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IMDbPro

Cocoon

  • 1985
  • Livre
  • 1 h 57 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,7/10
72 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
3.786
171
Cocoon (1985)
Assistir a Official Trailer
Reproduzir trailer1:27
3 vídeos
99+ fotos
Comédia peculiarComédiaDramaFicção científica

Quando um grupo de anciãos nada em uma piscina que contém casulos alienígenas, eles são energizados com vigor juvenil.Quando um grupo de anciãos nada em uma piscina que contém casulos alienígenas, eles são energizados com vigor juvenil.Quando um grupo de anciãos nada em uma piscina que contém casulos alienígenas, eles são energizados com vigor juvenil.

  • Direção
    • Ron Howard
  • Roteiristas
    • Tom Benedek
    • David Saperstein
  • Artistas
    • Don Ameche
    • Wilford Brimley
    • Hume Cronyn
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,7/10
    72 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    3.786
    171
    • Direção
      • Ron Howard
    • Roteiristas
      • Tom Benedek
      • David Saperstein
    • Artistas
      • Don Ameche
      • Wilford Brimley
      • Hume Cronyn
    • 117Avaliações de usuários
    • 65Avaliações da crítica
    • 65Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Ganhou 2 Oscars
      • 7 vitórias e 11 indicações no total

    Vídeos3

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:27
    Official Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:24
    Official Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:24
    Official Trailer
    COCOON Original Theatrical Trailer
    Clip 1:29
    COCOON Original Theatrical Trailer

    Fotos112

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    Elenco principal50

    Editar
    Don Ameche
    Don Ameche
    • Art Selwyn
    Wilford Brimley
    Wilford Brimley
    • Ben Luckett
    Hume Cronyn
    Hume Cronyn
    • Joe Finley
    Brian Dennehy
    Brian Dennehy
    • Walter
    Jack Gilford
    Jack Gilford
    • Bernie Lefkowitz
    Steve Guttenberg
    Steve Guttenberg
    • Jack Bonner
    Maureen Stapleton
    Maureen Stapleton
    • Mary Luckett
    Jessica Tandy
    Jessica Tandy
    • Alma Finley
    Gwen Verdon
    Gwen Verdon
    • Bess McCarthy
    Herta Ware
    • Rose 'Rosie' Lefkowitz
    Tahnee Welch
    Tahnee Welch
    • Kitty
    Barret Oliver
    Barret Oliver
    • David
    Linda Harrison
    Linda Harrison
    • Susan
    Tyrone Power Jr.
    • Pillsbury
    Clint Howard
    Clint Howard
    • John Dexter
    Charles Lampkin
    Charles Lampkin
    • Pops
    Mike Nomad
    • Doc
    Jorge Gil
    • Lou Pine
    • Direção
      • Ron Howard
    • Roteiristas
      • Tom Benedek
      • David Saperstein
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários117

    6,771.6K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    tfrizzell

    Early Ron Howard Entertainer.

    Six elderly people (Oscar-winner Don Ameche in more of a lifetime achievement award, Wilford Brimley, Hume Cronyn, Jessica Tandy, Maureen Stapleton and Gwen Verdon) start swimming at a locked up housed swimming pool that has strange pods in it and then start doing things that contradict their ages. Of course the pods really house aliens from another planet and they are the reasons for the "fountain of youth". Ron Howard's sympathetic and clever direction saves this uneven project that starts out as a pure comedy and then turns into a rough drama as the clock ticks away. Brian Dennehy and Steve Guttenberg shine in smart supporting roles. 4 stars out of 5.
    7raymond-15

    Interesting and thought-provoking

    Made 20 years ago with some former well-known actors, this film has stood the test of time very well and delivers a very interesting and thought-provoking story about the mortality of man.

    A group of people in a retirement village discover a neighbouring swimming pool which is out of bounds, but they have fun in it nevertheless. There are some strange objects lying on the bottom of the pool, but even more strange is the fact that after swimming there the old folk feel transformed and the vigor of their youth returns to their bodies. This makes for some light comedy as their hormones begin to take over.

