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IMDbPro

Traga-me Alecrim

Título original: Go Get Some Rosemary
  • 2009
  • TV-14
  • 1 h 40 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
3,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Traga-me Alecrim (2009)
Every year, free-spirited father Lenny spends a couple of weeks with his young sons, Sage and Frey. In these two weeks, a trip upstate, visitors from strange lands, a mother, a girlfriend, "magic" blankets, and complete lawlessness seem to take over their lives.
Reproduzir trailer1:29
2 vídeos
49 fotos
ComedyDrama

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA father juggling his kids with the rest of his responsibilities is ultimately faced with the choice of being their father or their friend.A father juggling his kids with the rest of his responsibilities is ultimately faced with the choice of being their father or their friend.A father juggling his kids with the rest of his responsibilities is ultimately faced with the choice of being their father or their friend.

  • Direção
    • Benny Safdie
    • Josh Safdie
  • Roteiristas
    • Ronald Bronstein
    • Benny Safdie
    • Josh Safdie
  • Artistas
    • Ronald Bronstein
    • Alex Greenblatt
    • Sage Ranaldo
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,9/10
    3,2 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Benny Safdie
      • Josh Safdie
    • Roteiristas
      • Ronald Bronstein
      • Benny Safdie
      • Josh Safdie
    • Artistas
      • Ronald Bronstein
      • Alex Greenblatt
      • Sage Ranaldo
    • 11Avaliações de usuários
    • 45Avaliações da crítica
    • 74Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 4 vitórias e 8 indicações no total

    Vídeos2

    Daddy Longlegs
    Trailer 1:29
    Daddy Longlegs
    Daddy Longlegs
    Clip 2:00
    Daddy Longlegs
    Daddy Longlegs
    Clip 2:00
    Daddy Longlegs

    Fotos48

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    Elenco principal54

    Editar
    Ronald Bronstein
    • Lenny
    Alex Greenblatt
    • Alex
    Sage Ranaldo
    • Sage Sokol
    Frey Ranaldo
    • Frey Sokol
    Victor Puccio
    • Principal Puccio
    Lance 'Batman' Chamberlain
    • Vietnam Vet #1
    Baker Suitson
    • Vietnam Vet #2
    Peter Cramer
    • Cruiser at 'Y'
    Eleonore Hendricks
    Eleonore Hendricks
    • Leni
    Sean Price Williams
    Sean Price Williams
    • Dale
    • (as Sean Williams)
    Dakota O'Hara
    Dakota O'Hara
    • Roberta
    • (as Dakota Goldhor)
    Jonny Napalm
    • Guy in Bar
    • (as Johnny Napalm)
    Simone Parker
    • Bartender
    Aren Topdijian
    • Aren (Boyfriend)
    • (as Aren Topdjian)
    Danny Callahan
    • Tow Truck Driver
    Firas Al-Ramahi
    • Firas
    Van Neistat
    Van Neistat
    • Boat Driver
    Larry Pelton
    • Terry
    • Direção
      • Benny Safdie
      • Josh Safdie
    • Roteiristas
      • Ronald Bronstein
      • Benny Safdie
      • Josh Safdie
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários11

    6,93.1K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    5MOscarbradley

    Good enough to make me wish I'd liked it more.

    The Safdie Brothers certainly served their apprenticeship. Their 2009 film "Daddy Longlegs" (aka "Go Get Some Rosemary"), is as independent and as close to 'cinema verite' as American cinema gets and its study of a deadbeat father's relationship with his sons is full of an improvisatorary feeling where the players don't so much act their parts as live them; we could be watching a documentary.

    There's no plot, just a series of nicely observed slices of life filmed on the streets of the Safdie's native New York and showing all the promise of early Scorsese. Where it falls down is in its lack of any kind of substantial drama not, of course, that great drama happens very much in everyday life but after a certain length of time people-watching can become a tad dull. What sustains the film is the superbly naturalistic performance of Ronald Bronstein as the father, (he was also one of the film's co-writers). A newcomer, it's almost impossible to say where Bronstein ends and his character begins. He's wonderful in the part but he's also the kind of man I would cross the street to avoid, lacking as he does any sense of responsibility. The kids, too, are excellent, again not so much 'acting' as simply playing extentions of themselves. The film itself comes over as a cross between autobiography and homage and is a little too personal for mass consumption. It's sufficiently good that I wish I liked it more.
    9Chris Knipp

    The troubling virtues of irresponsibility

    For those who can put up with its (largely intentional) jumpy hand-held 16 mm. look, Daddy Longlegs is a heck of a stimulating and complex piece of work. It's autobiographical, yet collaborative and imaginative. It's improvisational, yet very well planned. It's appalling, yet also appealing -- a film that sticks in the craw but also lingers in the mind and the heart. It signals the arrival of yet another team of film-making brothers whom we need to watch.

