AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
4,5 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA young woman juggles an unwanted suitor's advances and her desire for an exciting life, envying her free-spirited roommate's social whirlwind.A young woman juggles an unwanted suitor's advances and her desire for an exciting life, envying her free-spirited roommate's social whirlwind.A young woman juggles an unwanted suitor's advances and her desire for an exciting life, envying her free-spirited roommate's social whirlwind.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Indicado a 4 Oscars
- 6 vitórias e 17 indicações no total
Jolyon Booth
- Registry Office Clerk
- (as Jolyan Booth)
Lewis Alexander
- Party Guest
- (não creditado)
Jack Arrow
- Party Guest
- (não creditado)
Richard Atherton
- Waiter
- (não creditado)
Roy Beck
- Party Guest
- (não creditado)
Hyma Beckley
- Party Guest
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
Overall, I recommend this flick. I particularly liked the character of Georgy ...the way she tries to cover up any vulnerability with wit/ spunk..she MAKES the movie. But I can't help be bummed at the ending. Rationally, I approve of the ending, but find it disappointing at the same time..... It was more sensible,plausible and had more integrity than if they'd kept Georgy & Jos together...but...but... James Mason creeped me out through the whole movie (I mean, he watched her grow up..the old lecher!) and Alan Bates was soo ADORABLE (yes, he was selfish & immature too, I KNOW. He had potential for change??Maybe??) I supposed I'm just biased, Alan Bates (Alan Bates of the late '60s & '70s that is)being up there on my list of unconventional crushes.
I enjoyed "Georgy Girl" at the time of its original release, but hadn't thought about it until I recently viewed the DVD version. This revisit was well worth it: "Georgy Girl" is a delightful film.
Charlotte Rampling's Meredith is my favorite of the four main characters. Rampling has always been physically stunning, but it's her moody intellect within that keeps Meredith modern rather than a 60s icon who looks sensational in Mary Quant mini-dresses, a darker version of Julie Christie in "Darling" (a character who didn't have too much of a light side herself). Meredith is cool, in control, self-serving, brutal, and surprisingly honest about who she is. "You take me as me," she tells Jos (Alan Bates) as she cajoles him into marrying her, not so much because she's pregnant but because she's bored. It seems in Meredith's view, you can easily get rid of a pregnancy, but boredom requires more skill and is potentially a worse situation in which to find yourself. Other actresses could have successfully made Meredith a bitch, but Rampling makes her fascinating and thus strangely likable. When she exits the film, things go a bit limp, but then there's little left than to move the story to its inevitable conclusion.
Alan Bates plays Jos with such high physical and verbal energy he seems to be all the Marx Brothers rolled into one. His facial expression at the culmination of his strip during the 'I Love You' sequence suggested to me a nod to the great Harpo.
Lynn Redgrave made the role of Georgy so much her own it's difficult to believe the story that Vanessa Redgrave had been originally intended for it -- and even more difficult to imagine Vanessa playing scenes with Rampling.
The title song became a big hit at the time. In the film, the lyrics vary somewhat from the pop version, serving to set up the plot during the opening credits and then comment on its resolution at the end. In between, the song politely vanishes, leaving the classically influenced score by Alexander Faris to take over with its harpsichord riffs and its subtle playfulness. I especially liked the violin solo that accompanies the transition from orgasm to morning sickness.
The dialogue is often fast, overlapping, thrown away, or contains obscure (to me) cultural references, so it's worth enabling the English subtitles for DVD viewing. You wouldn't want to miss "Moss Bros", or Alan Bates' rapid-fire disrobing monologue, or Meredith's contempt for the concert at which she has just played violin: "Beethoven night. They're like animals."
Charlotte Rampling's Meredith is my favorite of the four main characters. Rampling has always been physically stunning, but it's her moody intellect within that keeps Meredith modern rather than a 60s icon who looks sensational in Mary Quant mini-dresses, a darker version of Julie Christie in "Darling" (a character who didn't have too much of a light side herself). Meredith is cool, in control, self-serving, brutal, and surprisingly honest about who she is. "You take me as me," she tells Jos (Alan Bates) as she cajoles him into marrying her, not so much because she's pregnant but because she's bored. It seems in Meredith's view, you can easily get rid of a pregnancy, but boredom requires more skill and is potentially a worse situation in which to find yourself. Other actresses could have successfully made Meredith a bitch, but Rampling makes her fascinating and thus strangely likable. When she exits the film, things go a bit limp, but then there's little left than to move the story to its inevitable conclusion.
Alan Bates plays Jos with such high physical and verbal energy he seems to be all the Marx Brothers rolled into one. His facial expression at the culmination of his strip during the 'I Love You' sequence suggested to me a nod to the great Harpo.
Lynn Redgrave made the role of Georgy so much her own it's difficult to believe the story that Vanessa Redgrave had been originally intended for it -- and even more difficult to imagine Vanessa playing scenes with Rampling.
The title song became a big hit at the time. In the film, the lyrics vary somewhat from the pop version, serving to set up the plot during the opening credits and then comment on its resolution at the end. In between, the song politely vanishes, leaving the classically influenced score by Alexander Faris to take over with its harpsichord riffs and its subtle playfulness. I especially liked the violin solo that accompanies the transition from orgasm to morning sickness.
The dialogue is often fast, overlapping, thrown away, or contains obscure (to me) cultural references, so it's worth enabling the English subtitles for DVD viewing. You wouldn't want to miss "Moss Bros", or Alan Bates' rapid-fire disrobing monologue, or Meredith's contempt for the concert at which she has just played violin: "Beethoven night. They're like animals."
