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IMDbPro

Casablanca

  • 1942
  • Livre
  • 1 h 42 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
8,5/10
639 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
620
41
Ingrid Bergman, Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre, Claude Rains, Sydney Greenstreet, Paul Henreid, and Conrad Veidt in Casablanca (1942)
Trailer for the classic drama Casablanca starring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman.
Reproduzir trailer2:11
7 vídeos
99+ fotos
Drama psicológicoDramaGuerraRomance

O proprietário cético de uma boate protege um antigo amor e seu marido dos nazistas no Marrocos.O proprietário cético de uma boate protege um antigo amor e seu marido dos nazistas no Marrocos.O proprietário cético de uma boate protege um antigo amor e seu marido dos nazistas no Marrocos.

  • Direção
    • Michael Curtiz
  • Roteiristas
    • Philip G. Epstein
    • Julius J. Epstein
    • Howard Koch
  • Artistas
    • Humphrey Bogart
    • Ingrid Bergman
    • Paul Henreid
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    8,5/10
    639 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    620
    41
    • Direção
      • Michael Curtiz
    • Roteiristas
      • Philip G. Epstein
      • Julius J. Epstein
      • Howard Koch
    • Artistas
      • Humphrey Bogart
      • Ingrid Bergman
      • Paul Henreid
    • 1.6KAvaliações de usuários
    • 219Avaliações da crítica
    • 100Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Filme mais avaliado nº45
    • Ganhou 3 Oscars
      • 18 vitórias e 12 indicações no total

    Vídeos7

    Casablanca
    Trailer 2:11
    Casablanca
    Casablanca
    Trailer 2:52
    Casablanca
    Casablanca
    Trailer 2:52
    Casablanca
    Which Iconic Movie Characters Should Meet at the 'El Royale'?
    Clip 1:35
    Which Iconic Movie Characters Should Meet at the 'El Royale'?
    Casablanca: Kiss Me
    Clip 0:51
    Casablanca: Kiss Me
    Casablanca: Practice
    Clip 0:52
    Casablanca: Practice
    Shakespeare "Goes Hollywood" With Finn Wittrock
    Video 1:36
    Shakespeare "Goes Hollywood" With Finn Wittrock

    Fotos272

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    Ver pôster
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    + 264
    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal99+

    Editar
    Humphrey Bogart
    Humphrey Bogart
    • Rick Blaine
    Ingrid Bergman
    Ingrid Bergman
    • Ilsa Lund
    Paul Henreid
    Paul Henreid
    • Victor Laszlo
    Claude Rains
    Claude Rains
    • Captain Louis Renault
    Conrad Veidt
    Conrad Veidt
    • Major Heinrich Strasser
    Sydney Greenstreet
    Sydney Greenstreet
    • Signor Ferrari
    Peter Lorre
    Peter Lorre
    • Ugarte
    S.Z. Sakall
    S.Z. Sakall
    • Carl
    • (as S.K. Sakall)
    Madeleine Lebeau
    Madeleine Lebeau
    • Yvonne
    • (as Madeleine LeBeau)
    Dooley Wilson
    Dooley Wilson
    • Sam
    Joy Page
    Joy Page
    • Annina Brandel
    John Qualen
    John Qualen
    • Berger
    Leonid Kinskey
    Leonid Kinskey
    • Sascha
    Curt Bois
    Curt Bois
    • Pickpocket
    Abdullah Abbas
    • Arab
    • (não creditado)
    Enrique Acosta
    • Guest at Rick's
    • (não creditado)
    Ed Agresti
    • Bar Patron
    • (não creditado)
    Arnet Amos
    • French Soldier
    • (não creditado)
    • …
    • Direção
      • Michael Curtiz
    • Roteiristas
      • Philip G. Epstein
      • Julius J. Epstein
      • Howard Koch
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários1.6K

    8,5639.2K
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    Resumo

    Reviewers say 'Casablanca' is lauded for its themes of love and sacrifice, iconic dialogue, and performances by Bogart and Bergman. Its historical significance and quotable lines resonate across generations. Critics commend its direction, cinematography, and the use of "As Time Goes By." However, some find it overrated or slow-paced, suggesting its charm may not universally appeal. Despite mixed opinions, it remains a significant and influential film.
    Gerado por IA a partir do texto das avaliações de usuários

    Avaliações em destaque

    Doylenf

    As time goes by, it's still one of the all-time greats...

