AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,3/10
2,4 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Depois de se queimar severamente num incidente com drogas, um comediante tem uma experiência de quase morte.Depois de se queimar severamente num incidente com drogas, um comediante tem uma experiência de quase morte.Depois de se queimar severamente num incidente com drogas, um comediante tem uma experiência de quase morte.
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Mike Genovese
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Avaliações em destaque
I recently watched Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life is Calling (1986) on Tubi. The storyline follows a famous comedian who nearly dies from a drug overdose. As he hovers between life and death, his life flashes before him. We follow his journey throughout his life and through his near-death experience.
This film is directed by and stars Richard Pryor (Harlem Nights), and also features Deborah Kaye Allen (Fame), Art Evans (Die Hard 2), Michael Ironside (Starship Troopers), and Barbara Williams (White House Down).
While this movie was just okay overall, the storyline was smart, well-written, and well-executed. It serves as a good warning. The characters felt authentic and were well portrayed. The relationships throughout the movie are sad but feel genuine. The comedy routines are hit or miss, but it's always fun to watch Pryor. The antics are predictable yet over the top. The ending is very good and makes the journey worthwhile.
In conclusion, Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life is Calling is a worthwhile journey through a troubled man's life. I would score this a 6.5/10 and recommend seeing it once.
This film is directed by and stars Richard Pryor (Harlem Nights), and also features Deborah Kaye Allen (Fame), Art Evans (Die Hard 2), Michael Ironside (Starship Troopers), and Barbara Williams (White House Down).
While this movie was just okay overall, the storyline was smart, well-written, and well-executed. It serves as a good warning. The characters felt authentic and were well portrayed. The relationships throughout the movie are sad but feel genuine. The comedy routines are hit or miss, but it's always fun to watch Pryor. The antics are predictable yet over the top. The ending is very good and makes the journey worthwhile.
In conclusion, Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life is Calling is a worthwhile journey through a troubled man's life. I would score this a 6.5/10 and recommend seeing it once.
I'm not sure if a biographical film as raw and truthful as "Jo Jo Dancer" ever had a chance to be a big financial hit. But viewed now, more than 15 years later, it is obvious that the film did not deserve the critical drubbing it got back in the day. Writer-director-producer-star Richard Pryor created a very strong film, simultaneously entertaining, funny, pathetic, provocative, heartbreaking, revealing, and raw. Two things held it back. Firstly, it was too rough for the super-slick mid-80s, being shot and structured more like a seventies film. Secondly, even though the climax of the film--Jo Jo setting himself on fire in a harrowing, drug-fueled despair--is powerful, it lacks a sense of closure. Sadly, the reason for this is that, like the real life Richard Pryor upon whose life the story is based, Jo Jo doesn't die at the end. He is badly burned and we are briefly shown that he lives to continue his career, just as Pryor did.
The story is told through flashbacks, after Jo Jo has set himself on fire, focusing on how he got to that point. Since the story abruptly ends soon after his suicide attempt, however, we are not shown much of what happens after that point. In an odd bit of irony, Jo Jo's survival then makes for an unsatisfying conclusion, story-wise. It's as though Pryor is saying, hey I burned myself up and that made me all better. It just isn't satisfying.
Other than those minor points, however, "Jo Jo" is a fine film that stands as one of the best of Pryor's spotty film career, and one of the very few dramatic films that allowed his unique brand of rage and vulnerability to show through completely ("Blue Collar" and "The Mack" being two others).
Not a classic, but certainly not the bomb it was painted as in '86. And, I might add, head and shoulders above the majority of dramatic films cranked out by hollywood today.
The story is told through flashbacks, after Jo Jo has set himself on fire, focusing on how he got to that point. Since the story abruptly ends soon after his suicide attempt, however, we are not shown much of what happens after that point. In an odd bit of irony, Jo Jo's survival then makes for an unsatisfying conclusion, story-wise. It's as though Pryor is saying, hey I burned myself up and that made me all better. It just isn't satisfying.
