AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
4,9/10
426
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAn American widower and a British divorcée keep running into each other and marry. But when the marriage loses its bloom, they try to separate, yet can’t stop finding their way back together... Ler tudoAn American widower and a British divorcée keep running into each other and marry. But when the marriage loses its bloom, they try to separate, yet can’t stop finding their way back together.An American widower and a British divorcée keep running into each other and marry. But when the marriage loses its bloom, they try to separate, yet can’t stop finding their way back together.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Hollis McLaren
- Eden
- (as Hollis Mclaren)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
This flick has not held up over the years. Watching George Segal and Glenda Jackson trying to be funny is more depressing than entertaining. The script and plot is so poorly written and is so full of holes it makes the movie awkward and embarrassing.
It may have been a popular movie in it's day but now it's a struggle to get through. And when it is over you will feel like a fool for watching it. That's how I felt!
It may have been a popular movie in it's day but now it's a struggle to get through. And when it is over you will feel like a fool for watching it. That's how I felt!
Odd story about a couple who seem destined to be together has George Segal as a college professor in New England struggling with his book, the death of his wife, and his subversive mother when he meets and marries a British woman (Glenda Jackson) he meets while on holiday in Europe.
Jackson is a fish out of water in the small New England town and has trouble adjusting to "college life" as well as her new husband's secrets and unwillingness to admit his career is foundering.
The re-teaming of Jackson and Segal (after their hit in A TOUCH OF CLASS) shows they have great chemistry, but the story is weak and the film is too long. Still, it has its funny moments.
Paul Sorvino (also in A TOUCH OF CLASS) returns as a philosophic cab driver. Maureen Stapleton is fun as the loony mother. John Cunningham is the best friend and rival. Others include John Candy, Martin Short, Janie Sell, Diana Barrington, Ken Pogue, and Hollis McLaren as the grad student.
Jackson is a fish out of water in the small New England town and has trouble adjusting to "college life" as well as her new husband's secrets and unwillingness to admit his career is foundering.
The re-teaming of Jackson and Segal (after their hit in A TOUCH OF CLASS) shows they have great chemistry, but the story is weak and the film is too long. Still, it has its funny moments.
Paul Sorvino (also in A TOUCH OF CLASS) returns as a philosophic cab driver. Maureen Stapleton is fun as the loony mother. John Cunningham is the best friend and rival. Others include John Candy, Martin Short, Janie Sell, Diana Barrington, Ken Pogue, and Hollis McLaren as the grad student.
George Segal (Just Shoot me, Look who is Talking) plays Adam Watson, a professor who has to write in order to get tenure. Running away from: (1) writing; (2) the fact that he has to compete for the Chair against his best friend, (3) the death of his wife, (4) a controlling mother; he ends up crashing into Tricia Brittenham, Glenda Jackson (A Touch of Class, Marat Sade), who is running from her divorce. The two crash into each other on the beautiful ski slopes of Europe. They marry and end up coming back to the States. She is British and is lost in the American-culture, with his academic friends, with his controlling mother, with a house left just like his deceased wife left it when she lived there. Tricia finds herself competing with a perfect, yet, dead wife. All those factors take a toll in their relationship. And they fight some more! I do not understand why in romantic comedies the leading characters have to fight so much. It seems to send a message to young people that fighting is the way to love, when in reality it is not, to the contrary! She tries to run away from her new found problems by going back to England. She needs peace and quiet but needs to take a cab to go the airport. The taxi driver Reilly, played by Paul Sorvino (Nixon) does not stop talking, leaving Tricia with no peace at all. Sorvino plays a very likable and at the same time a very annoying guy because he talks too much. Adam tries to commit suicide. Tricia realizes that Adam needs her. Tricia and Reilly rescue Adam in a very funny fashion! I am giving this movie a seven. If you can find the tape, rent it. Unfortunately this movie is not easily available at movie rental stores.
Only 4 other reviews and 3 of them negative....?? What...?
Okay, "Lost and Found" is not "A Touch of Class" (the previous pairing of stars George Segal and Glenda Jackson) but, just on its own terms, this film has some bright moments, some smart diaolgue and, most importantly, two of the best film stars of the '70's!
