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IMDbPro

Perfume de Mulher

Título original: Scent of a Woman
  • 1992
  • Livre
  • 2 h 36 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
8,0/10
356 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
824
178
Al Pacino, Gabrielle Anwar, and Chris O'Donnell in Perfume de Mulher (1992)
On this IMDbrief, we're talking turkey about the perfect Thanksgiving movies to watch before, during, or after your big meal.
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Assistir a The Perfect Movies to Watch This Thanksgiving
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DramaÉpico

Um estudante do ensino médio que precisa de dinheiro concorda em "cuidar" de uma pessoa cega, mas o trabalho não é nada do que ele previa.Um estudante do ensino médio que precisa de dinheiro concorda em "cuidar" de uma pessoa cega, mas o trabalho não é nada do que ele previa.Um estudante do ensino médio que precisa de dinheiro concorda em "cuidar" de uma pessoa cega, mas o trabalho não é nada do que ele previa.

  • Direção
    • Martin Brest
  • Roteiristas
    • Giovanni Arpino
    • Bo Goldman
    • Ruggero Maccari
  • Artistas
    • Al Pacino
    • Chris O'Donnell
    • James Rebhorn
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    8,0/10
    356 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    824
    178
    • Direção
      • Martin Brest
    • Roteiristas
      • Giovanni Arpino
      • Bo Goldman
      • Ruggero Maccari
    • Artistas
      • Al Pacino
      • Chris O'Donnell
      • James Rebhorn
    • 566Avaliações de usuários
    • 52Avaliações da crítica
    • 57Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Ganhou 1 Oscar
      • 6 vitórias e 14 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    The Perfect Movies to Watch This Thanksgiving
    Clip 3:51
    The Perfect Movies to Watch This Thanksgiving

    Fotos192

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    Elenco principal52

    Editar
    Al Pacino
    Al Pacino
    • Lt. Col. Frank Slade
    Chris O'Donnell
    Chris O'Donnell
    • Charlie Simms
    James Rebhorn
    James Rebhorn
    • Mr. Trask
    Gabrielle Anwar
    Gabrielle Anwar
    • Donna
    Philip Seymour Hoffman
    Philip Seymour Hoffman
    • George Willis, Jr.
    • (as Philip S. Hoffman)
    Richard Venture
    Richard Venture
    • W.R. Slade
    Bradley Whitford
    Bradley Whitford
    • Randy
    Rochelle Oliver
    Rochelle Oliver
    • Gretchen
    Margaret Eginton
    • Gail
    Tom Riis Farrell
    Tom Riis Farrell
    • Garry
    Nicholas Sadler
    Nicholas Sadler
    • Harry Havemeyer
    Todd Louiso
    Todd Louiso
    • Trent Potter
    Matt Smith
    • Jimmy Jameson
    Gene Canfield
    Gene Canfield
    • Manny
    Frances Conroy
    Frances Conroy
    • Christine Downes
    June Squibb
    June Squibb
    • Mrs. Hunsaker
    Ron Eldard
    Ron Eldard
    • Officer Gore
    Sally Murphy
    Sally Murphy
    • Karen Rossi
    • Direção
      • Martin Brest
    • Roteiristas
      • Giovanni Arpino
      • Bo Goldman
      • Ruggero Maccari
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários566

    8,0355.5K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8macpherr

    This is a terrific movie!

    Al Pacino (The Godfather, Looking for Richard) won an Oscar for Best Actor for his outstanding performance as Lt. Col. Frank Slade. I have the tape and have watched it a bazillion times. I have seen many other actors playing a blind man but Pacino outwits them all. I have watched it closely just to watch his eyes. He is terrific! Every time we watch the movie we spend at least two days going: "Oo-rah!" I like prep school movies and I have two movies where Chris O'Donnell (Circle of Friends) Charlie Simms is in a prep school. I guess it goes with his type. I like the part of Charlie who is doing the best he can with the weekend he has to face. One of the most difficult things for people is to feel is useless. That is how Lt. Co. Frank Slade feels. He also has a cynicism about life that in a sense is funny because of its irony. He meets Charlie and has everything planned out. The Colonel has extremely good taste. Meeting young Charlie, who is in a very difficult situation, the outspoken Lt. Col. found a reason to live and to feel useful again, even enjoying the smell of the perfume of Charlie's teacher. I did not see the 1974 Italian film "PROFUMO DI DONNA," but would love to see the performance of the late Vittorio Gassman, one of the most well known actor of the Italian Theater and Cinema. My Favorite Scenes: Lt. Col. driving in New York city, dancing tango, and giving a speech before the student body, to clear up Charlie's name. This is a great movie! My Favorite Quotes: Lt. Col. Frank Slade: "Oo-rah!" ..." But there isn't nothing' like the sight of an amputated spirit, there is no prosthetic for that.." "There are two kinds of people in this world, Charlie. The first group are the people that face the music; the second group are those who run for cover. Cover is better."
    8khatcher-2

