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Os Últimos Dias de Patton

Título original: The Last Days of Patton
  • Filme para televisão
  • 1986
  • TV-PG
  • 2 h 26 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,3/10
1,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Os Últimos Dias de Patton (1986)
BiografiaDrama

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaJuly 1945. The war in Europe is over and General George S Patton is now military governor of Bavaria. True to form he doesn't always see eye-to-eye with his superiors and is prone to making ... Ler tudoJuly 1945. The war in Europe is over and General George S Patton is now military governor of Bavaria. True to form he doesn't always see eye-to-eye with his superiors and is prone to making comments that they don't approve of.July 1945. The war in Europe is over and General George S Patton is now military governor of Bavaria. True to form he doesn't always see eye-to-eye with his superiors and is prone to making comments that they don't approve of.

  • Direção
    • Delbert Mann
  • Roteiristas
    • Ladislas Farago
    • William Luce
  • Artistas
    • George C. Scott
    • Richard Dysart
    • Murray Hamilton
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,3/10
    1,2 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Delbert Mann
    • Roteiristas
      • Ladislas Farago
      • William Luce
    • Artistas
      • George C. Scott
      • Richard Dysart
      • Murray Hamilton
    • 21Avaliações de usuários
    • 2Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Ganhou 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 1 vitória e 1 indicação no total

    Fotos8

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    Elenco principal61

    Editar
    George C. Scott
    George C. Scott
    • General George S. Patton Jr.
    Richard Dysart
    Richard Dysart
    • Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
    Murray Hamilton
    Murray Hamilton
    • Gen. Hobart 'Hap' Gay
    Ed Lauter
    Ed Lauter
    • Dr. Lt.Col. Paul S. Hill
    Kathryn Leigh Scott
    Kathryn Leigh Scott
    • Jean Gordon
    Horst Janson
    Horst Janson
    • Baron von Wangenheim
    Daniel Benzali
    Daniel Benzali
    • Col. Glen Spurling
    Ron Berglas
    Ron Berglas
    • Young Patton
    Don Fellows
    Don Fellows
    • Lt.Gen. Walter Bedell Smith
    Errol John
    Errol John
    • Sgt. 1st Class George Meeks
    Alan MacNaughtan
    Alan MacNaughtan
    • Brigadier Hugh Cairns
    • (as Alan MacNaughton)
    Paul Maxwell
    Paul Maxwell
    • Lt.Gen. Geoffrey Keyes
    Lee Patterson
    Lee Patterson
    • Col. Paul Harkins
    Shane Rimmer
    Shane Rimmer
    • Dr. Col. Lawrence Ball
    Eva Marie Saint
    Eva Marie Saint
    • Mrs. Beatrice Ayer Patton
    Erika Hoffman
    • Young Beatrice
    Ian Tyler
    • Pfc. Horace 'Woody' Woodring
    Aaron Swartz
    • Sgt. Joe Spruce
    • Direção
      • Delbert Mann
    • Roteiristas
      • Ladislas Farago
      • William Luce
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários21

    6,31.2K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    5Cineleyenda

    Last part too long

    It is OK that they made a sequel concerning Patton's life at the end of the war. Proud of his Anglo-Saxon heritage, he has some identification with the Germans for this reason and because he was strongly anti-communist. Whether he made some of the specific remarks he made here is open to question (it can more easily be proved that he said something than he did not say something, of course). In any event, it is historically true that he made an impolitic remark that, like his soldier-slapping, got him into trouble and transferred away from his military governor position.

