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IMDbPro

Meu Nome é Joe

Título original: My Name Is Joe
  • 1998
  • R
  • 1 h 45 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,4/10
9,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Louise Goodall and Peter Mullan in Meu Nome é Joe (1998)
My Name Is Joe: Really Important Game
Reproduzir clip2:01
Assistir a My Name Is Joe: Really Important Game
2 vídeos
48 fotos
DramaRomance

O ex-alcoólatra desempregado Joe e a agente de saúde comunitária Sarah, ambos na casa dos 30 e poucos anos, iniciam um relacionamento romântico em um dos bairros mais pesados de Glasgow.O ex-alcoólatra desempregado Joe e a agente de saúde comunitária Sarah, ambos na casa dos 30 e poucos anos, iniciam um relacionamento romântico em um dos bairros mais pesados de Glasgow.O ex-alcoólatra desempregado Joe e a agente de saúde comunitária Sarah, ambos na casa dos 30 e poucos anos, iniciam um relacionamento romântico em um dos bairros mais pesados de Glasgow.

  • Direção
    • Ken Loach
  • Roteirista
    • Paul Laverty
  • Artistas
    • Peter Mullan
    • Louise Goodall
    • Gary Lewis
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,4/10
    9,2 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Ken Loach
    • Roteirista
      • Paul Laverty
    • Artistas
      • Peter Mullan
      • Louise Goodall
      • Gary Lewis
    • 52Avaliações de usuários
    • 33Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado para 1 prêmio BAFTA
      • 13 vitórias e 11 indicações no total

    Vídeos2

    My Name Is Joe
    Trailer 2:22
    My Name Is Joe
    My Name Is Joe: Really Important Game
    Clip 2:01
    My Name Is Joe: Really Important Game
    My Name Is Joe: Really Important Game
    Clip 2:01
    My Name Is Joe: Really Important Game

    Fotos47

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    Editar
    Peter Mullan
    Peter Mullan
    • Joe Kavanagh
    Louise Goodall
    • Sarah Downie
    Gary Lewis
    Gary Lewis
    • Shanks
    Lorraine McIntosh
    • Maggie
    David McKay
    • Liam
    Anne-Marie Kennedy
    • Sabine
    • (as Annemarie Kennedy)
    Scott Hannah
    • Scott
    David Peacock
    • Hooligan
    Gordon McMurray
    • Scrag
    James McHendry
    • Perfume
    Paul Clark
    • Zulu
    Stephen McCole
    Stephen McCole
    • Mojo
    Simon Macallum
    • Robbo
    Paul Gillan
    • Davy
    Stephen Docherty
    • Doc
    Paul Doonan
    • Tattie
    Cary Carbin
    • Sepp Maier
    David Hayman
    David Hayman
    • McGowan
    • Direção
      • Ken Loach
    • Roteirista
      • Paul Laverty
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários52

    7,49.1K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    9howard.schumann

    A work of compassion and humanity

    Ken Loach has been making films about working class families for many years and My Name is Joe is one of his most powerful. Peter Mullan is instantly likable as Joe Kavanagh, a recovering alcoholic from Ruchill, a decaying suburb of Glasgow, who has a lot at stake. He has fallen in love with Sarah (Louis Goodall), a health worker, and wants to go straight but circumstances conspire against him. He is determined to help his friend Liam (David McKay) when he gets behind on his payments to a drug dealer but his options are limited and he is forced to make a choice that threatens the stability of his fragile relationship.

    Mullan won the Best Actor award at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival and it is fully deserved. We know that Joe's problems are overwhelming but we root for him to make it in spite of the odds because of his warmth and humor and generosity towards others. Joe has been sober for a year and attends sessions of Alcoholics Anonymous. He also coaches the local soccer team composed of unemployed workers who have won only one game the entire year. When he meets Sarah, a social worker for the Health Department who is visiting Liam and his wife Sabine (Anne-Marie Kennedy) and young child, things start to look up. We do not learn much about Sarah's past but it is obvious that the two have discovered each other at a crucial point in their life.

