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Em Busca da Fama

Título original: The Cool Ones
  • 1967
  • Approved
  • 1 h 35 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
4,5/10
431
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Em Busca da Fama (1967)
Comedy

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA young, millionaire rock promoter decides to create a new boy/girl duo team for his teen TV dance show by teaming up an ambitious go-go dancer and a has-been pop star and presenting them to... Ler tudoA young, millionaire rock promoter decides to create a new boy/girl duo team for his teen TV dance show by teaming up an ambitious go-go dancer and a has-been pop star and presenting them to the public as a new romantic pair.A young, millionaire rock promoter decides to create a new boy/girl duo team for his teen TV dance show by teaming up an ambitious go-go dancer and a has-been pop star and presenting them to the public as a new romantic pair.

  • Direção
    • Gene Nelson
  • Roteiristas
    • Joyce Geller
    • Gene Nelson
    • Robert Kaufman
  • Artistas
    • Roddy McDowall
    • Debbie Watson
    • Gil Peterson
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    4,5/10
    431
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Gene Nelson
    • Roteiristas
      • Joyce Geller
      • Gene Nelson
      • Robert Kaufman
    • Artistas
      • Roddy McDowall
      • Debbie Watson
      • Gil Peterson
    • 30Avaliações de usuários
    • 12Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos20

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    Elenco principal92

    Editar
    Roddy McDowall
    Roddy McDowall
    • Tony Krum
    Debbie Watson
    Debbie Watson
    • Hallie Rodgers
    Gil Peterson
    Gil Peterson
    • Cliff Donner
    Phil Harris
    Phil Harris
    • Fred MacElwaine
    Robert Coote
    Robert Coote
    • Stanley Krumley
    Nita Talbot
    Nita Talbot
    • Dee Dee Howitzer
    George Furth
    George Furth
    • Howie
    Mrs. Miller
    Mrs. Miller
    • Mrs. Miller
    The Bantams
    • The Bantams
    Glen Campbell
    Glen Campbell
    • Patrick
    The Leaves
    • The Leaves
    T.J. and The Fourmations
    • T.J. and The Fourmations
    Jim Begg
    Jim Begg
    • Charlie Forbes
    James Millhollin
    James Millhollin
    • Manager
    Phil Arnold
    Phil Arnold
    • Uncle Steve
    Melanie Alexander
    • Sandy
    Martin Abrahams
    Martin Abrahams
    • Club Dancer
    • (não creditado)
    Roxanne Albee
    Roxanne Albee
    • Minor Role
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Gene Nelson
    • Roteiristas
      • Joyce Geller
      • Gene Nelson
      • Robert Kaufman
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários30

    4,5431
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    Avaliações em destaque

    5silverandgold89

    Wacky and Harmless

    I enjoyed this hilariously uncool attempt to be cool. I was left with the impression that the actors knew this was bad and decided to have as much fun as possible with it. I think I've also developed a crush on Nita Talbot.
    6ccmiller1492

    Roddy McDowall as Simon Cowell?

    "The Cool Ones" is definitely a second-string musical but it's more entertaining than many of the A-list musicals of the decade and doesn't deserve the obscurity to which it's consigned. It's well-paced, with lots of song and dance numbers, directed by Gene Nelson, who has a great feel for these elements. The real standout in this film is Gil Peterson who greatly resembles Grant Williams. He has enough charisma and talent to pull the whole thing together with a convincing performance and wonderful vocals. If his songs were dubbed, it is incredible how synchronized they were and how appropriately they matched his speaking voice. It's a mystery why this talented, handsome and energetic performer didn't achieve a more successful career.

    Unfortunately there is far too much screen time and energy devoted to Roddy McDowall's annoying and overly fey portrayal of the promoter. Could this be an earlier incarnation of Simon Cowell?
    5atlasmb

    More Corny Than Cool

    You hear that "The Cool Ones" is "The groovy movie with the hip hit tunes" (an official tagline), so you want to dig the scene, right? Not really. The scene is a confusing mixture of pop cultural references as written by a committee of older businessmen. If you were not around in 1967, when the movie was released, you will probably have difficulty knowing what references really were "cool" in 1967 and which were manufactured, or warmed over fare from years before. If you were around in 1967, the movie is somewhat fun--despite being bad--to pick apart and reminisce about.