    Delicious high-class drama

    I do not tend to go along with Hollywood-created cult figures, that kind of hero-worship, idol-making, whatever: you can have your Julia Roberts and such like making endless and mindless blockbuster hits with such insipid nonsense as `Pretty Woman', `Notting Hill' and so on, but it has to be something more serious like Joel Schumacher's `Dying Young' or even Steven Soderbergh's `Erin Brockovich' to convince me that Ms Roberts can/might be a good actress. The same goes for Al Pacino. Until the arrival of `Scent of a Woman' he was just merely another actor of those who come out of the Hollywood mass-manufacturing industry. `Scent of a Woman' changed all that: here Pacino shows he is a grand master, a brilliant actor. It is not important that this film is a redoing of an Italian original, or even whether this film won him an Oscar: the film stands up for its own merits, and Pacino reaches colossal heights in this well-directed drama, ably and willingly aided by a refreshing Chris O'Donnell. Very much a two-man film as the characterisation centres masterfully on these two leading characters, Pacino had to carry out a truly theatre-like interpretation of a blind retired colonel; Bo Goldman's dialogues are up to the challenge, creating some magnificent monologues which Pacino so superbly enacted.

    My rating is somewhat higher than the surprisingly low IMDb user rating: a memorable and classic piece of serious cinema which puts Pacino into a very high category.
    8pedroborges-90881

    Good film with a great over the top performance

    At this point in his career, Pacino was starting to change a little his acting techniques and still remain great, but it wasn't only a great over the top performance, he also portrayed a blind person like no other actor i ever seen it.

    The movie is simple and good, Pacino is the one who elevated the whole material, the tango scene is great and the entire scene when Pacino gives his speech at the school is amazing .
    Docterry

    A Film For The Lonely

    There's something about this film that keeps you company. It's like you're also spending the weekend with Colonel Slade. The film entertains your darkest notions and tops your depth of grief and then somehow elevates you to find hope amidst our consciously blind existence.

    At first I had a problem with Pacino's performance. I thought Al was definitely over-acting. He's playing a man who is consciously suicidal, a man suffering the loss of his dependence. He seems preoccupied in fulfilling a sexual desire but what he really yearns for is the acceptance of a woman now that he's been injured. However, even beyond his glorified apparition of woman what he presently needs is someone, anyone who will listen. He needs someone he can bark orders at like in the past. Some babe in the woods he can bemuse and corrupt amidst the decadence of `Freak Show Central', his personal nickname for New York City. In this contrived situation he finds life again and with these considerations Pacino's bravura performance is forgivable.

    Pacino ironically switches energies with O'Donnell's character being the Colonel's high energy defuses Charlie's depressed low energy. The Colonel is psyched for his weekend's desperate romp, `A little tour of pleasures', he says. Given this distinction in performances, Charlie should have been the suicidal one, the defeated one because O'Donnell walks around this film like a deer caught in the headlights and there really isn't anything inspiring or motivating about him. It would have been an awesome acting exercise to have a young actor go against Pacino and realistically attempt to change his character's suicidal mission, granted his whole outlook on life yet what we have is a quick resolution that is very intense but not very intellectual.