    In a powerful scene, Sarah asks Joe why he stopped drinking and he tells her how he had beaten a woman he was dating and has never forgiven himself. Both are very tentative about getting involved but they are also drawn to each other and can think about the future for the first time. Sadly, the world has other plans. Sabine is a heroin addict who used the drugs she was supposed to sell and is in serious debt to a local drug dealer McGowan (David Hayman), an old friend of Joe's. When the mobster boss demands that Liam cover his wife's debt or they will break his legs, Joe tries to moderate and ends up striking a deal with the mob, leading to a series of unfortunate events. In one of the most emotionally gripping scenes, Sarah berates Joe for lying to her and he responds "Some of us don't have a choice. Some of us don't have a f***ing choice." The mean streets of Ruchill are strewn with the results of urban decay and Loach does not spare us the details. He even mocks the image of bonnie Scotland with a scene involving a kilt-clad bagpiper playing the same three songs over and over for a group of tourists. Combining gritty realism with humor, My Name is Joe has an outstanding script by Paul Laverty and fully dimensional characters that transcend clichés. Loach does not pass judgment on his characters or directly condemn society for their failings. It is a work of compassion and humanity.
    Teach-7

    Entertaining film about "social issues"

    Ken Loach is a truly exceptional film-maker. Like Bunuel, he has seemingly risen from the dead (during Thatcher's reign) and re-emerged as an international force. I found his latest film "My name is Joe" to be a hugely enjoyable affair, perhaps a little less abrasive and direct than his earlier efforts, like "Poor cow" and "Family life". Even so, he depicts "working class"- people with the same warmth and insight as before.

    The main character is Joe, a jobless reformed alcoholic in Glasgow with a heart of gold. In the attempt to better the lot of those around him, (and forget his self-loathing) Joe organizes a football team and makes house-calls on those in need of support, especially Liam and Sabine, a young couple in dire straits. Liam owes 500 pounds to the local drug-dealer, and Sabine has likewise racked up a debt. Joe tries his best to offer help, but when he is forced to perform a criminal act, he runs the risk of losing his law-abiding girl-friend into the bargain.

    Joe is a character whom you instantly like. Even his transgressions won't make you think the worse of him, as he quite obviously suffers from what he's done. Joe wants to lead a "normal" life, stay on the right side of the law, get a girlfriend and what have you. But he just can't juggle off his past as a drunkard, he can't get off the dole and so hasn't the means to move away from his run-down apartment, his rotten little suburb. His only hope is to get someone to love him, someone to lift him out of the rut, to boost his self-esteem.

    It is, for sure, a touching, humane story, beautifully scripted, shot in a simple style, and with a wonderful central performance by Peter Mullan. My question is, is it more? Is MNIJ a valid comment on deprived communities in Britain today? Do there still exist working class ethics like the ones Loach depicts in this movie? And are they still as relevant as when Britain was poor back in the 60' ies, the decade of Loach's first movies?

    Granted, there are still poor, neglected people aplenty, but do they behave like this? This movie seems a little on the soft side compared to say Gillian MacKinnon's "Small faces", and even "Trainspotting". "MNIJ, I feel, is more of a self-contained Chekhovian drama than an attack on our bourgeois sensibilities.

    (The soundtrack, by the way, consists mostly of dangerously out-dated glam-rock material from the 70' ies. Painful stuff!) Call me flippant, but I didn't feel like hitting a drug dealer, or tearing the social fabric after watching this movie. Perhaps it should have hurt more. Even so, it's a fabulous film by a unique director.
    7fredrikgunerius

    Love has its way

    As far removed from Hollywood's glamour as can come is Ken Loach's take on working-class life in Glasgow, in this film centered around a recovering alcoholic named Joe. Or rather non-working class, because the poverty and despair of the struggling late 1990s characters in My Name Is Joe feel as palpable as real unemployment. Loach describes the hopelessness of post-Thatcher peripheral Britain, much like Danny Boyle did in Trainspotting or Peter Cattaneo did with The Full Monty during the same period, only without the flashiness of the former or the bubbling positivism of the latter. Loach's characters are utterly and fundamentally sad - even when they are trying to have some fun. And since they have been in this rot for a long time, their destructiveness and, to be honest, often lack of redeemable qualities almost makes you feel they deserve their bad luck. Loach certainly gives them nothing for free.