    But after he is seriously injured (spinal column and paralysis) in the auto accident, the movie drags on way too long, over an hour when he is in a hospital bed. There are reminisces from him and many parties, flashbacks, and many well wishers and helpers. The problem is that nothing really happens of significance, it is just a failed attempt at tear-jerking. Patton himself was fiery, so not a person who lends to easy identification with all the softness. For those worried about being bored, I would stay away or leave halfway through. Clearly, a maximum of 20 minutes was needed to cover this period and the director's insistence on doing much more wrecked the movie, in my book. Adding to the pre-injury time would have been a better decision.
    10srulison

    A fitting sequel

    This film, a made-for-TV sequel to the movie "Patton", is exceptionally well done. With essentially the same cast as the film, it follows the career of General George S. Patton from victory in Europe to his untimely death following an automobile accident in Bavaria. While the movie "Patton" portrays the brusque, sometimes profane side of General Patton, this sequel shows his softer side. He was a brilliant strategist and tactician but also felt deeply the role and demands of the common soldier, with whom he desired to be buried. The script for this film was derived from the book by Ladislav Farrago, author of the excellent biography "Patton". Farrago was a WWII OSS agent who experienced the rigors of war firsthand. At the time he wrote "The last days..." and writing about Patton's painful last days in the hospital, he was himself dying of cancer. His wife and son finished the work. This film is an important footnote to history and should be recorded on DVD.
    8tonellinon

    The movie is a character study

    I found this movie compelling to watch. Selecting only the final days of its subject's life, it is not really a biopic. There is no plot--the life of any person seldom has a plot. I call it a character study, probably the least spectacular of all dramas. What character studies lack in spectacle, they're supposed to make up for with a fascinating portrait of the subject's personality--like looking at a great oil painting of a famous person--except that it's a motion picture. Having said that, I found this film to be remarkably well done and could have been better were it not budgeted as a TV movie. I think the film's theme (rather than plot) is how a person handles his own impending death. When the subject is General Patton, a first-class soldier and real hero, a man who always wanted to die by the last bullet of the last battle of the last war of his life, and the circumstances of his dying is by a fender-bender that breaks his neck and renders him an invalid for 12 days, a recipe for a real dramatic character study emerges. How a man like Patton handled the absurdity of his transition to death is the human question that permeates the whole movie. It starts off by his return to the States for the first time since November 1942. He has his wife on his arm, and the couple is surrounded by reporters. The reporters demonstrate that, whether pro or con, Patton is a legend and he makes good copy. Beatrice at his side reminds us that he was also a family man--and a good one--a man who compliments his wife publicly. The film is filled with reminiscing flashbacks which shows two things: that Beatrice was a good match for Patton, particularly the scene where she drives the tank prototype, at her husband's request, to demonstrate the ease with which it can be driven before the Army brass; a man who is sorely tempted to see no more point to continue living is tugged one way by memories (thus, acknowledgment) of having lived a good life and tugged another way to put up a cheerful front in facing the absurd, anticlimactic present. Beatrice realizes this in a scene with General "Hap" Gay in a darkened hospital room where she reveals her understanding that her husband has everyone fooled by his charm and bravado--but her husband is slipping and he knows it. The movie shows that Patton's heroism was not an act put on for his soldiers or for the public or the press--nor was it self-delusion--his heroism ran deep--steeped as he was in his knowledge of history, his own ancestry and family, the film shows that the dying, invalid Patton was heroic in another way: he was kind and generous to his doctors and their staff; he tried greatly to spare his wife any unnecessary hurt. Even in his attitudes towards the de-Nazification policy--is not driven by any political motive. No real warrior takes any pleasure in seeing a vanquished people suffer after they've been disarmed. Given his upbringing and values he had demonstrated all his life, I believe that Patton saw his job as military governor of Bavaria to help the Bavarian people survive the winter and to get back on their feet. Even if he were wrong about de-Nazification, the film is interested in the character that drove the man. His attitude towards the Soviets was probably also driven by what he saw as very cruel and heartless conduct by the Soviet forces against the conquered German population. This movie is not for everyone. It will not entertain anyone who needs real spectacle to remain entertained. The natural audience for this kind of movie is a more mature--or emotionally deep--audience.
    JonathanDP81

    It's far too loooooooong.