    In the end, this movie somehow manages to conduct all it's emotional payoffs thus rendering the viewer at the mercy of what may seem bathos. Many have criticized the film as negotiating Hollywood Plot A with Plot B or C. However, the Colonel realizes his biggest failure in life was in his interpersonal relationships. He learns that sometimes having friends can be a stronger and more important bond than family- a point well taken. Sometimes when a film comes together, after all the pre and post production, the result can be undeniably charming and this film manages to soar above its foundations, those manifested in the most basic of premises of melodrama. `Scent Of A Woman' does inevitably work and it's a very heart-warming film.
    Banky-7

    The two best syllables in the world are...hoo-ha!

    Movies often have lines that become part of our culture. The line from this one is hoo-ha! I don't know why for sure Pacino says that. He does though and it's great. Whenever I ask anyone about this movie, those who have seen it 99% of the time answer with a hearty hoo-ha!

    As for the performances: Pacino, I dare say, gave his best performance ever. It was also the riskiest. We're not supposed to like him, but we do. We can tell he doesn't think that Charlie is a moron. We can tell that he likes him in fact as a son. It strikes us as sad though. We can sense that this man has always been lonely. But then he lost his sight because of his mere stupidity and fondness for booze. He became even more lonely and sarcastic. Mean in fact, but funny. I was laughing my $ss off when he drove the Fararri, yelling hoo-ha! at every turn. Charlie has what Slade attempted to achieve his whole life: integrity. As he says, Slade did stuff just to do stuff. Charlie does it because he means it. Chris O'Donnell, as Charlie Simms, is good. Albeit a bit understated. As I said before, Pacino is masterful. The actor who played the rich boy George is funny too.

    When I first saw this, I thought the ending ruined it. It seems a bit trite and cliche ridden, but the final speech is good. Brilliant, in fact. Pacino's character comes to his own realizations and ultimately his climax in the speech. Brilliantly acted by Pacino, I may add. He takes several stupid lines in the speech and makes them forceful.

    This is a good movie. Great really. It ranks on my top 10 of all time. Number 1 being Saving Private Ryan. If you want to see what Academy voters are swayed by, see Unforgiven. If you want to see a masterful movie that contains one of what I consider to be the best performance by an actor ever(the real best being Charles Sheen in Major League 2)see Scent of a Woman. The script does have its errors. The time duration is often unclear. Slade tells Charlie that his gun is not a gun, but a weapon or a piece. Seconds later, Charlie asks for it and Slade refers to it as his gun. Just little stuff like that are the reasons why the Academy didn't give it their vote. I don't care about that though. See it. Remember, the two best syllables in the world are....oh wait. I can't print that. If you've seen the movie, you get the joke.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The scene on the street where Lt. Colonel Slade falls over a garbage can was actually unplanned.
    • Erros de gravação
      There appears a missing day in the timeline of the movie. Considering Frank and Charlie have Thanksgiving dinner on the actual day, the following day (Friday) is spent meeting Donna and spending the evening with the escort. The next day (Saturday) is spent driving the Ferrari and the climatic scene between Frank and Charlie. It's that evening that they're informed they missed their flight and drive up to New Hampshire, arriving moments before the meeting of the disciplinary committee on Monday morning, thus eliminating all of Sunday.
    • Citações

      [Charlie refused to come clean with the names of the students responsible for the prank; Mr. Trask is furious]

      Mr. Trask: [furious] I am left with no real witness. Mr. Willis's testimony is not only vague, it is unsubstantiated. The substance I was looking for, Mr. Simms, was to come from you.

      Charlie Simms: [remorseful] I'm sorry.

      Mr. Trask: I'm sorry too, Mr. Simms, because you know what I am going to do. In as much as I can't punish Mr. Havemeyer, Mr. Potter, or Mr. Jameson, and I won't punish Mr. Willis. He's the only party to this incident who is still worthy of calling himself a Baird man. I'm going to recommend to the disciplinary committee that you be expelled. Mr. Simms, you are a cover-up artist and you are a liar.

      Lt. Col. Frank Slade: But not a snitch.

      Mr. Trask: Excuse me?

      Lt. Col. Frank Slade: No, I don't think I will.

      Mr. Trask: Mr. Slade...

      Lt. Col. Frank Slade: This is such a crock of SHIT.

      Mr. Trask: Please watch your language, Mr. Slade. You are in the Baird School, not a barracks. Mr Simms, I will give you one last opportunity to speak up.