    While my personal Bogey favorite is still his Sam Spade in 'The Maltese Falcon', his cynical nightclub owner, Rick, in 'Casablanca', is also a standout. Rather than some "off the cuff" comments, I'll quote instead from my article on Claude Rains (from March 2000 issue of CLASSIC IMAGES) that pretty well sums up the film:

    "It was 1943's 'Casablanca', bustling with melodramatic wartime intrigue, that really put him (Claude Rains) in the forefront as one of the screen's smoothest character actors, almost--but not quite--stealing the film from Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman, as the uniformed Captain Louis Renault who investigates the goings-on at Rick's notorious cafe.

    Nobody associated with the film guessed that it would become a screen classic, least of all its director, Michael Curtiz, the prolific WB director to whom it was just another assignment. It went on to win the Oscar for Best Film of 1943 with an award for Curtiz' taut direction.

    Oddly enough, the film's memorable airport ending was written and conceived just shortly before filming wrapped up, with neither Bergman nor Bogart knowing whether or not she would leave him for husband Paul Henried. Wartime audiences loved the film. Sydney Greenstreet, Conrad Veidt, Victor Francen and Peter Lorre all gave sterling performances and Rains was again nominated for Best Supporting actor."

    And by the way, I disagree with a former comment indicating the black and white photography of this film was primitive as compared to today's. Incredible nonsense!! As a matter of fact, the film's black and white cinematography was nominated for an Oscar!

    Ingrid Bergman was at the peak of her radiant beauty in this one--and Bogey was firing on all six cylinders. Great chemistry!

    As time goes by, we still have 'Casablanca'...
    Lechuguilla

    Wartime Themes

    Love and sacrifice during WWII underlie the story about a café owner named Rick (Humphrey Bogart), and his link to two intellectual refugees from Nazi occupied France. Ilsa (Ingrid Bergman) and Victor Laszlo (Paul Henreid) seek asylum here in politically neutral Casablanca and, like other European refugees, gravitate to Rick's upscale café, near the city's airport, with its revolving searchlight.

    Rick is a middle-aged cynic who also has a touch of sentimentalism, especially for people in need, like Ilsa and Victor. The film's story is ideal for romantics everywhere.

    Much of the plot takes place inside Rick's café, an ornate nightclub with archways and high ceilings. Rick's is a gathering place for an eclectic mix of patrons, from locals to those who have arrived from countries throughout Europe. It's this deliciously international ambiance of Rick's café that renders this film so appealing, with a variety of interesting accents, clothes, and uniforms. And, of course, there's Sam, the piano player, who plays all the favorites, including "As Time Goes By".

    All of the film's technical elements are excellent including the script, with its colorful characters, like the debonair Captain Renault (Claude Rains); and Signor Ferrari (Sydney Greenstreet), the articulate and portly "leader of all illegal activities in Casablanca". And a minor character that made an impression on me was the guitar playing female singer at Rick's (Corinna Mura), whose beautifully operatic voice was an unexpected delight in this smoke filled saloon.

    The film's dialogue, though substantial, is clever and lively, like when Captain Renault observes Rick escorting an intoxicated woman out of the bar: "How extravagant you are, throwing away women like that; some day they may be scarce".

    High-contrast B&W lighting renders a noir look. And that pounding score at the film's beginning is stunning; it evokes a feeling of far-off adventure.

    "Casablanca" differs from traditional noir films, mostly as a result of its ending. Rick must make a choice between his own interests and the interests of others. The choice he makes enjoins viewers to a sense of courage and optimism, an individual's example of proper collective behavior in the war against Nazi Germany.
    10Jaymay

    HOW TO WATCH THIS MOVIE

    There are literally hundreds of comments about this movie on IMDB. Many of them exhort its greatness. I don't disagree with them.

    But I'd like to add a suggestion to those of you out there who haven't seen this film. I'd like to tell you HOW to watch it.

    The people who made this movie didn't think they were producing a masterpiece. Bergman left the shoot disgusted. The screenwriters were on salary for Warners, writing half a dozen movies a year, and this was just one more. Bogie was punching the clock in the middle of a workhorse career.

    So as an audience member, you can't sit down expecting gilded greatness.

    Don't have a Casablaca party. Don't watch it on your first date, hoping it will lend that "Romantic Touch." Don't watch it as part of your "I need to watch the Best 10 movies of all time" Film School project.