Marvelous film, an extension of the British kitchen-sink dramas from earlier in the decade (but with a friskier spirit), "Georgy Girl" introduced audiences to Vanessa Redgrave's kid sister, Lynn (in an Oscar-nominated performance). She's plain and frumpy Georgina, a too-tall, kissless clown and nursery school teacher who plays second-fiddle to her more beautiful flat-mate--and who also harbors a crush on her pal's sexy boyfriend in the bargain. While dodging the advances of her father's wealthy employer, Georgina acts as nursemaid to her pregnant roommate, never dreaming of the circumstances to follow. From Margaret Forster's novel, which she co-adapted with Peter Nichols, the film is visually alive, stylish and skittering about with "free and easy" abandon, yet with moral choices and a sobering heart at its center. Redgrave is nothing short of fabulous; her "Georgy" is often slumped over sulking, an easy mark with little sense of humor (she's either completely inflexible or terribly over-eager). The clever, enticing writing is spread about for everyone to share in--so much so that the supporting characters nearly upstage our heroine (whose moods tend to be exasperating near the end): Charlotte Rampling is excellent as pregnant Meredith (who gets the film's most viciously funny lines); Alan Bates is terrific as her devilish lover; while Oscar-nominated James Mason is too comfortably cast as the older man with an eye for Georgy (he isn't able to offer anything fresh here). Delightful comedy-drama from director Silvio Narizzano, one of the few from this era not to use 'mod' touches to set the time and place. *** from ****
Georgina Parkin is a little bit naive, and she wears innocent heart, front and back, and on her sleeve, she's intelligent and bright, quite self-conscious of her plight, not particularly forthright, don't deserve what she receives; has a father plus a father figure who, at 49 (looks a lot older if you ask me) wants 22, to attend to, all the things his wife's unable, to spread out upon the table, let him consume and deplume the ingénue. Now Georgy shares a flat with Meredith, she has a fella name of Jos she spends time with, although it's reasonable to say, she likes to vary where she plays, a promiscuous, and wild type of miss. But it's quite tricky when you fancy your mates lover, that is, until he plays his cards and you discover, that there could just be a maybe, even though girlfriend's with a baby, in a complicated tale, someone will suffer.
An of its time story that doesn't age quite as well as some 60s dramas, although the performances are great and from some rather talented actors who went on to much greater things.
An of its time story that doesn't age quite as well as some 60s dramas, although the performances are great and from some rather talented actors who went on to much greater things.
... it's because it is. But you have to look at the year it was made - 1966. The top film at the box office that year was "The Bible", but the #3 movie was "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?". So society and its values were definitely in transition, even in confusion.
The plot is centered on Georgy (Lynn Redgrave), a twenty-something working class British girl who is portrayed as overweight and plain when I think she is adorable. She's on a voyage of self-discovery, but ultimately finds that she's most fulfilled in service to others, in particular her roommate's infant child who is abandoned at birth, and whose care she enthusiastically takes up. This might have been a sweeter tale than it is if not for HOW Georgy manages to keep the child and support her, made especially puzzling by the closing rendition of the title song that infers that this is supposed to be a happy ending! To find out what she did you'll have to watch this yourself. This film was considered controversial for its time, dealing with promiscuity, abortion, hedonism, child abandonment, and classism.
This movie might have even had trouble being made in the US at the time, and it for sure had difficulty with some local TV station managers that considered it unsuitable even five years later. I know that in my hometown, Dallas, no TV station manager would air it as late as the early 70s. If you think that's odd, do realize that the local Dallas ABC affiliate wouldn't air NYPD Blue during its first season in the early 90s because station management considered it obscene!
If you do decide to watch it, remember it's definitely not a comedy though it has comic moments.
The plot is centered on Georgy (Lynn Redgrave), a twenty-something working class British girl who is portrayed as overweight and plain when I think she is adorable. She's on a voyage of self-discovery, but ultimately finds that she's most fulfilled in service to others, in particular her roommate's infant child who is abandoned at birth, and whose care she enthusiastically takes up. This might have been a sweeter tale than it is if not for HOW Georgy manages to keep the child and support her, made especially puzzling by the closing rendition of the title song that infers that this is supposed to be a happy ending! To find out what she did you'll have to watch this yourself. This film was considered controversial for its time, dealing with promiscuity, abortion, hedonism, child abandonment, and classism.
This movie might have even had trouble being made in the US at the time, and it for sure had difficulty with some local TV station managers that considered it unsuitable even five years later. I know that in my hometown, Dallas, no TV station manager would air it as late as the early 70s. If you think that's odd, do realize that the local Dallas ABC affiliate wouldn't air NYPD Blue during its first season in the early 90s because station management considered it obscene!
If you do decide to watch it, remember it's definitely not a comedy though it has comic moments.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesVanessa Redgrave backed out of the role of Georgy just before shooting started. Her sister Lynn picked up the part instead.
- Erros de gravaçãoIn the early scene at the piano where Georgy's father has brought her a dress to wear to a birthday party, she's wearing glasses when he starts to say, "Oh, please yourself," but not wearing them before he finishes the line.
- ConexõesFeatured in The Lady with the Torch (1999)
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Georgy Girl
- Locações de filme
- Dame Clara Butt House, 7 Harley Road, London, Greater London, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(James Leamington's mansion)
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 400.000 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 39 min(99 min)
- Cor
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