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Voltando ao Passado

Título original: Turn Back the Clock
  • 1933
  • Not Rated
  • 1 h 19 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,7/10
618
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Lee Tracy in Voltando ao Passado (1933)
Joe and Mary barely get by with their tobacco store. After an old friend returns now married to wealthy Elvina, Joe wishes he married her instead when he had the chance. Will he be happy when his wish comes true?
Reproduzir trailer2:39
1 vídeo
14 fotos
ComédiaDramaFantasia

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaJoe and Mary barely get by with their tobacco store. After an old friend returns now married to wealthy Elvina, Joe wishes he married her instead when he had the chance. Will he be happy whe... Ler tudoJoe and Mary barely get by with their tobacco store. After an old friend returns now married to wealthy Elvina, Joe wishes he married her instead when he had the chance. Will he be happy when his wish comes true?Joe and Mary barely get by with their tobacco store. After an old friend returns now married to wealthy Elvina, Joe wishes he married her instead when he had the chance. Will he be happy when his wish comes true?

  • Direção
    • Edgar Selwyn
  • Roteiristas
    • Edgar Selwyn
    • Ben Hecht
  • Artistas
    • Lee Tracy
    • Mae Clarke
    • Otto Kruger
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,7/10
    618
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Edgar Selwyn
    • Roteiristas
      • Edgar Selwyn
      • Ben Hecht
    • Artistas
      • Lee Tracy
      • Mae Clarke
      • Otto Kruger
    • 24Avaliações de usuários
    • 9Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 2 vitórias no total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:39
    Trailer

    Fotos14

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    Elenco principal46

    Editar
    Lee Tracy
    Lee Tracy
    • Joe Gimlet
    Mae Clarke
    Mae Clarke
    • Mary Gimlet…
    Otto Kruger
    Otto Kruger
    • Ted Wright
    George Barbier
    George Barbier
    • Pete Evans
    Peggy Shannon
    Peggy Shannon
    • Elvina Wright…
    C. Henry Gordon
    C. Henry Gordon
    • Dave Holmes
    Clara Blandick
    Clara Blandick
    • Joe's Mother
    Ernie Adams
    Ernie Adams
    • Reporter
    • (não creditado)
    Norman Ainsley
    • Joe's Valet
    • (não creditado)
    Ernie Alexander
    • Wedding Guest
    • (não creditado)
    Hooper Atchley
    Hooper Atchley
    • 1925 Spokesman
    • (não creditado)
    Symona Boniface
    Symona Boniface
    • Nightclub Patron
    • (não creditado)
    Don Brodie
    Don Brodie
    • Reporter
    • (não creditado)
    William Burress
    William Burress
    • Mr. Cradwell - Drug Store Proprietor
    • (não creditado)
    Ruth Cherrington
    Ruth Cherrington
    • Wedding Guest
    • (não creditado)
    Corky
    • Effie the Dog
    • (não creditado)
    Nell Craig
    Nell Craig
    • Nurse
    • (não creditado)
    Lester Dorr
    Lester Dorr
    • Joe's Aide
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Edgar Selwyn
    • Roteiristas
      • Edgar Selwyn
      • Ben Hecht
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários24

    6,7618
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    Avaliações em destaque

    81930s_Time_Machine

    The Wizard of Oz for grown-ups?

    It's not just because both Aunt Em and Uncle Henry from THE WIZARD OF OZ appear in this, the message: to be grateful for what you've got, is also the message of this fabulous 'if only you could re-live your life again' story.

    I'd generally avoid anything with Lee Tracy in like the plague - I find him the most annoying actor of all time but in this he's surprisingly ok. Under the superb direction of Edgar Selwyn, Mr Tracy's usual crass obnoxiousness is completely transformed into a reasonably sympathetic and likeable character. The production of this from MGM is excellent - Edgar Selwyn is perhaps forgotten about these days but virtually all his films he made in the early thirties are brilliant. He also wrote many of them as well - for this film, he co-wrote it with possibly Hollywood's best writer, Ben Hecht.

    Particularly in 1933, people might have wished that they could re-live their lives more so than other years. This film therefore, with its upbeat optimistic message would have been particularly poignant for its audience struggling through The Depression. Watched today it gives us a real sense of what Americans wanted to be told, what comforting reassurances they liked to hear as FDR took over the reins at the height - or rather lowest point of The Depression.