I was always a little miffed by the success of "A Touch of Class" anyway. The characters were adulterers, after all, and there's little that's fascinating or charming about that. And then there was the Best Picture Oscar nod and Glenda's Best Actress win. Surprising and puzzling, but one has to admit that the film delivers for sophistication, amusing laughs and intermittent romanticism.
But there are laughs to be had here, too. An Academic and a divorcee prematurely marry and entanglements ensue. It's no great shakes perhaps but it's a fair sight better than the stuff being peddled today. This was back in the days when lead actors could actually be in their forties and adult situations didn't mean they were X-rated. Dignity and discretion carry the day. Fun and slapstick comedy abound, if not in the dollops perhaps expected. The film is, as they say, handsomely mounted, fairy well paced, and has nice bits by Maureen Stapleton (though the old lady potty mouth schtick gets a bit wearing), Paul Sorvino, John Candy, Martin Short, and the marvelous Hollis McLaren. If you have some time and aren't expecting the world, there are far worse flicks to watch.
Okay, "Lost and Found" is not "A Touch of Class" (the previous pairing of stars George Segal and Glenda Jackson) but, just on its own terms, this film has some bright moments, some smart diaolgue and, most importantly, two of the best film stars of the '70's!
I was always a little miffed by the success of "A Touch of Class" anyway. The characters were adulterers, after all, and there's little that's fascinating or charming about that. And then there was the Best Picture Oscar nod and Glenda's Best Actress win. Surprising and puzzling, but one has to admit that the film delivers for sophistication, amusing laughs and intermittent romanticism.
But there are laughs to be had here, too. An Academic and a divorcee prematurely marry and entanglements ensue. It's no great shakes perhaps but it's a fair sight better than the stuff being peddled today. This was back in the days when lead actors could actually be in their forties and adult situations didn't mean they were X-rated. Dignity and discretion carry the day. Fun and slapstick comedy abound, if not in the dollops perhaps expected. The film is, as they say, handsomely mounted, fairy well paced, and has nice bits by Maureen Stapleton (though the old lady potty mouth schtick gets a bit wearing), Paul Sorvino, John Candy, Martin Short, and the marvelous Hollis McLaren. If you have some time and aren't expecting the world, there are far worse flicks to watch.
Glenda Jackson and George Segal made a great couple in the Oscar-winning classic "A Touch Of Class" (1973). Her very English nature, and his American-ness, both clashed with and complemented each other beautifully.
In "Lost and Found" the same qualities just make their constant nasty conflicts annoying. They both have their moments - Glenda's drunken tirade at the Chinese restaurant is particularly superb - but the film drags on and on with a series of pointless screaming matches and tantrums. And when Paul Sorvino's talkative taxi driver arrives on the scene the film becomes barely watchable, and loses all sense of realism.
Extremely dull direction, poor scripting, awful music, and bad cinematography don't help. And why did they film all of Glenda's close-ups in soft focus!!! It looks ridiculous. Why couldn't they just trust her admittedly unusual, but still very sexy, face??
It's all a waste of two top actors at the peak of their careers.
In "Lost and Found" the same qualities just make their constant nasty conflicts annoying. They both have their moments - Glenda's drunken tirade at the Chinese restaurant is particularly superb - but the film drags on and on with a series of pointless screaming matches and tantrums. And when Paul Sorvino's talkative taxi driver arrives on the scene the film becomes barely watchable, and loses all sense of realism.
Extremely dull direction, poor scripting, awful music, and bad cinematography don't help. And why did they film all of Glenda's close-ups in soft focus!!! It looks ridiculous. Why couldn't they just trust her admittedly unusual, but still very sexy, face??
It's all a waste of two top actors at the peak of their careers.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAlthough this is not a sequel to Um Toque de Classe (1973), a number of the cast and crew re-teamed after that earlier Glenda Jackson-George Segal vehicle. These included writer-director Melvin Frank, actors Cec Linder and Paul Sorvino, writer Jack Rose and editor Bill Butler.
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- How long is Lost and Found?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Lost and Found
- Locações de filme
- Lake Louise Ski Area, Lake Louise, Banff National Park, Alberta, Canadá(ski resort: Megève, French Alps)
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 6.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 3.223.197
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 1.022.374
- 24 de jun. de 1979
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 3.223.197
- Tempo de duração1 hora 46 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Um Toque de Humor (1979) officially released in Canada in English?
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