    Buy this movie on DVD. Have it at the ready. And then, one Friday night, when your plans fall through and you find it's 10:30pm and there's nothing on TV that's any good, open a six pack of beer, or pour yourself some wine, and watch this movie in a darkened room.

    The characters in Casablanca are absolutely devoid of sentimentalism. Every one of them sees the world without a hint of rose color in their lenses. As Rick says, "Three little people don't amount to a hill of beans in this big old world." If you're in a mood where you understand what he's saying, watch this movie and it will transport you.

    There is no single movie that deserves to be called the best movie of all time. Because movies, when all is said and done, don't amount to a hill of beans. They are meant to entertain us, not for us to worship THEM.

    But no movie has ever known this fact like Casablanca.

    If you watch Casablance this way, with no expectations, with no "hype," you might catch 10 percent of its greatness on one viewing. And that will be enough to start you on your way.

    Happy viewing, kid.
    mryerson

    Of all the gin joints, in all the world...

    Sunday, November the 20th is the anniversary of Marcel Dalio's death in 1983. It was the end of a serendipitous life. You know him. He was a citizen of the world. Born Israel Moshe Blauschild, in Paris, in 1900, he became a much sought-after character actor. His lovely animated face with its great expressive eyes became familiar across Europe. He appeared in Jean Renoir's idiosyncratic Rules of the Game, and Grand Illusion, arguably the greatest of all films. True to his Frenchman's heart, he married the very young, breathtaking beauty Madeleine LeBeau. He worked with von Stroheim and Pierre Chenal. He had it all.

    But then the Germans crushed Poland, swept across Belgium and pressed on toward Paris. He waited until the last possible moment and finally, with the sound of artillery clearly audible, with Madeleine, fled in a borrowed car to Orleans and then, in a freight train, to Bordeaux and finally to Portugal. In Lisbon, they bribed a crooked immigration official and were surreptitiously given two visas for Chile. But on arriving in Mexico City, it was discovered the visas were rank forgeries. Facing deportation, Marcel and Madeleine found themselves making application for political asylum with virtually every country in the western hemisphere. Weeks passed until Canada finally issued them temporary visas and they left for Montreal.

    Meanwhile, France had fallen and, in the process of subjugating the country, the Germans had found some publicity stills of Dalio. A series of posters were produced and were then displayed throughout the city with the caption 'a typical Jew' so that citizens could more easily report anyone suspected of unrepentant Jewishness. The madness continued. 'Entree des artistes', a popular film, was ordered re-edited so that Dalio's scenes could be deleted and re-shot with another, non-Jewish, actor.

    After a short time, friends in the film industry arranged for them to arrive in Hollywood. Nearly broke, Marcel was immediately put to work in a string of largely forgettable films. Madeleine, a budding actress in her own right, was ironically cast in 'Hold Back the Dawn', a vehicle for Charles Boyer with a plot driven by the efforts of an émigré (Boyer) trying desperately to cross into the United States from Mexico. But the real irony was waiting at Warner Brothers.

    In early 1942, Jack Warner was driving production of a film based on a one act play, 'Everybody Comes to Rick's' but had no screenplay. What he had was a mishmash of treatments loosely based on the play and two previous movies. But he had a projected release date and a commitment to his distributors to have a movie for that time slot and little else. Warner Brothers started to wing it.

    Shooting started without a screenplay and little plot. Principal players were cast and a director hired but casting calls for supporting roles and bit players continued and sometime in the early spring Marcel Dalio and Madeleine LeBeau were cast as, respectively, a croupier and a romantic entanglement for the male lead. Veteran screen-writers were hired to produce a running screenplay, sometimes delivering pages of dialogue one day, for scenes to be shot the following day. No one knew exactly where the plot would go or how the story would turn out. No one was sure of the ending. And, of course, they produced a classic, perhaps the finest American movie.

    They produced a screenplay of multiple genres, rich with characterizations, perfectly in tune with the unfolding events in Europe and loaded with talent from top to bottom. Oh, and they changed the title to 'Casablanca'.

    It is so well known, that many lines of long-memorized dialogue have passed into the slang idiom. 'We'll always have Paris', 'I was misinformed', 'Here's looking at you, kid', ' I am shocked! Shocked! To find that there's gambling going on in here!', 'Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship', 'Oh he's just like any other man, only more so', 'I don't mind a parasite. I object to a cut-rate one', 'Round up the usual suspects', and, of course, the oft quoted, apocryphal, 'Play it again, Sam'.