    If BACK TO THE FUTURE is one of your favourite films (which of course it should be) then you should enjoy this 1930s take on that theme. Vastly underrated Edgar Selwyn gives us almost as much fun as Zemeckis did fifty years later but being from the early thirties there's a touch of cynicism there too. Although you'd normally associate an attack on snobbery, class division, greed and the exploitation of the ordinary working man with Warner Brothers, all that's included in this as Joe, our hero has the enviable but ultimately unenviable challenge of being wealthy. Fortunately for most of that unfortunate 1933 audience, he learns that love not wealth is the key to happiness To end with an appropriate few words from The Beatles: Money Can't Buy Me Love.
    7AlsExGal

    Lee Tracy portends The Wizard of Oz

    Joe Gimlet (Lee Tracy) owns a cigar store in New York along with his wife Mary (Mae Clarke). They aren't poor, but they do struggle to make ends meet. On March 6, 1933, in walks someone he knew when he was growing up, Ted Wright (Otto Kruger), now a banker. Ted invites Joe and Mary to dinner with him and his wife, Elvina, and tells Joe that if he will give him the four thousand he has in savings, he can turn it into twenty thousand in a few months. Joe wants to do this, Mary does not because it is all they have. They argue, and Joe says that if he could live his life over he would not have married Mary and would have instead pursued wealth. Joe then storms out of their apartment and into the street, and is hit by a car. While he's unconscious, he imagines he gets to live his life all over again, starting in 1910 when he is a young man.

    In this alternate reality, Joe takes up Pete Evans (George Barbier) when he offers to let him in on a real estate deal in return for his 400 dollar life savings. He marries Pete's daughter, Elvina, to seal the deal. And since he knows everything that's going to happen through March 6,1933, he's a tremendous success in business, becoming not only a rich but a powerful man. Among the bad things he knew - He figured that his wife would probably two time him since he saw signs of her two-timing Ted in 1933. Joe didn't think he'd mind, but it turns out he does. And then March 6, 1933 comes and he no longer has the advantage of prescience. Complications ensue.

    It's not like anything in this film is a big surprise, although time travel was not common story material at the time. It's all about learning to appreciate what you have or, in the words of Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz "There's no place like home."

    The make-up job done is pretty impressive for the time - MGM really does make the lovely Mae Clarke look like a middle aged frump at age 23.

    MGM really "got" what worked as far as Lee Tracy vehicles. Starting with "The Nuisance" when he came over from Warner Brothers, they always gave him parts that used his penchant for fast talking comedy while letting him show his dramatic chops as well. An example of the latter in this film is when Tracy realizes he's back in 1910, in his boyhood home, and goes downstairs to see his mother cooking breakfast. In 1933 she must have been dead for years, because here he embraces her like he hasn't seen her for years - he hasn't - and tells her he's never leaving her side again. It's a very touching moment that, if you've lost a parent, you can easily relate to.

    Lee Tracy ended up throwing away his own career at MGM, as did Buster Keaton, but at least MGM gave Lee Tracy the sporting chance that they never gave Buster Keaton.
    10Ron Oliver

    Lee Tracy Struts His Stuff

    A middle-aged shopkeeper is given the chance to TURN BACK THE CLOCK and see what his life would have been like had he made other choices when young.

    Human dynamo Lee Tracy animates this whimsical fantasy about second chances. (Somewhat ironic, in that a `second chance' was exactly what MGM would not give Tracy after his spectacular fall from grace in 1934.) This was one of 5 films which Tracy would make for MGM in a very busy 1933, his total output at the Studio. As always, he energizes his every scene. Always engaging & enjoyable to watch, it is a shame that he is almost forgotten today.

    Costars Clara Blandick (mother), Mae Clarke (wife), George Barbier (father-in-law), and Otto Kruger (rich friend) all provide very competent assistance, but this is really Tracy's film all the way.

    Movie mavens will spot uncredited performances by Charley Grapewin as Tracy's boyhood doctor, and The Three Stooges (Moe & Curly Howard and Larry Fine), playing it straight as singers at Tracy's wedding.

