made a personal choice to retire from filmmaking, the idea that one bad movie should make you a filmmaking outcast isn't really fair.

    Anyway, watch the Walken and/or Pacino scenes on YouTube. Miss the rest. It's pretty dull and tedious, and probably has about 25 minutes of plot spread across two hours, and it's not even like the characters are enjoyable or likeable either.
    1bigboybhatia

    Rhymes with 'Really'. As in Really Bad.

    I borrowed my friend's Gigli DVD to see if the movie was really as bad as the ratings and other comments here will indicate. The answer is yes. When the film first came out, it rocketed to number 1 on the bottom 100 list. That ranking was undeserved, as the movie does have decent technical aspects (editing, sound) relative to Manos and Future War. Its good to see Gigli settling a little further down the list. From the outset, I could tell the dialog was just horrible. It was unfunny 90% of the time, and contained useless overlong scenes. One example was the whole 'pleasing a woman' sequence where Lopez was doing Yoga on a mat while talking with Affleck. Just horrible. Jennifer Lopez has to win the award for most painfully miscast actress. She is totally unbelievable as a Lesbian girl gangster. She failed to convince me that she had ever broken the law in the past. 'I did some really bad things' -- yeah right. I would avoid this like the plague. 1/10
    2caspian1978

    $54,000,000! Where did all the money go?

    I saw this movie and hated about 99% of it. After I found out it cost $54,000,000 to make, I started to hate the other 1%. If this is considered a love story between Lopez and Affleck, may I ask...where was the love? A sex scene with no nudity, no passion, and no sound....why? Supporting characters like Christopher Walken and others were introduced and went no where...why? The story alone peeks when Pacino arrives and shoots one of the cast members. From there, i was hoping that Pacino had finished the job and killed the rest of the cast. If that happened, the movie would have been good. Instead, the movie drags and drags and drags. The audience is not going to care if the actors in the movie learn something or progress if they don't care about the characters. Lopez and Affleck's characters do not exist! Much like the ugly tattoos on Affleck's shoulder, the movie was not fun to look at. In my opinion, and I do not think I am wrong, if Lopez had a small nude scene and / or the movie was done as an independent film for under 2 or 3 million, Gigli would have been a giant success. Instead, we are left to wonder....why?

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Every UK cinema dropped the film after one week.
    • Blooper
      The cast in the end credits is listed as being "in order of appearance" and Terry Camilleri ("Man in Dryer") is listed before David Backus ("Laundry Customer"). But Backus actually appears on-screen before Camilleri.
    • Citazioni

      Ricki: It's turkey time.

      Larry Gigli: Huh?

      Ricki: Gobble, gobble.