      Lt. Col. Frank Slade: Mr. Simms doesn't want it. He desn't need to labeled, "Still worthy of being a Baird man". What the hell is that? What is your motto here? "Boys, inform on your classmates, save your hide. Anything short of that, we're gonna burn you at the stake"? Well, gentlemen, when the shit hits the fan, some guys run and some guys stay. Here's Charlie facing the fire and there's George hiding in Big Daddy's pocket. And what are you doing? You're gonna reward George and destroy Charlie.

      Mr. Trask: Are you finished, Mr. Slade?

      Lt. Col. Frank Slade: No, I'm just gettin' warmed up. I don't know who went to this place, William Howard Taft, William Jennings Bryan, William Tell, whoever. Their spirit is dead, if they ever had one. It's gone. You're building a rat ship here. A vessel for seagoing snitches, and if you think you're preparing these minnows for manhood, you better think again, because I say you are killing the very spirit this institution proclaims it instills. What a sham. What kind of a show you guys are putting on here today? I mean, the only class in this act is sitting next to me, and I'm here to tell ya this boy's soul is intact. It's non-negotiable. You know how I know? Someone here, and I'm not gonna say who, offered to buy it. Only Charlie here wasn't selling.

      Mr. Trask: Sir, you're out of order.

      [Trask hits the gavel; Col. Slade stands up angry]

      Lt. Col. Frank Slade: Out of order. I'll show YOU "out of order"! You don't know what "out of order" is, Mr. Trask. I'd show you, but I'm too old, I'm too tired, I'm too fucking blind. If I were the man I was five years ago, I'd take a...

      Lt. Col. Frank Slade: [slams his cane on the desk, screaming] FLAMETHROWER to this place! Out of order? Who the hell do ya think you're talking to? I've been around, ya know? There was a time I could see. And I have seen. Boys like these, younger than these. Their arms torn out, their legs ripped off. But there is nothing like the sight of an amputated spirit. There's no prostetic for that. You think you're merely sending this splendid foot solder back home to Oregon with tail between his legs, but I say you are executing his SOUL! And why? Because he's not a Baird man. Baird men. You hurt this boy, you're gonna be Baird bums, the lot of ya. And Harry, Jimmy, Trent, wherever you are, fuck you too!

      [the student body and the committee are in shock as Trask's anger is further aggravated]

      Mr. Trask: [yells; hits the gavel three times] Stand down, Mr. Slade!

      Lt. Col. Frank Slade: I'm not finished! As I came in here, I heard those words, "Cradle of Leadership". Well, when the bough breaks, the cradle will fall. And it has fallen here. It has fallen. Makers of men, Creators of leaders. Be careful what kind of leaders you're producing here. I don't know if Charlie's silence here today is right or wrong. I'm not a judge or jury, but I can tell you this: He won't sell anybody out to buy his future! And that, my friends, is called integrity. That's called courage. Now that's the stuff leaders should be made of. Now I have come to the crossroads in my life. I always knew what the right path was. Without exception, I knew. But I never took it. You know why? It was too damn hard. Now here's Charlie. He's come to the crossroads. He has chosen a path. It's the right path. It's a path made of principle that leads to character. Let him continue on his journey. You hold this boy's future in your hands, committee. It's a valuable future. Believe me. Don't destroy it. Protect it. Embrace it. It's gonna make you proud one day, I promise you.

    • Versões alternativas
      The heavily edited network TV version was disowned by director Martin Brest, and credits "Allen Smithee" as director.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Forever Young/Damage/Toys/Scent of a Woman/Used People (1992)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Evangeline
      Written by Robbie Robertson

      Performed by Emmylou Harris

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes

    • How long is Scent of a Woman?
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    • How did Slade become blind?
    • What is the name of the song to which Frank and Donna do the tango?

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 12 de março de 1993 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Official Facebook
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Perfume de mujer
    • Locações de filme
      • Emma Willard School - 285 Pawling Avenue, Troy, Nova Iorque, EUA
    • Empresas de produção
      • Universal Pictures
      • City Light Films
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 31.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 63.095.253
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 357.468
      • 27 de dez. de 1992
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 134.095.253
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      2 horas 36 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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