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IMDbPro

Esse Rato é um Espanto

Título original: Rat
  • 2000
  • PG
  • 1 h 29 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,9/10
1 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Esse Rato é um Espanto (2000)
Trailer
Reproduzir trailer2:15
1 vídeo
11 fotos
SatireComedyDramaFamilyFantasy

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA woman becomes furious when her husband arrives home from the local pub and turns into a rat.A woman becomes furious when her husband arrives home from the local pub and turns into a rat.A woman becomes furious when her husband arrives home from the local pub and turns into a rat.

  • Direção
    • Steve Barron
  • Roteirista
    • Wesley Burrowes
  • Artistas
    • Pete Postlethwaite
    • Imelda Staunton
    • Frank Kelly
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,9/10
    1 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Steve Barron
    • Roteirista
      • Wesley Burrowes
    • Artistas
      • Pete Postlethwaite
      • Imelda Staunton
      • Frank Kelly
    • 17Avaliações de usuários
    • 3Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 3 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Rat
    Trailer 2:15
    Rat

    Fotos10

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    Elenco principal37

    Editar
    Pete Postlethwaite
    Pete Postlethwaite
    • Hubert Flynn
    Imelda Staunton
    Imelda Staunton
    • Conchita Flynn
    Frank Kelly
    Frank Kelly
    • Uncle Matt
    David Wilmot
    David Wilmot
    • Phelim Spratt
    Andrew Lovern
    • Pius Flynn
    Kerry Condon
    Kerry Condon
    • Marietta Flynn
    Veronica Duffy
    • Daisy
    Ed Byrne
    Ed Byrne
    • Rudolph
    Niall Toibin
    Niall Toibin
    • Father Geraldo
    Alfie
    • Mickey the Dog
    Peter Caffrey
    • Mick the Barman
    Rita Hamill
    • Estate Woman
    Roxanna Nic Liam
    • Hopscotch Child
    • (as Roxanna Williams)
    Geoffrey Palmer
    Geoffrey Palmer
    • The Doctor
    Stanley Townsend
    Stanley Townsend
    • Newsreader
    Simon Delaney
    Simon Delaney
    • Bookies Manager
    Niall O'Brien
    • Man in Bookies
    John O'Toole
    • Man in Bookies
    • Direção
      • Steve Barron
    • Roteirista
      • Wesley Burrowes
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários17

    5,91K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    the_elf23

    What a mind-boggling film!

    This movie is despicable. It's bad-humored. It's extremely painful. It's discouraging. I went to bed so disappointed and angry I thought I'd have night terrors.

    It could have been so good! I don't know how you mess up a plot the way they did! The crew had to consist of the least funny people in the world! There isn't a single character and not a single joke.

    It's baffling!
    6the red duchess

    Film about man who turns into rat the most realistic film about Ireland in ages.

    'Rat' is a charming, funny film that has been getting somewhat overpraised here because films from this country are generally inept, pretentious and/or cliched. 'Rat' is none of these things, and so is a cause for rejoicing, but to use epithets like 'Borgesian' seems inappropriate - the film has few of the philosophical resonances of true Borgesian films like 'Performance', 'The Spider's Strategem', 'Belle de Jour' or even 'Being John Malkovich', to which this film has been mostly compared. We are never shown what the transformation from human to rat has on Hubert's psyche; there are no questions about what it means to be human or its limits.

    With the exception of a couple of point-of-view shots necessary to resolve the narrative, the film takes place entirely outside Hubert's experience, focusing instead on his family's reactions, so that it's almost irrelevant that he is a rat. This distances the film somewhat from another source, Kafka's 'Metamorphosis', although both share the emphasis on family reaction. Kafka's fable is a dramatisation of alienation, from identity, body, family, society, epoque even species.

    Some eager critics of 'Rat' have seen it as an allegory of racism in latterday Ireland (and it is a very xenophobic society at present), but the links are tenuous - Hubert begins as a confirmed member of his society; any mocking of the family are just that, jibes at the family, just as you'll get in any society based on begrudgery or gossip (although, considering the near-sacred status of the Irish family not so long ago, this is pointed enough).

    Before I go on to praise the film - and it is a film, for vision and audacity, that deserves much praise - I just want to mention one more flaw - Wesley Burrowes' excellent script is frequently let down by ponderous direction, which sometimes drags out the script's nimble wit in attempts to be 'deep'.

    The thing that surprised me most about 'Rat' was not its modernity or intellectual sophistication, but its recreation of a certain Ireland that is only a generation old, and yet seems as remote as the Famine. It could be set in any time from the 40s to the early 70s - only the blurred clip from 'Eat the Peach' (mid-80s) and the Karaoke machine in the very last scene gives away the setting as any later (yeah, and maybe Marietta's bizarre tights). This is an Ireland mercifully free of mobile phones, go-getting yuppies and strategic planning - this is a world of Johnson Mooney and O'Brien delivery vans, quiet pints in quiet pubs, smelly bookies, young sons who want to be priests, priests who are psychotics and perform exorcisms with what appears to be bondage gear, neighbours trying to openly steal husbands, know-all brothers-in-law who know nothing.

    What is modern about the film is the way it captures a particular social phenomenon. With the breaking of old social and religious ties in recent years, there has been a greater personal freedom never experienced in this country. With this liberty, though, has been an increase in selfishness, in general apathy towards anyone else, and the reaction to Hubert brilliantly shows this, the family worried about how it will affect THEM, what people will think of them. Their willingness to kill is chillingly plausible (and mirrors the icy piety of pro-lifers), and maybe this is where the anti-racism comes in, that we're not used to so much prosperity and happiness, that we are violently hostile to anyone who threatens to take it from us.