    These old people have a very serious decision to make and it is not an easy one. This is probably the best part of the film. Should they accept or decline the invitation? Having made the decision there is no turning back! We ask ourselves...what would we do placed in their circumstances? We feel very much involved. Thinking it over, isn't this proposal very much like what the Christian churches are promising us?

    The final memorial church service by the sea is such a fitting ending and the little grandson David gives such a knowing smile as he raises his eyes to the sky.
    8blanche-2

    Sweet film that probably means more today

    1985's Cocoon, directed by Ron Howard, asks - would you give up the emotional, mental and physical pain of growing old if you could?

    Baby boomers today feel that death is optional and seek out whatever it takes to make them feel and look young - so if Cocoon came out in 2008, it would perhaps resonate even more.

    The story takes place in a rest home inhabited by a group of friends: Arthur (Don Ameche), Benjamin (Wilford Brimley) and his wife Marilyn (Maureen Stapleton), Joseph (Hume Cronyn) and his wife Alma (Jessica Tandy) and a perky red-head Bess (Gwen Verdon). The guys have taken to going to an abandoned pool house and swimming - without permission, of course.

    Then the building is rented by a man (Brian Dennehy). This same man also rents a boat from Jack Bonner (Steve Guttenberg), who is down on his luck and can use the money. He watches Jack, his beautiful assistant Kitty (Tahnee Welch) and some other people skindiving and bringing up huge silver packages. These packages are then dumped into the pool.

    After the men swim there one day, they find themselves suddenly rejuvenated and start having sex, staying up, nightclubbing and having more energy. Meantime, on the boat, Jack has gotten a look at Kitty getting ready for bed...and notices that she removes her skin as well as her clothes and glows in the dark.

    This movie has many poignant moments - Alma coming to grips with the fact that her husband has always cheated, and the saddest of all, when Bernard (Jack Gilford) who has been violently opposed to the whole idea of the pool as a fountain of youth, desperately brings his wife there.

    Howard cast this with an eye toward man's normal immortality - children - with Raquel Welch's daughter and Tyrone Power's son, Tyrone Power Jr. As Pillsbury - while telling the story of people who have a chance at a different kind of immortality. Both Power and Welch bear strong resemblance to their famous parents.

    The old-timers in the cast are among the greatest actors of their generation and sadly, we've lost nearly all of them now. Only Wilford Brimley remains. The film revived Don Ameche's career, and the cast returned for a sequel, "Cocoon: The Return."

    A wonderful film to see the old stars in a very touching story and to ask yourself - if you had the chance, would you take it?
    FilmFlaneur

    Charming fable that's still fresh

    Cocoon is a charming science fiction fable by the underrated Ron Howard. Howard is an amiable, frequently baseball-capped figure who, in the 70's, became a familiar face through his 6 year stint as Richie in TV's Happy Days. Cocoon followed immediately after Splash! (1984), another successful fantasy. It exchanges the Tom Hanks figure featured in that film with a similar one played by Steve Guttenberg, another romantic innocent. But whereas in the earlier film Hanks had a central role, here Jack Bonner (Guttenberg) has far less prominence. This is perhaps because of Guttenberg's modest acting abilities, but principally so the narrative can focus more securely on the characters that matter – the community of senior citizens facing their twilight years at the Sunny Shores Retirement Center.

    Cocoon's achievement as a film is all the more remarkable when one reflects upon the scarcity of active, old people in American cinema, let alone a group of them presented so positively in a state of sexual re awakening, then led to such an upbeat conclusion. Behind this apparent optimism, however, the thoughtful viewer can still reflect on some final doubts and uncertainties.