    Still, and as you may have learned by now, love has its way, and the romance between Joe and a well-doing health visitor named Sarah comes with a rare filmatic bareness and honesty. The lack of any kind of classical romanticism between them brings out another aspect: how much these two need each other; theirs feels like a romance borne out of necessity and circumstance, not plot-convenience. Like he has become known for doing over the years, Ken Loach strips his characters and environments down and presents them to us as they are. My Name Is Joe does tests the audience's zeal and goodness, but ultimately even Ken Loach rewards his most patient viewers.
    9stevie j

    Gritty realism, powerfully performed, a must-see movie

    The awesome realism of "Once Were Warriors" (New Zealand, 1994), successfully transposed to Glasgow, Scotland.

    Solid, decent human beings use alcohol and drugs to "cope" with life. But, life only gets worse, loyalties are brutally tested, and one poor unfortunate will not survive. But, don't think this to be another flaccid piece of cliched, anti-drug drivel. No, this film speaks powerfully to the perverse, and often vicious, arbitrariness of life. Darwinians, of course, will be unmoved. The rest of us, however, will be chilled by the scale of our impotence in making this world a better place. Prepare yourself to feel humbled.
    8Didier-Becu

    MY NAME IS JOE (KEN LOACH)

    Believe me as soon this movie has ended it will be damned difficult not to reach for your handkerchief and not to dry your eyes as this movie really touches you, and director Ken Loach doesn't even need no Titanic-script as according to his style he just picks out some stories of life. We are in Glasgow, Scotland at where we meet Joe (Peter Mullan), an ex-alcoholic who is on the dole and whose sole surviving point is the footballteam (that always loose) he manages. It's more friendship then football but out of a sudden he meets a nurse Sarah (Louise Goodall) and he falls in love. For Sarah it is quite difficult, she loves him but she can't get used to the world Joe lives in, a world that is dominated by poverty. Everything goes badly wrong when Joe decides to help one of his footballplayers Liam (David McKay) who is a junk and who is in the hands of the mob that are awaiting 2000 pounds from him. Little by little Joe is witnessing that he looses everything that he build up the day he said the bottle farewell. This is not Loach's most known film (I guess that is Raining Stones) but this movie really had its impact on the festival of Cannes and it made a sort of indiestar from actor Peter Mullan who recently made his debut as director making "The Magdalene Sisters". Along with Mike Leigh is Loach one of the best British directors ever, a film you absolutely must see!!!!

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      With the exception of David McKay (Liam), all the members of Joe's football team had no previous acting experience and were local residents, some with previous drug problems.
    • Erros de gravação
      The reflection of the boom microphone is visible in the television set when Sarah is talking with Sabine at the school.
    • Citações

      Sarah Downie: Get out of my way! Leave me!

      Joe Kavanagh: No. No. No, calm down. Just calm down.

      Sarah Downie: Are you gonna hit me too, Joe?

    • Conexões
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Payback/She's All That/Rushmore/Simply Irresistible/My Name Is Joe (1999)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Down the Dustpipe
      Written by Groszmann

      Performed by Status Quo

      Published by Valley Music Ltd

      Courtesy of Castle Copyrights Ltd

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    Perguntas frequentes18

    • How long is My Name Is Joe?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 14 de outubro de 1998 (França)
    • Países de origem
      • Reino Unido
      • Alemanha
      • França
      • Espanha
    • Idiomas
      • Ânglico escocês
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • My Name Is Joe
    • Locações de filme
      • Tarbert, Loch Fyne, Argyll and Bute, RU
    • Empresas de produção
      • ARD Degeto Film
      • ARTE
      • Alta Films
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 354.952
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 16.017
      • 24 de jan. de 1999
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 354.952
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 45 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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