    On the face of it, this is the story of a criminally irresponsible divorced dad who gets to spend two weeks out of a year with his two boys, aged around seven and nine. Lenny (Ronald Bronstein) is young and childlike himself, thin, agile, athletic, but graying, terminally unconventional, a hipster, unstable, a film projectionist, a man whose life he has no firm grip on, but determined to love his kids and make his time with them as memorable as possible. When he picks up the boys, he immediately launches into dangerous play, walking on his hands across the street with them. Sage (Sage Ranaldo) and Frey (Frey Ranaldo) alternate between being delighted, excited, and scared to death by Lenny's games.

    He has a one-night stand, and then the next day forces himself, with the boys, on the woman and her boyfriend when the latter drives upstate for the weekend. (The story otherwise takes place very much in a Manhattan whose wild grunginess and seemingly greater-then-normal tolerance for irresponsible behavior suggest the New York of the 1970's.) He takes the boys to play squash (a rough game for two pipsqueaks). He gets mugged by a peddler-thug (played by Abel Ferrara) coming home by himself with groceries and ice cream cones, but never mentions the incident to the boys or anyone. He has a date with an on-and-off girlfriend. With her around in the morning, he gives the boys a pet lizard he hides as a prize in a cereal box.

    At least one of the things he does is really awful. He unexpectedly pulls an all-nighter at his job, and, because he can't find anybody to babysit with the boys, gives them crushed bits of adult sleeping pills. They go into a deep sleep and cannot be awakened. This lasts for several days; it could have lasted longer. A doctor friend who comes in explains this and says if he weren't a friend, he'd report this to the police. The really creepy feeling this incident gives you lingers on. But it ends happily. The boys are fine. And that goes for the whole experience, though this does not make Lenny's nightmare parenting techniques okay. The film is meant to arouse contradictory feelings and express the filmmakers' own mixed emotions toward their real dad.

    Watching Lenny is like witnessing a train wreck but Bronstein is very good at keeping you from hating him. So are Benny and Josh, filmmakers, of course, who made this out of their own childhoods with a wealth of conflicting emotion. Their artistry and luck pay off in how complex the feelings are that Daddy Longlegs evokes. The film (and the collaboration with Bronstein) are a triumphant combination of cool reason in the planning and warm emotion in the making. Having had two brothers in charge who have that contrast -- one more logical, the other more romantic -- also doubtless helps maintain the fertile balance.

    Lenny is more like a hyper older brother than a father, but that can be a lot of fun for little boys -- for a while anyway. Most of the year Sage and Frey are with their mother (played by the young actors' real mother -- wife of the lead guitarist of Sonic Youth), who, from what we see of her, provides a grownup and sensible environment.

    But it's to be noted that Josh and Benny Safdie made this movie, about this riskier side of their experience, to evoke their childhood. Happy families are all alike -- the small, crazy part of your youth spent with a divorced parent may be more memorable and complex and stimulating to the art that goes into making films than the safe, grownup, responsible part that nurtured you and protected you and kept you sane. With divorced parents, you have two different worlds you move between; the "happy"-"unhappy" distinction may not apply. The distinction might better be "safe but a little bit boring" versus "unsafe but wild fun."

    The Safdies have made clear that Lenny is an original creation, based on their dad, but built up very much in collaboration with Ronald Bronstein, who, though to them he looked remarkably like a classic silent film actor, was not an actor at all but a filmmaker whom they met at Austin's hip SXSW festival where they were all celebrated for their work. They sat down with Bronstein for days of talk in a diner where they hashed out all their ideas about their father and learned what Bronstein could internalize and what he rejected. Thus an improvisational collaboration grew. Bronstein worked constantly with the Ranaldo boys, always in character (a kooky new play dad) even when they were not shooting. Another element was the Safdies' and their team's guerrilla street film-making techniques used to incorporate non-actors along the way. "If Jean Vigo, John Cassavetes, Buster Keaton, Woody Allen and Charlie Chaplin had a deformed child, we would be their best friend," the brothers told Interview magazine recently. This is a richer and more deeply thought-through mix than we usually get from Cassavetes' youthful Mumblecore offspring, a more intense mining of memory and experience.

    Interviews with Benny and Josh show a bright and happy pair of young men who finish each other's sentences. It looks like they grew up just fine, their time with their real father having taught them to be alert and resourceful. Those dangerous, irresponsible weeks were a pebble that produced a pearl.
    6Jeremy_Urquhart

    Effectively real/raw, but also kind of boring.

    It's interesting and a little bittersweet to go back and watch Daddy Longlegs in a post-Safdie Brothers world. They've gone their separate ways as directors apparently, which is a shame, because each feature film they made was a little better than the last. And Daddy Longlegs was the first they directed together (there was another slightly earlier that just one of them did). There was also a documentary somewhere I believe. But the four core features - Daddy Longlegs to Heaven Knows What to Good Time and then Uncut Gems - that was quite the run. Uncut Gems was basically perfect, too, so I don't know if they could've ever topped that. Whether that was a factor in "breaking up or whether it was something else, I don't know.