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      Towards the end of the credits Brian (Justin Bartha) can be heard singing his rendition of "Baby Got Back".
    • Versioni alternative
      Film critic Michael Dequina saw an early version and described the differences to the released film in his review on 'The Movie Report Archive': "...Gigli plays in theatres a much different film than it once was. Since it looks increasingly unlikely Martin Brest's original Gigli will ever see the light of day again, I feel a need to describe the differences in this original version to the best of my admittedly foggy memory (after all, it has been nearly a year since I saw this original version) to prove that, if nothing else, the film originally added up to something. That said, there isn't too much in the way of concrete differences for most of either version's run time. Although some scenes (such as the detour to Larry's mother's house) originally lasted longer, the film plays more or less the same up to Al Pacino's cameo as mob boss Starkman, with the core trio of Larry, Ricki and Brian coming together in the exact same way, and Larry and Ricki sparring until she boldly declares "it's turkey time." One subtle adjustment, however, makes a difference. In the release version, the first real indication that Larry has any inclination toward leaving the criminal life behind comes late in the film, in a scene where he and Ricki talk in his car the morning after they consummate and right before the meeting with Starkman. Larry tells Ricki about his dream of finding "a clean place," and this revelation seems to come a bit out of nowhere, almost as a last-minute twist to send Larry on the road to Hollywoodized redemption. In the original cut, however, Larry's desire to leave the mob grind is established far earlier and much clearly, mere moments after the opening scene in the laundromat; we see Larry close his eyes and visualize this "clean place"--shown on screen as a pristine tropical beach overlooking an impossibly clear ocean. So when he finally makes mention of the "clean place" to Ricki, the audience knows exactly what he's talking about. Also, this once-recurring thread gives Larry a stronger link to Brian, as they are both--though Larry fails to recognize it--in a sense searching for "The Baywatch," thus turning what may seem like a cheap TV/pop culture reference into something a little more meaningful. Not long after the scene with Starkman comes the scene with Larry, Ricki and Brian driving by the Baywatch, which, much to Brian's delight, is "open"--and after this point the two Giglis veer in wildly different directions. In the release version, the three then stop at the beach; Larry makes arrangements to return Brian home; Brian joins some sort of music video shoot on the beach and meets the Aussie girl of his dreams; Larry lets Ricki take his car to escape to parts unknown--only to have her return and pick him up, and the two leave Los Angeles and a life of crime. Fade out; credits. While a beach-set scene also capped off the first version of Gigli, there was still a good deal of movie left to go at this point, during which a number of the plot and character points left dangling in the release cut are resolved. A number of points are resolved in a scene immediately after this first pass by the Baywatch. Larry pulls the car over by the side of a road, and Ricki finally comes clean to Larry, no doubt due to the violent scene at Starkman's place. She reveals that her real name is Rochelle, and she actually isn't a contractor--which then follows through on a number of points made earlier in the film: (1) during their first meet, Larry tells her that he hadn't seen her around before and didn't look like a contractor; and (2) Ricki's insistence on talking her way out of sticky situations, namely the confrontation with thugs at the fast food stand and the meeting at Starkman's. Ricki goes on to reveal that the actual hitwoman was her girlfriend Robin, whose single-scene appearance barging into Larry's apartment and slashing her wrists is rather bewildering without this payoff. She and Robin had some relationship problems, and as an as escape Rochelle tried to taste what Robin's life was like, and hence her showing up on Larry's doorstep. Since she was role playing, Ricki's "fence-jumping" with Larry makes more sense, as perhaps she did it because it was something she thought Robin would do; even "turkey time" makes more sense, as it was perhaps Rochelle's misbegotten idea of "tough" speak. But now having had her taste and then some after seeing Starkman kill Larry's higher-up Louis right in front of them, Rochelle tries to get Larry to pick up and leave with her. He declines, and so Rochelle takes her things and leaves him and Brian in the car. Rochelle is never again seen or heard from for the rest of the film; at the end there's no friendly reunion, let alone a lovey-dovey one. Not only does the loss of this scene harm the film from a basic story perspective, it also does a disservice to Lopez's performance. The entire crux of the character is in this scene, and, indeed, it is Lopez's finest moment in the film. With its deletion, what's left is a performance that can understandably be criticized as being an overly soft, less-than-convincing portrayal of a mob enforcer--because, after all, Ricki was originally conceived and performed as never being an actual one. With Ricki/Rochelle gone, Larry decides to do the right thing and turn Brian in to Christopher Walken's cop character, Jacobellis, whose role was substantially larger than the cameo that now remains. The two meet up in a warehouse, where Jacobellis, in another showy Walken speech, reveals that he has been working for Starkman all along--thus showing to Larry that even the apparent good guys in this world are also corrupt. There's gunplay, and Larry ends up shooting Jacobellis dead. However, Larry catches a bullet himself, square in the gut. A visibly shaken Brian sees his wound--"You're bleeding, Larry," he matter-of-factly states in a noticeably more somber tone--but Larry insists that he's fine. Slowly bleeding to death, Larry drives Brian all the way back to the Baywatch; there's a certain bittersweetness as Brian's excitement contrasts against Larry's dying selflessness, and the rough cut's temp score (Hans Zimmer's familiar Gladiator music) effectively enhanced the mood. Much of what follows then progresses as seen in the release version: Larry urges Brian on to join the dancers on the beach; Brian meets the Australian girl. However, Larry's reaction shots are completely different; instead of being alive and upright, nodding along, Larry is lying on the sand, bleeding, dying, which then makes Brian's shyness and uncertain looks all the more understandable. The music (in the rough cut, the song was "Let's Get Loud," a track from Lopez's first album) and dancing starts and, as in the release version, the action eventually goes into slow motion. But then we end on Larry's face, as he looks to the ocean, which we see is the spitting image of his fantasy "clean place"--he's finally found it, and what led him there was, ironically, the life path he was hoping to escape."
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Late Night with Conan O'Brien: Sylvester Stallone/Bill Bellamy/Train (2003)
    • Colonne sonore
      Demagogue
      Written by Silvano Matadin, Michel Schoots, Patrick Tilon and Rene van Barneveld

      Performed by Urban Dance Squad

      Courtesy of Lovecat Records

      By arrangement with Ocean Park Music Group

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    Domande frequenti22

    • How long is Gigli?Powered by Alexa
    • Was this movie supposed to be closer to what Martin Brest wanted Rain Man - L'uomo della pioggia (1988) to be like?
    • Is this regarded as the worst film ever made?

    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 14 novembre 2003 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Sito ufficiale
      • Columbia Tristar (France)
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Una Relación Peligrosa
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Long Beach, California, Stati Uniti
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Revolution Studios
      • City Light Films
      • Casey Silver Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Budget
      • 54.000.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 6.087.542 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 3.753.518 USD
      • 3 ago 2003
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 7.266.209 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      2 ore 1 minuto
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.39 : 1

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