    As an entertainment, 'Rat' is full of good things, the off-centre dialogue, the gloriously silly performances (Niall Toibin's parody of 'the Exorcist' is priceless), the arched-eyebrow situations. There are some lovely visual set-ups, the opening narration which moves from the hackneyed Romantic Irish landscape of American legend to a rat's eye view (on a boat!) of Dublin down the Liffey; the chase of Hubert as he escapes from a pub, finally upending a beer delivery truck; the second chase, the camera swooping back on a sprawling housing estate as chessboard.

    The revelation for me, though, was the showbands on the soundtrack. For decades the word 'showband' has been an insult, its dominance during the reactionary era seen as collusive; now we all listen to tedious, serious rock or whatever. But the Brendan Bowyer song that closes the film is remarkable, as huge, celebratory, melancholy and musically exhilarating as early Scott Walker.
    bob the moo

    Very funny look at Irish tough love

    When their father Hubert suddenly turns into a rat, his family don't really know how to react, apart from putting him in a cage. When a journalist convinces them to write a book, he moves in and starts to mould their emotions to exploit the situation for fame and fortune.

    The key to this film is in the imaginative set up and the funny telling rather than the actual plot itself. In terms of plot the film runs out of steam a little towards the end where it seems to realise that plotting hasn't been the main driving force of the film. What does drive the film is that it is laugh out loud funny almost all the way through. If you like the sort of Irish humour and characters then you'll like this a lot. The idea of being turned into a rat isn't really explained but this doesn't really matter.

    The characters are all excellent, although Postlethwaite is really little more than cameo for most of the film, his part being played rather well by various white rats! Staunton is the strongest character and has captured the hard love of an Irish mother very well – focused on the practicals despite circumstances (a priest is called to the rat and she throws it in the washing machine so his dirty fur won't shame the family, `it's ok, he's on wool' she assures a concerned family member). Her character is hilarious throughout. Kelly (Father Jack) is strong in a small role, but Wilmot's character is less clear but seems to be the one that the plot is riding on. The kids' roles are pretty funny and the support cast of Irish stereotypes all do what they are expected to do.

    When I watched this movie on TV I had never heard of it and I wonder how many people have actually seen it, it's a shame because this is really funny and worth seeing despite the fact that the actual plot itself is not as strong as the laughs deserve. Overall this is very funny throughout if you like the Father Ted style of slightly exaggerated Irish humour.
    6merklekranz

    Black comedy that delivers the laughs .......

    First, "Rat" gets extra points for a very original screenplay. The fine acting is what carries this unique comedy, because the only way "Rat" works is if the characters come across as dead serious, which they do. Any decent into slapstick would have been disastrous. Another plus is the unique camera angles giving a rat's point of view. Different reactions of the various family members, to what is obviously a highly unusual situation, fuels this dark comedy. In order for a black comedy to work, it must be outrageous, not mean spirited, and deadly serious, and "Rat succeeds on all counts. I liked this clever and highly original comedy. - MERK
    9Aidan Og Madden

    A witty and surreal Irish comedy

    How many Irish films can succeed without resorting to "faith an' begorrah" cliches? RAT doesn't. Veteran writer Wesley Burrowes has written a wildly whimsical moral tale that laughs in the face of miserable, self-pitying Irish drama with his story of the tragedy that befalls a home which the man of the house turns into a rodent. Beautifully balancing the bizarre and the mundane, this is a film that the great Irish humourist Flann O'Brien could have made. The performances are great (including the rat, courtesy of Jim Henson's company) and the cast includes Pete Postletwaite (In The Name of the Father, Brassed Off, etc), Imelda Staunton (Shakespeare in Love, Sense and Sensibility, etc), Frank Kelly (best known as 'Father Jack'), Niall Toibin (in rattling good form as the priest) and comedian Ed Byrne (although his role is a minor one, and, oddly, he doesn't get any good lines). The soundtrack by Bob Geldof and Pete Briquette perfectly capture the mock-horror of the storyline. The details of the story? Go and see it. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

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    • Curiosidades
      The cast of this film includes three Academy Award nominees: Pete Postlethwaite, Imelda Staunton, and Kerry Condon. Of these three actors, Postlethwaite is the only one who was nominated before the release of this film.
    • Citações

      [first lines]

      Hubert: Seventy years ago, me grandfather, Hubert Flynn Foster, set out from his home in the County Wexford, and joining north over the hills and valleys of Whitlock, until he came to Dublin City.

      Hubert: I remember once, when I was a chiseler, he caught me whittlin' up against the wall. And he told me if I behaved like a dog, I might turn into a dog. And then he was off on one of his old yarns about people he knew that turned into goats and weasels. Of course we ran afoul, he said, of more than his prayers. But sometimes, in and among the ramblings, there'd be a grain of truth.

    • Conexões
      Referenced in Uma Noite Mais Que Louca (2011)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Secret Love
      Written by Sammy Fain and Paul Francis Webster

      Performed by Doris Day

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes18

    • How long is Rat?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 6 de outubro de 2000 (Irlanda)
    • Países de origem
      • Irlanda
      • Reino Unido
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Rat
    • Locações de filme
      • Dublin, County Dublin, Irlanda
    • Empresas de produção
      • Jim Henson Company
      • Jim Henson Productions
      • Ruby Films
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 2.630
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 1.815
      • 29 de abr. de 2001
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 5.980
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 29 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Stereo
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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