    In my opinion, this film is a musical. Musical numbers are staged in the middle of scenes, and the characters break out in song when not on a stage. Trying to create a teen movie musical is a bold undertaking, but this is no "Bye Bye Birdie". It features a young go-go dancer(Debbie Watson playing Hallie Rogers) and a former singing idol (Gil Peterson playing Cliff Donner) who meet in a supposedly hip club called "Stan's Cellar" and are persuaded by a young pop music guru (Roddy McDowall) to combine forces to capture the imagination of gullible teen fans. They even create what they hope will be a new dance craze: The Tantrum.

    Donner is supposed to be a jaded singer who once had screaming fans. He performs in the "Cellar" with a group called The Leaves. Some of the numbers performed by musical groups in this film are not bad and are authentic to the theme of the movie. But Donner is often stuck singing old tunes that are arranged in a (not so) cool way: "What is This Thing Called Love", "Secret Love", and--incredibly--"The Birth of the Blues". There is one scene where Glen Campbell sings "Just One of Those Things". Not cool. No teen with an edgy persona in 1967 would be embracing those gems. This is three years after the Beatles conquered America!

    Surprisingly, the choreography is often of good quality and on a par with other musicals.

    Things to look for, even if some seem out of place in a movie about "cool ones":

    *The Petula Clark poster on the wall.

    *The dance performed to music reminiscent of "The Hand Jive".

    *The kids snapping their fingers like the cast of "West Side Story"--cool man!

    *The red Mustang. Now that was a cool car!

    *The mod look--the colorful London-based chic that some of the kids dress in.

    *Small smatterings of psychedelia.

    *The "dirty old man" who looks all of 27.

    *The "draft board" reference.

    *The unexpected occasional lapses into slapstick.

    *The laughable computer reference. The public had so little knowledge of computers that anything will flashing lights and beeping sounds could pass. And they often performed feats that are nothing short of mystical.

    *Actor Phil Harris who seems to be playing the part of "obligatory adult whose purpose is to thwart the coolness of teens".

    *Actress Nita Talbot, who plays Dee Dee Howitzer and somehow manages to have screen presence despite a limited role.

    *The proposal scene in the back of a bus. One might be reminded of the iconic back-of-the-bus scene in "The Graduate", also released in 1967.

    This is no time capsule of 1967 in particular, but as a reminder of many disparate cultural references from the previous decade or more, it could be a fun watch.
    5bkoganbing

    That big break on Whiz Bang

    The Cool Ones is about a pair of singers, Gil Peterson and Debbie Watson who are looking for different things from the music business. Peterson is an already passe rock and roll idol and Watson is a young hopeful. Some elements of A Star Is Born are present as you see.

    An egotistical promoter Roddy McDowall gets a hold of them and decides to team them. McDowall's own manipulation cause the road to success and romance to be a bit bumpier than normal.

    But McDowall gives a Whiz Bang performance and the goal for both is a debut as a duo on the rock and roll variety show Whiz Bang. Back in the 60s there were such shows as Shindig, Hullabaloo, and Where The Action Is on TV. The culture changed after Woodstock.

    Some original rock and roll numbers are about half the soundtrack. But it also includes such standards like Cole Porter's Just One Of Those Things and What Is This Thing Called Love? are there too done in rock and roll style. What Cole Porter might have thought of it we won't know without a seance. But I'm of the opinion that any exposure to Cole Porter is good.

    Peterson and Watson are an attractive couple and such other Hollywood veterans like Phil Harris, Robert Coote, Nita Talbot and Phil Arnold give good support. But this is Roddy McDowall's picture like no other.
    Ddey65

    I'm not going to lie; I saw it mainly for Teri Garr.

    Despite the title, there are other aspects of this movie that got me interested in it. One main reason the movie didn't do so well at the box office was because they were making a 1965 movie in 1967. By the time this movie was released, The Beatles had finished doing official concerts in under a year, the hippies were beginning to organize the "Summer of Love" in San Francisco, "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" had pushed sleaze into Oscar territory, and "The Graduate" did more to speak for the kids than any leftover wannabe beach party movie.

    Cliff Donner (Gil Peterson) was an early '60's swinging sixties pop singer whose career went into the toilet when some managers suggest he performs some old 1940's music. Think Ricky Nelson going Bing Crosby, and you'll get the idea. Years later Cliff is driving to Palm Springs and stops at a night club owned by Stanley Krumley (Robert Coote), a man he knew from England who ran a club there, and talks him into singing along with The Leaves.

