- Prêmios
- 2 indicações no total
Robert Downey Jr.
- Ian
- (as Robert Downey)
Vince Townsend Jr.
- Bar Patron
- (as Vince Monroe Townsend)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Does a movie need definitive plot points or events that move the characters forward? No! Weird Science proves that a movie need be nothing more than a series of jokes and visual gags. But Weird Science is also a movie with a message. That message – horny boys and science is a wicked combination. Once you see John Hughes' masterpiece about Frankensex, you will be asking yourself why you ever quoted The Breakfast Club. I sense you doubting that Weird Science effectively taps into the troubled teen psyche with sincerity and insight. Well consider the following. A bodacious babe is front and center with Einstein's intellect and essence of David Lee Roth. A teenage girl is stripped naked by a vacuum cleaner chimney – which is okay cuz it's in the name of science. Bill Paxton is reduced to a Jim Hensonesque troll! A giant phallic missile penetrates a suburban house. Still not convinced? Well, just watch the last half hour. A gang of road ragers crashes the obligatory 80s teen party, do donuts all over the floors and smack random guys in the crotch. Bennet from Commando asks the heroes if they have tossed off to any good books lately and Anthony Michael Hall get's all Dirty Harry on their uninvited post- apocalypse asses. This is a work of unparalleled brilliance and sophistication. It's got Robert Downey Jr. in it too!
I first watched this in 1985 on VHS as a 13 year old, so a lot of the sentiment was lost on me then. Having watching it again as a 50 year old after finding it on the BBC iplayer I decided to give it another go. I have to say that it was way more enjoyable now. It really brought back the feeling of being an awkward teenager and the fantasy of being guided through adolescence. There were a few quirks with the story but this can be overlooked by how the sensitivity of being an awkward teenager can be is portrayed. I do think the bones of the story could be updated for a remake that could possibly make more sense but still be a fun movie.
Weird science is a movie that takes you back to a time where more could be shown. It is a movie that really shows how the 80s was in its prime. The characters are litteraly high schoolers and it's perfect. It's about 2 nerdy teens that create a woman aka Lisa (Kelly Lebrock). And that is the plot and all you need to know. It's funny, Ruanchy, sexist, and it's perfect that way.
Weird Science was a lot of fun, a perfect light and frothy 1980s movie.
Although, having said that it is quietly subversive and more than a little risqué, it is unlike the other Directorial works of John Hughes.
In a nutshell, whilst two high-school nerds are watching a colourised version of Frankenstein, they hit upon the idea of using a computer program to literally create the perfect woman, who promptly turns their lives upside-down.
In a scene that echoed the earlier WarGames and perhaps foreshadowed AI our nerds tap into non-specific massive computing power via a dial-up modem!?
In any case, that perfect woman turns out to be Kelly LeBrock at the absolute peak of her powers, and not only does she do a bang-up job as Lisa she also seems to be having an absolute ball.
Aside from the year before's The Woman in Red the rest of Kelly's career was rather a non-event, which on this showing seems a shame.
The film also contains very early appearances for Bill Paxton and a pre-Junior Robert Downey.
We also have Vernon Wells relatively fresh from his rather similar role in Mad Max II, who then went on to appear in the following years Commando up against Arnie.
Last of note is Michael Berryman, best known for playing Pluto in the iconic The Hills Have Eyes.
These latter two actors have gone on to have prolific careers racking up more than 100 movie appearances each.
Of the two lead actors, only Anthony Michael Hall's's career amounted to much, his co-star Ilan Mitchell-Smith went on to do very little else.
I mention all this to illustrate just how varied and fickle this business we call show can be.
As Lisa's classic first line goes, and these are words to live by: "so, what would you little maniacs like to do first"?
Although, having said that it is quietly subversive and more than a little risqué, it is unlike the other Directorial works of John Hughes.
In a nutshell, whilst two high-school nerds are watching a colourised version of Frankenstein, they hit upon the idea of using a computer program to literally create the perfect woman, who promptly turns their lives upside-down.
In a scene that echoed the earlier WarGames and perhaps foreshadowed AI our nerds tap into non-specific massive computing power via a dial-up modem!?
In any case, that perfect woman turns out to be Kelly LeBrock at the absolute peak of her powers, and not only does she do a bang-up job as Lisa she also seems to be having an absolute ball.
Aside from the year before's The Woman in Red the rest of Kelly's career was rather a non-event, which on this showing seems a shame.
The film also contains very early appearances for Bill Paxton and a pre-Junior Robert Downey.
We also have Vernon Wells relatively fresh from his rather similar role in Mad Max II, who then went on to appear in the following years Commando up against Arnie.
Last of note is Michael Berryman, best known for playing Pluto in the iconic The Hills Have Eyes.
These latter two actors have gone on to have prolific careers racking up more than 100 movie appearances each.
Of the two lead actors, only Anthony Michael Hall's's career amounted to much, his co-star Ilan Mitchell-Smith went on to do very little else.
I mention all this to illustrate just how varied and fickle this business we call show can be.
As Lisa's classic first line goes, and these are words to live by: "so, what would you little maniacs like to do first"?
During most of the 1980s, I was working in or running movie theatres. I showed this movie and previewed it before it even opened. The one thing which struck me upon first viewing it was that it is essentially a teen-age version of Dr. Seuss's "The Cat in the Hat", right down to the house being magically cleaned up and the last piece of furniture sliding into place just as the parents return home to find everything as they left it. I always wondered if Hughes borrowed the plot on purpose or if he wrote Weird Science without realizing it's commonalities with one of the best loved children's story of all times. Anyone have opinions on that?
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesJohn Hughes wrote the script in only two days.
- Erros de gravação(at around 1h) A split second before the motorcycle crashes through the large window the pane shatters before the bike hits it.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosAs the end credits roll is ready to begin, Kelly LeBrock's character smiles / winks at the camera.
- Versões alternativasIn the basic cable version, the line "In the family jewels?" was changed to "In the flippin' gizzard?"
- ConexõesEdited from Gatinhas e Gatões (1984)
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- How long is Weird Science?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Mulher Nota Mil
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 7.500.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 23.834.048
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 4.895.421
- 4 de ago. de 1985
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 38.934.048
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 34 min(94 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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