    The first Patton movie was a classic, but some stupid TV exec had to convince George C. Scott that this sequel was a good idea. Of course you wouldn't expect much from a TV movie, but this... What were they thinking? This depressing slop just seems to drag on and on, until at the end you're almost happy he's finally dead. The last few days of Patton's life would never be fit for an entire movie. The ending of one, maybe, but it should impossible to stretch Patton dying in a bed into feature length. Yet somehow they did, and even longer. My theory is that at the last minute, someone told the writer they wanted a two-parter. That would explain the huge amounts of padding in this film. My advice, stick to the original and forget this one ever existed.
    rooprect

    Joins Exorcist III in the list of great sequels starring George C Scott that people hated because they were expecting something different

    Like Exorcist III, a great movie that was largely shunned by original Exorcist fans because it wasn't spooky enough, "The Last Days of Patton" is another piece of powerful cinema which was shunned by many Patton fans because it didn't have enough action. The point in both of these sequels was not to continue/rehash the heart-pounding spectacle of the first, but rather to present a quiet, heavy, introspective, script driven drama. Who else but the great George C Scott can pull this off?

    "The Last Days of Patton" begins on June 7, 1945 when a victorious Patton returned to Bedford, MA to throngs of fans & reporters, and it takes us through the last 6 months of Patton's life which ended in December that same year. There's no combat, no gunfire, no "war" other than a frustrated General Patton attempting to take charge and rebuild a war-ravaged Bavaria, much to the opposition of Eisenhower's political interests. This is a quiet drama that focuses on the private hell of a soldier without a war.

    George C Scott and an excellent script full of literary quotations make this an intellectual film, and I'd be lying if I said I recognized all the references. I found myself pausing the movie so I could google things like who said "Up he rose, and forth they went / Away from battleground, fortress, tent / Mountain, wilderness, field and farm / Death and the General, arm-in-arm" (save you the trouble: it's Arthur Guiterman). The character also quotes Kipling, Foutenelle, Napoleon and others, with each quote holding deep significance and insight into the mind of the general.

    One of the most memorable lines, spoken as only Scott could with a mix of bitter irony and light hearted humor: "I do not suffer, my friends; but I feel a certain difficulty in existence."

    Supporting actors and actresses were fantastic with a standing ovation for Murray Hamilton (Patton's friend General Hap Gay) who himself was dying of cancer during filming and passed away the month it was released, Sep 1986. Knowing this, you might be particularly affected by a scene where Hap laments the impending death of his friend Patton, a quiet but powerful monologue where he talks about the tragedy of a great life ending in such a common way.

    The only "problem" with this film, through no fault of its own, is that it's in serious need of restoration. The only available copies seem to be on DVD transferred from VHS in 4:3 made-for-tv screen size. I would pay good money if this were remastered from the original 35mm print and released on blu-ray. In the first half there are stunning scenes of the European natural landscape, as well as convincing recreations of war-torn Bavaria with wrecked streets and castles. Unfortunately since this is an obscure film, we might never get that. So grab it while you can.

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    Biografia
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    Drama

    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      In the scenes where Gen. Patton gives his farewell address to the Third Army, most of the extras are actual USAF airmen from RAFs Mildenhall and Lakenheath.
    • Erros de gravação
      Parts of the films were shot at Harlaxton Manor in Lincolnshire, UK, although since it is supposed to be in Bavaria, the Alps are shown in the background. In one scene, they failed to insert the Alps behind the manor house.
    • Citações

      General George S. Patton Jr.: [the General is paralyzed, and is talking to his doctors] If there's no doubt in your minds that I'll be paralyzed for the rest of my life, then let's cut out all of this crap right now and let me die.

    • Conexões
      Follows Patton, Rebelde ou Herói? (1970)

    Principais escolhas

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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 14 de setembro de 1986 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • The Last Days of Patton
    • Locações de filme
      • Wandsworth Town Hall, Wandsworth High Street, Wandsworth, Londres, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Nazi Headquarters in Berlin)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Entertainment Partners
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 2 h 26 min(146 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.33 : 1

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