    Anyway, Daddy Longlegs is about a chaotic father looking after his kids and doing a bad job at it. Thats most of it. It's not great, but I'm also not crazy about these super raw, improv-ish character dramas. Even the ones by John Cassavetes don't do a ton for me. I think the main casting choice in Heaven Knows What makes that approach more interesting, and then Good Time and Uncut Gems are kind of on another level. It feels like there's more immediacy and more going on in those films, and it's sad they perfected a kind of cinematic anxiety and then dipped (though their solo films - which I hope will start coming out sooner rather than later - might end up scratching similar itches).

    I think Daddy Longlegs is more than worthwhile for anyone considering completing the Safdie Bros filmography, but it's also not really my thing. It's listless and wandering by design, but I watch this kind of film sometimes and I'm like, "So what?"

    I asked "so what?" to myself a little less during Daddy Longlegs than some other rambly films, so maybe it was doing something sort of right.
    7Stay_away_from_the_Metropol

    A real New York slice

    Super interesting to see that this is how the Safdie Brothers really got their filmmaking careers started. While it does feature similar pacing and cinematography to their other 3 primary feature films, its mostly missing the utter anxiety and claustrophobia. Though things are going "wrong" throughout it, this film's greatest strength is in how touching it manages to be in its rawness. It simply feels immensely real.

    Ronald Bronstein does a great job as the dad who can't keep up with his own life and isn't doing the best job of taking care of his sons. And the boys are adorable and totally believable - it never feels like they are acting. They just feel like real kids being kids.

    This definitely qualifies as a "slice of life" movie, "a real New York slice" in this case, as not a lot of profound events really occur, but it has enough charm that it functions well as just that. It's really wild that the bros went from such an endearing first feature right into the junkie tale HEAVEN KNOWS WHAT as their follow-up, one of the bleakest movies made this century. What an insane dynamic to flex with your first two films - no wonder they started getting celebs on board fast for Good Time (one of my favorite films of this century) and then Uncut Gems! Rise Safdies, rise!
    8Jonk_3-1-4-1

    Great improvement from "The Pleasure of Being Robbed"

    Only 1 year after Josh Safdie's directorial debut, came the first true collaboration between Josh and his brother Benny, and it sure is noticeable. Daddy Longlegs is a perfect combination of Josh Safdie's raw tone and passion for storytelling with Benny's creativity and comedy. While they could have used the bigger budget and crew to make a more stylised, traditional Hollywood film, the Safdies have instead opted to perfect the formula that was used in The Pleasure of Being Robbed. That film's raw perspective with a hindered believability is now a completely realized and believable world. The film is so convincingly documentary, in-fact, that it becomes almost impossible to even begin to imagine the process of writing it - absolutely everything feels improvised.

    All of the acting is great, especially by the kids. The brothers had to go through a very unique directing predicament: dealing with child actors, yet they handle it masterfully. Under the direction of the Safdies, the kid's youth and inexperience somehow makes them all the more believable. It seems like in order to get good performances from all of the actors, almost every piece of dialogue had to be improvised, with only what happens in each scene being decided beforehand.

    The result of all of this is a movie that makes the audience feel as though they are spying on a family, that they are watching a document of something private and personal, something not meant to be seen. The intermittent tension from the father's temper and recklessness is greatly aided by the raw, documentary approach. It doesn't feel overly dramatic or cliché, but instead gives off a much more relatable feeling that both parents and children can understand, and very much fits the unromanticized nostalgia of the story. Daddy Longlegs is a character study that feels not as though it were a study of a character, but as though it were an objective documentation of real peoples' lives, leaving it up to the viewer to make a study of what they see.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Ronald Bronstein, the protagonist of this film, is a common collaborator of the Safdie Brothers, co-writing and editing most of their films, including Heaven Knows What (2014) and Good Time (2017).
    • Citações

      Lenny: It's my screw-up. I'm entitled to screw-up.

    • Conexões
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Robin Hood/Letters to Juliet/Just Wright/Daddy Longlegs (2010)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Green Soul
      Original Song by David Sandholm

      Written by David Sandholm

      Courtesy of the artist

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    Perguntas frequentes18

    • How long is Daddy Longlegs?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 28 de abril de 2010 (França)
    • Países de origem
      • França
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • IFC Films (United States)
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Go Get Some Rosemary
    • Locações de filme
      • Nova Iorque, Nova Iorque, EUA
    • Empresas de produção
      • Neistat Scott & Associates
      • Neistat, Scott and Associates
      • Red Bucket Films
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 21.766
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 8.323
      • 16 de mai. de 2010
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 33.217
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 40 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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