    The central circle of old people, around whom events turn, together prove a fine acting ensemble. Arthur (a still svelte Don Ameche), Ben (Selwyn Wilford Brimley) Jo (Hume Cronyn), Bernie (Walter Gilford), Alma (Jessica Tandy), Bess (Gwen Verdon) and the others are a convincing unit, squabbling, relating and facing the end of their lives with cantankerous dignity which is entirely convincing. Tandy and Cronyn were married in real life. Many of film's most poignant moments of the film spring from the relationships between these people. The quiet passing of Rose for instance, and her husband's grief by her bedside. Notable too is the wooing by former song and dance man Ameche of his new lady love, a process during which he shows no lessening of time-honed screen courtesy and assurance. During the opening of the film, Arthur and Jo's witnessing of an unsuccessful resuscitation is a stark reminder of the mortality of the principals, sadly off and on screen. Cocoon was a last hurrah for many of the elderly cast (although one or two survived advancing years to appear in the terrible Cocoon 2(1988)).

    The other major character group are the Antareans. Here too a refreshing leap out of the stereotypical is taken as the aliens prove reasonable, non aggressive and forgiving – perhaps characteristics inspired by Spielberg's influential and amenable ET (1982) or the religiosity of Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977). Jack Bonner's near hysterical reaction to their initial unmasking ('If you try and eat my face off you'll be very, very sorry'), his following conversion then inevitable dalliance, are all handled with an effective lightness. Even Howard's depiction of an alien orgasm on screen as Jack romances Kitty (Tahnee Welch) without touching, in the life giving pool, is done sensitively. It is perhaps the most striking moment of its sort in Science Fiction cinema since Woody Allen's Sleeper (1973). Cocoon is a film in which sexual energy is equated closely to an amplified life force and is seen as both positive and welcome. Both young and old feel the replenishment of their passion, directly or indirectly, in connection with the cocoon tank. Here the items retrieved from the sea are settled at the bottom, somewhat ominous reminders of a life to come. The title itself is suggestive, not only of the typical dormacy of a chrysalis, but of impending rebirth such an object heralds. As the oldsters rejuvenate with the 'fountain of youth', they find new meaning and value in their lives, a belated development which even leads to the sad break up of families. The desire for life can be selfish, even when healthily expressed, and some prefer to 'stick with the hand nature has given' them.

    The Antarean's recovery of their 'ground crew' is what brings them to earth. While their leader's account of them having originally lodged themselves in what was Atlantis is slightly hoary (their bases apparently having sunk during the 'first great upheaval') the film wisely seers away from too much alien hardware. Apart from the pretty device on the deck of Bonner's boat, and the splendours of the returning mother ship, very little technology is glimpsed. The Antareans are certainly strange, but lacking much hard evidence of their difference enables the audience to relate to them easily. Even their unskinning, as they emerge as their true, shining selves, is a wonderous event, a shining transfiguration with no implicit threat to humanity.

    These are aliens associated with whiteness and with life, forgiving and considerate, exhibiting 'christian' values. They radiate and float like angels when emerging from human covering, and their ship takes the departing OAPs up into the light. Hollywood readily associates such light with the rewards of heaven (for other examples of the brilliance bestowed upon the departing see The Frighteners (1996) or Jacob's Ladder (1990). Substitute the pool of life for baptism, the smiling Walter (Brian Dennehy) for a prophet, and Cocoon's alien spaceship might just as easily be the Gabriel leading the faithful to paradise.

    But what of the end of the film? Is it really as happy and as affirmative as it first seems? Bonner has made great play with his responsibility as a skipper in an earlier scene with Kitty. At the conclusion he might, therefore, reasonably be held to account for his loss of a cargo of elderly transportees. At least one extended family is broken up by their leaving. And Walter has to return home, his mission a failure, together with a boatload of unexpected guests. At the least the final ascension is a complex event, leaving some tensions unresolved. That Cocoon manages to hold all these elements together in a satisfying whole is one reason to seek it out. To enjoy a warm hearted family film is another.
    6Movie_Muse_Reviews

    A rare and truthful focus on the elderly makes "Cocoon" a nice film

    Very few films have been made with seniors as the main characters. It seems that Hollywood producers are convinced we prefer to see younger people on the screen -- and they're probably right. "Cocoon" is a rare elderly-focused take on the fountain of youth concept, an ancient motif that's enough proof in itself that humans desire young age, whether in general or at the movies. Although science fiction, "Cocoon" is simple and mild-mannered like its lovable old protagonists. It might be light on drama but it's big on heart.