    Madeleine LeBeau plays Yvonne, the jilted lover of Humphrey Bogart, who is seen drowning her sorrows at the bar early in the film and who later, to get back at Rick and looking for solace takes up with a German officer finding only self-hatred. She is luminous.

    And when Claude Rains delivers the signature line, 'I'm shocked! Shocked! To find that there's gambling going on in here!' the croupier, Emil, played by Marcel Dalio, approaches from the roulette table and says simply, 'Your winnings, sir.' It is a delicious moment ripe with scripted irony, one among many in this film, but one made all the more so, knowing where Dalio came from and what he and his wife had endured to arrive at that line.

    I have often wondered exactly when they saw the final script or if they only realised the many parallels to their own lives when the film was released.

    Alas, they separated and divorced the next year, both going on to long successful careers. Dalio never remarried.

    Late in his career, when Mike Nichols was looking for a vaguely familiar face to deliver a long and worldly, near-monologue in Catch-22, he turned to Dalio. Faced with a hopelessly idealistic young American pilot, Dalio, as simply 'old man in whore house', in tight close-up, delivers a discourse on practical people faced with impractical circumstances, of the virtues of expedience in the face of amorality . Using his wonderful plastic features, now beginning to sag, in a voice full of melancholy, the old man reassures the young man that regardless of what 'grand themes' may be afoot in the world, in the end, little matters but survival.
    10Dockelektro

    Now I finally know why this one is one of the best

    Probably the most legendary movie of all time, I finally got to see it, it was a great hole in my movie-viewing history. And finally I got to understand why a classic movie like this has made its mark in history. The intricate political plot comes first, and sets the movie on a melting pot of the second world war, where everyone hopes and dies for an opportunity to reach the USA via Lisbon. This would provide sufficient material for hundreds of movies, but enter Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, magnificent cinematography, role model storytelling, a perfect supporting cast, some of the best dialogue ever commited to celluloid and Dooley Wilson singing THAT song, and history was made. More than 60 years of jaw-drops are sufficient to give the sceptics a good reason to make them understand that this is probably the greatest classic movie of all times, and one of the best ever made in the past, present and future.

    Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Many of the actors who played the Nazis were in fact European Jews who had fled Nazi occupation.
    • Erros de gravação
      (at around 37 mins) When Rick is getting drunk he ask Sam, "It's December 1941 in Casablanca, what time is it in New York?" After Sam replies, "My watch stopped," he goes on to say, "I'll bet they're asleep in New York. I'll bet they're asleep all over America." However, Rick is not referring to the actual time (noted by giving a month and year rather than a time) and is actually making reference to, in pre-Pearl Harbor America, most Americans are "asleep" when it comes to the war and fighting the Axis powers. This is an intentional attempt at a poetic reference, not a statement of fact.
    • Citações

      Rick: Of all the gin joints, in all the towns, in all the world, she walks into mine.

    • Versões alternativas
      As late as 1974, the references to an extra-marital affair were banned in Ireland. The Irish cut got rid of two important sequences. First, after Ilsa tells Rick that she had left him after finding out that Viktor was still alive, the embraces and dialogue that followed were cut. Second, the emotional dialogue at the end of the film from Ilsa's line "You're saying that only to make me go" to Rick's line "What I've got to do, you haven't any part of". This led to Irish audiences' being bemused by the relationship between Rick and Ilsa, and often interpreting Rick's final speech beginning "I'm no good at being noble" as a reflection on the debilitating effects of war.
    • Conexões
      Edited into 77 Sunset Strip: The Secret of Adam Cain (1959)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      La Marseillaise
      (1792) (uncredited)

      Written by Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle

      Arranged by Max Steiner

      Played during the opening credits

      Sung by Madeleine Lebeau and others at Rick's

      Variations played often in the score

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes23

    • How long is Casablanca?Fornecido pela Alexa
    • Was Ronald Reagan originally cast as Rick?
    • What exactly are "letters of transit"?
    • Is the character Victor Laszlo's name mispronounced?

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 17 de setembro de 1943 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Centrais de atendimento oficiais
      • Facebook
      • Warner Bros.
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Francês
      • Alemão
      • Italiano
      • Russo
    • Também conhecido como
      • Everybody Comes to Rick's
    • Locações de filme
      • Waterman Drive, Van Nuys, Los Angeles, Califórnia, EUA(airport runway)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Warner Bros.
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 950.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 4.219.709
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 181.494
      • 12 de abr. de 1992
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 4.732.250
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 42 min(102 min)
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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