Other than those minor points, however, "Jo Jo" is a fine film that stands as one of the best of Pryor's spotty film career, and one of the very few dramatic films that allowed his unique brand of rage and vulnerability to show through completely ("Blue Collar" and "The Mack" being two others).
Not a classic, but certainly not the bomb it was painted as in '86. And, I might add, head and shoulders above the majority of dramatic films cranked out by hollywood today.
I found this film to be a really good depiction of Richard Pryor's life. But, I would've used the actual story of his life instead of using a fictional character to depict his life. Only a suggestion though Richard. But besides that, it is a great bio that has charm and laughs along the way (that later reminded me of Andy Kaufman's Man on the Moon). Trivia note- Pryor wrote, produced, directed (his first real film, though he directed Richard Pryor Here and Now) and starred in this film, which would be his last film to have writer, producer and director on his credits (he now has MS). A-
I've always enjoyed "Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling" but it does have more than its fair share of flaws. The movie just doesn't work as well as it should have. Maybe Richard Pryor should have handed the direction off to a seasoned veteran rather than trying to do it himself. I don't know. The alter-ego stuff works well in some scenes and not that well in others. Visually the alter-ego is almost never convincing. "Jo Jo Dancer" is well acted but it seems to be longer than it actually is. The scenes with young Jo Jo are great. The "accident" scene is heartbreaking. Much of the stand up stuff isn't that good, especially Jo Jo's strip scene (ouch). I still watch this movie from time to time but it's just not completely satisfying. (I saw "Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling" in the theater when it first came out.)
Jo Jo Dancer Your Life is Calling (1987)
*** 1/2 (out of 4)
Richard Pryor direct, wrote, produced and stars in this film about a famous stand up comic who begins to rethink his life after catching himself on fire. If you've seen any of Pryor's three concert films then most of this film will be familiar since this is clearly an autobiographical film dealing with stuff we're heard Pryor discuss before. Everything from growing up in a whore house to his various marriages all the way to the fire incident, which nearly cost him his life. The director isn't the strongest in the world but Pryor's performance is right on the mark and the screenplay does a nice job at showing off these various stages in his life. The film has some very hard hitting moments and some touching ones just like his concert films.
*** 1/2 (out of 4)
Richard Pryor direct, wrote, produced and stars in this film about a famous stand up comic who begins to rethink his life after catching himself on fire. If you've seen any of Pryor's three concert films then most of this film will be familiar since this is clearly an autobiographical film dealing with stuff we're heard Pryor discuss before. Everything from growing up in a whore house to his various marriages all the way to the fire incident, which nearly cost him his life. The director isn't the strongest in the world but Pryor's performance is right on the mark and the screenplay does a nice job at showing off these various stages in his life. The film has some very hard hitting moments and some touching ones just like his concert films.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe dark side of Jo Jo's (Richard Pryor) growing acclaim in the film's story line is a reliance first on booze, then drugs. It is an aspect of the film which, Pryor admits, was painful to evoke as a writer, director, and actor. He said, "I look at the movie now and ask myself, 'Why did you show people that?' But I had no choice. It was something I had to do. I won't cop out, trying to explain why Jo Jo, or I, did drugs. I know why. I understand it even better after making the picture. But it's all there on film for people to take as they see fit. I'm one of the lucky ones. I was gone, crazy, out of my mind. But I'm alive."
- Erros de gravaçãoEarly cable versions opened up the Super 35 frame, which is responsible for a mistake when the "spirit" of JoJo walks to the limo. From the back, he is naked, but from the front, it can be seen that Richard Pryor is only bare chested, wearing jeans.
- Citações
Jo Jo Dancer: [to his wife as he gets on the bus] I'm gonna write you, I'm gonna write you.
- Trilhas sonorasMy Destiny
Produced by Arif Mardin, Philippe Saisse and Chaka Khan
Written and Performed by Chaka Khan
Courtesy of Warner Bros. Records
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- How long is Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Jo Jo Dancer
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 14.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 18.034.150
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 4.879.107
- 4 de mai. de 1986
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 18.034.150
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 37 min(97 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.39 : 1
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