    Notice the fine attention to detail which MGM gives the shots of Tracy's hometown - the busy streets and authentic-looking buildings. It was this high level of production value - even for a `B' picture such as this - which was one of the Studio's hallmarks.
    9clanciai

    Virtuoso story construction resulting in a marvel of realistic imagination.

    This is worth seeing for its amazing story, which although fantastic is completely logical all the way. It's Ben Hecht, of course, and at his best, working together with Edgar Selwyn to produce a cinematic wonder of plot and imagination, playing with destiny and accomplishing a wonder of plausibility in spite of its character of total conjecture.

    The only problem of the film is Lee Tracy's acting, which is rather exhausting, since he is constantly overdoing it. Maybe that was the fashion of actors in the early 30s, but today it's just annoying.

    The other actors are doing alright, especially the two ladies and Otto Kruger, but it's the plot that is the main thing of this film. Who hasn't one time or another dreamt of reliving one's life and doing it over again but better? That's what happens to Joe Gimlet, he gets an alternative chance and really makes the best of it and everything he wanted to do different, and still it all goes wrong...

    The most ingenious thing about the story construction is how it is combined with the story he left behind, he meets the same people but under different circumstances and making different careers, and so in the end he finds his best friend, president of the National Bank, in his own original position as a petty shop owner.

    Ben Hecht was in his prime throughout the 30s, beginning with "Front Page", bringing forth a flood of script masterpieces, until he was allowed to make a film of his own, "The Specter of the Rose", an ambitious art film of ballet, very much ahead of its time, which flopped, so he was never allowed to make another movie. Still he continued writing excellent scripts, but his sharpest edge was lost.
    9flatrich

    Unique for its time - an excellent film for Lee Tracy fans

    A unique film of the "if I had it all to do over" variety, Turn Back The Clock gives Lee Tracy a chance to show the full range of his talents as an average Joe who wants a second chance at life and gets it.

    Director Edgar Selwyn and screenwriter Ben Hecht delivered a small masterpiece in 1933 that might seem familiar now to later generations. Everyone from Frank Capra to Rod Serling has used the same theme successfully - the lesson to be learned: you can't change the past without consequences, so maybe its better just to be happy with what you have.

    TCM has this one in its vault, so see it if you're a Tracy fan. You won't be disappointed. Excellent performances by Mae Clarke and Peggy Shannon as well. Funny and dramatic with some of the delightful over the top stuff you'd expect from an early Thirties film, but fast and insightful at the same time.

    Oh, and an uncredited guest bit with The Three Stooges as wedding singers!

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    • Curiosidades
      Voltando ao Passado (1933) was the first film in which then known as "Ted Healy's Stooges"--Moe Howard, Jerry Howard (later known as Curly Howard), and Larry Fine--appeared together, but not as The Three Stooges. They sing "Sweet Adeline." Joe tells them to sing "something lively"; Larry volunteers that they know "My Old Kentucky Home." Forgetting the difference in years while drunk, Joe requests the Stooges sing "Tony's Wife" (a pop song from 1933), which the Stooges are unfamiliar with; it's Moe then asks "Tony's wife? Who is she?" Although they are not credited as the Three Stooges (indeed, they receive no screen credit at all), this marks the first time the trio appeared as a group on film without their former leader, Ted Healy. They would launch their long-running film-shorts career a few months later.
    • Erros de gravação
      President Woodrow Wilson's letter asking for Joe Gimlet's resignation misspells his last name as "Gimlett."
    • Citações

      Ted Wright: Oh, wait 'til I tell you about the time Joe and I made a blind date with two girls that called at the drug store.

      Joe Gimlet: You mean the Chippeway twins.

      Ted Wright: Ha-ha. The Chippeway twins. We called them Africans and they turned out to be Indians.

    • Conexões
      Featured in We Haven't Really Met Properly...: Clara Blandick as Auntie Em (2005)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      A Hot Time in the Old Town
      (1896) (uncredited)

      Music by Theodore A. Metz

      Whistled by Lee Tracy

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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 25 de agosto de 1933 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • YouTube - Video
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Turn Back the Clock
    • Locações de filme
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, Califórnia, EUA(Studio)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 19 min(79 min)
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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