    Would-be pop singer Hallie Rodgers (played by the uber-cute Debbie Watson), is struggling to make it big in the music business but has to settle for being a go-go dancer on "Whiz-Bam," an obvious imitation of "Hullaballoo." Frustrated with having the powers that be stall her career, she breaks out of her cage and has an unauthorized duet with the lead signer of Patrick and the East Enders (played by Glen Campbell). The producers are pissed at her, but the kids dig it, and the Whiz-Bam dancers noticed this. Even Patrick notices it, and when a stagehand insults their audience, and the girl is fired, both the Whiz-Bam dancers and the band threaten them "West Side Story-"style (I wish I were kidding!).

    Though despondent over being fired, some of her fellow Whiz-Bammers take her to that bar in Palm Springs where Cliff and The Leaves are performing. Suddenly, a guy in his late-20's who looks a lot like Iggy Pop (No, really!) decides he wants to put the moves on her, and he won't take no for an answer. The commotion this guy causes stops the show, Cliff comes to the rescue and throws everybody out, until he recognizes her from the show. He decides he wants get her foot in the door with the dance that everyone on in the audience was doing which he dubbed "The Tantrum." However she wants him to make a comeback in return for his promotion of her.

    Then there this whole elaborate number where Gil, Debbie and the Whiz-Bam dancers perform the song "High" in the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway. Leave it to a non-Californian such as myself to be flabergasted over the fact that such a transit system can exist in Southern California, and with a ski lodge too. After it's all over, Krumley tells them that he's about to give the two of them a big break through his brother Tony Krum, a wannabe Phil Spector played by Roddy McDowall. Naturally as expected from these movies, the two fall in love, but Tony Krum wants to be the one who decides when and how they do so. This creates a major kink in their relationship, but Krum doesn't care, and Donner sees what's going on, and poor Miss Rodgers wants to keep both her man and her career. He even goes so far into getting Gil to get involved in a demoltion derby as part of his promotion. One might think this might be more of an attempt to capitalize on movies such as "Fireball 500."

    So who else among the dancers are in this movie besides the lovely Ms. Garr? Well, you have a short guy with a goatee, a guy who looks like Howdy-Doody, another guy with a Peter Tork haircut, an Asian-American woman, one token black guy, some other blondes, including one with roots, and a lot of other extras. Sadly I don't recognize them all, although I've heard some names of a few of those people, so maybe I should.

    There's a line from the docudrama on the making of "Sweet Sweetback's Badassssss Song" where Mario Van Peebles (playing his father) claimed that in the late-1960's the times were changing, and Hollywood wasn't. Actually there were movies that reflected what was going on (or what people thought was going on), and how people felt about it, and even if this wasn't one of them, it was still farily enjoyable. Let's be honest though; this movie is not only not cool, it's corny, and doesn't know it's corny, unlike, say for instance, "Enchanted." Incidentally, Garr's career started to take off after this movie when she went from being a nobody dancer to roles in a certain episode of "Star Trek," and the 1968 Monkees movie "Head," and the rest is history. So a little art imitating life gives this movie a couple of extra points.

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    • Curiosidades
      This was the last feature for Director of Photography Floyd Crosby, father of musician and singer David Crosby.
    • Erros de gravação
      British pop star Tony Krum lands in Palm Springs on his private jet, with his coat-of-arms insignia on the side. But the tail numbers of his plane indicate it's not British, but American.
    • Citações

      [Hallie visits Gil by the pool at a motel]

      Hallie Rogers: Where are you going?

      Cliff Donner: I'm gonna get out of this wet suit

      Hallie Rogers: Ooh. Oh boy, a naked man.

    • Conexões
      References Password (1961)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Where Did I Go Wrong?
      Music by Billy Strange

      Lyrics by Jack Lloyd

      Performed by Roddy McDowall with Nita Talbot, Robert Coote & Jim Begg

      [Tony sings the song with Dee Dee, Stanley and Charlie in Tony's office at the Sunset Towers when Tony laments about the problems in arranging Cliff and Hallie's act]

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    Perguntas frequentes

    • How long is The Cool Ones?
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    Detalhes

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    • Data de lançamento
      • 12 de abril de 1967 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • The Cool Ones
    • Locações de filme
      • Palm Springs Aerial Tramway, Palm Springs, Califórnia, EUA
    • Empresa de produção
      • William Conrad Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 35 minutos
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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