    Loaded with stars from yesteryear, among them Don Ameche, Hume Cronyn, Jessica Tandy and Gwen Verdon, one could say "Cocoon" was an '80s alien movie made specifically for an older crowd. And that's fair -- they deserve it. It's as if director Ron Howard was hoping to give his cast some of their youth back in letting them take prominence in the film, based on a story by David Saperstein and screenplay by Tom Benedek. It's not riveting sci-fi material but it prompts an honest conversation about aging, one that in reality someone of any age could understand and appreciate.

    The film takes place in a senior living center in St. Petersburg, Florida. As part of their recreation time, three of the senior men enjoy swimming in the abandoned pool just through the woods around the center. When a strange group of people come in and buy the old house and rent a boat at the dock, the stubborn old guys still come to swim in the pool, only it appears the people are storing rocks in the water. They swim anyway and find that with the rocks in the pool (actually alien cocoons) that they feel energetic, rejuvenated -- and younger.

    Howard's film is easygoing. There is not a lot of suspense or gripping conflict. Instead, you watch and get a kick out of the way these seniors and their wives behave having been affected by the water. Their sex drive, for example, reappears to comic effect and there's general misbehavior. They all come off as bigger children and each have a different reaction to this "cheating" of age. Thus the film's core conflict of whether it's right to defy nature appears and guides the rest of the film. It's a replacement for any major form of antagonism.

    "Cocoon" is touching because the story is very frank in portraying these seniors as having nothing to live for but each other and whatever remaining family they have. When you're that old, a chance at prolonged life is like being granted a whole new world of opportunity whereas you're just biding time when you're old and physically and mentally unable to do the things you used to.

    There have been better stories, better special effects (although this one an Oscar in 1985) and better science-fiction films, so "Cocoon" is best appreciated as a unique film about old age, something movies rarely focus entirely upon.

    ~Steven C

    Visit my site! http://moviemusereviews.com

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Hume Cronyn was a Golden Glove boxer and lost sight in one eye. In the scene where he hits the young orderly, without depth perception, he actually hit the young man and knocked him out.
    • Erros de gravação
      Kitty massages Jack's right leg just after he bangs it. However, when they are talking, the leg left is the injured one.
    • Citações

      Joseph Finley: [to Alma] They say if we go with them, we'll live forever. And that's good. It's probably going to take you an eternity to forgive me... Alma, I'm sorry. I guess I was being ridiculous. I'm sorry. I love you. You're my whole life. I wanna go. But if it's a choice of only six more months here with you or living forever all by myself, well I'll take the six more months here with you. I don't want to live forever if you're not going to be with me.

    • Versões alternativas
      UK cinema and video versions were cut by 2 secs by the BBFC to remove one brief use of the word 'fucking' for a PG certificate. The Blu-ray is uncut, upgraded to a 12 rating.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Michael Sembello: Gravity (1985)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Gravity
      Performed by Michael Sembello

      Produced by Richard Rudolph (as Richard Rudolph) and Michael Sembello

      Courtesy of A&M Records

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes24

    • How long is Cocoon?Fornecido pela Alexa
    • What is 'Cocoon' about?
    • Is 'Cocoon' based on a book?
    • Where are the aliens from?

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 10 de outubro de 1985 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Кокон
    • Locações de filme
      • St. Petersburg, Flórida, EUA
    • Empresas de produção
      • Twentieth Century Fox
      • Zanuck/Brown Productions
      • SLM Production Group
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 17.500.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 76.113.124
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 7.936.427
      • 23 de jun. de 1985
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 85.313.124
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 57 min(117 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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