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Phil Spector

  • Filme para televisão
  • 2013
  • TV-MA
  • 1 h 32 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,2/10
8,4 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Al Pacino and Helen Mirren in Phil Spector (2013)
Assistir a Teaser Trailer
Reproduzir trailer0:21
3 vídeos
65 fotos
BiografiaDramaMúsica

Um drama centrado no relacionamento entre Phil Spector e a advogada de defesa Linda Kenney Baden.Um drama centrado no relacionamento entre Phil Spector e a advogada de defesa Linda Kenney Baden.Um drama centrado no relacionamento entre Phil Spector e a advogada de defesa Linda Kenney Baden.

  • Direção
    • David Mamet
  • Roteirista
    • David Mamet
  • Artistas
    • Al Pacino
    • Helen Mirren
    • Jeffrey Tambor
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,2/10
    8,4 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • David Mamet
    • Roteirista
      • David Mamet
    • Artistas
      • Al Pacino
      • Helen Mirren
      • Jeffrey Tambor
    • 42Avaliações de usuários
    • 34Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado para 11 Primetime Emmys
      • 2 vitórias e 37 indicações no total

    Vídeos3

    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 0:21
    Teaser Trailer
    Making "Phil Spector"
    Video 1:31
    Making "Phil Spector"
    Making "Phil Spector"
    Video 1:31
    Making "Phil Spector"
    David Mamet on Making "Phil Spector"
    Video 5:07
    David Mamet on Making "Phil Spector"

    Fotos65

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    Elenco principal71

    Editar
    Al Pacino
    Al Pacino
    • Phil Spector
    Helen Mirren
    Helen Mirren
    • Linda Kenney Baden
    Jeffrey Tambor
    Jeffrey Tambor
    • Bruce Cutler
    Chiwetel Ejiofor
    Chiwetel Ejiofor
    • Mock Prosecutor
    Rebecca Pidgeon
    Rebecca Pidgeon
    • Dr. Fallon
    John Pirruccello
    John Pirruccello
    • Nick Stavros
    James Tolkan
    James Tolkan
    • Judge Fidler
    David Aaron Baker
    David Aaron Baker
    • DDA Alan Jackson
    Matt Malloy
    Matt Malloy
    • Dr. Spitz
    Jack Wallace
    Jack Wallace
    • Music Store Owner
    Dominic Hoffman
    Dominic Hoffman
    • Mr. Brown
    Philip Martin
    Philip Martin
    • James
    Grim Reaper Q.
    • Bodyguard
    Vernon Campbell
    Vernon Campbell
    • Bodyguard
    • (as Vernon W. Campbell)
    Adargiza De Los Santos
    • Focus Group Woman
    • (as Adalgiza Chemountd)
    Gail Silver
    Gail Silver
    • Focus Group Woman
    Jenn Lyon
    Jenn Lyon
    • Focus Group Woman #3
    Steve Park
    Steve Park
    • Focus Group Man
    • (as Stephen Park)
    • Direção
      • David Mamet
    • Roteirista
      • David Mamet
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários42

    6,28.3K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    7l_rawjalaurence

    Penetrating Character-Study of a Has-Been

    Based on actual events that took place, PHIL SPECTOR dramatizes the court-case in which the eponymous hero (Al Pacino) is accused of murder and defended by hotshot lawyer Linda (Helen Mirren). With David Mamet as writer/director, viewers can expect nothing less than a penetrating character-study with the emphasis on great dialog and changing reactions. PHIL SPECTOR does not disappoint in this respect; a study of a once-great music producer fallen on hard times who (like Norma Desmond in SUNSET BOULEVARD) lives in fantasy-worlds of his own creation. The ever-increasingly grotesque choice of wigs Spector uses is proof of this. Sometimes it's difficult to separate truth from fiction, while listening to his lengthy speeches - which makes the lawyer's task of defending him that much more difficult. In the end Spector's pretensions are unmasked as he is literally brow-beaten into making an appearance in court: Mamet's camera focuses unrelentingly on his hands that shake uncontrollably as he listens to the evidence presented against him.

    As the lawyer, Mirren acts as a workmanlike foil to Pacino's central performance. Although firmly convinced of her client's innocence, she finds it increasingly difficult to present a convincing case; the judge and the prosecution seem hell-bent on frustrating her, as well as her client. Nonetheless she shows admirable stoicism in pursuing her case.

    In the end, however, PHIL SPECTOR is not really a courtroom drama, even though much of the action is set in and around the court-house. Rather it concentrates on the double-edged nature of celebrity; when you're riding high, no one can touch you, but when you're down on your luck, everyone wants to kick you. This helps to explain Spector's retreat into a fantasy-world - at least no one can touch him there.
    7LeonLouisRicci

    Hardly Breaks the (Wall of) Sound Barrier

    This is a frustrating Made-for-TV-Movie. It is so short in length that it leaves the viewer with a wanting for much more. There is so much potential untapped power here. The magnetic lead Actors, the always interesting and divisive Writer/Director David Mamet and of course, the legendary Music Producer, Phil Spector.

    His unique blending of multi-tracked Music into what became known as the "Wall of Sound" was so impressive and unusual that he attracted clients as diverse as The Ronnetts, The Rightheous Brothers, Tina Turner, The Beatles, and The Ramones to name a few. He was labeled a Boy Genius.

    All this adulation made him into a neurotic, reclusive, abusive, megalomaniac, arrogant, show-off, but he also made the best and greatest Music that filled the much needed gap between Elvis and The Beatles with his rich and beautiful Pop Songs. He also had very few friends and quite a few jealous enemies. When asked if he liked People, he responded..."I don't know, I've never spent any time with them".

    This is just a very short Movie about the weeks before the beginning of his first trial for murdering his Date. So the insights into Spector are crammed in here and what is here is interesting, but ultimately just some footnotes of a life. His guilt or not in this snapshot of the trial ordeal is fascinating. But considering all that could have been it cannot help but be nothing but a well done tempting tease.
    7blanche-2

    preparation for a trial

    If you're thinking this film is about the trial of Phil Spector, it isn't. It does, however, contain a lot about preparing for the trial.

    Helen Mirren is Linda Kenney Baden, who reluctantly takes on the murder case of Phil Spector, who is accused of killing Lana Clarkson in his home. Spector claims it was suicide.

    Baden reluctantly finds herself believing him, as she performs a series of experiments that to her prove he could not have done it. Though trying to talk with Spector is very difficult, she also finds herself liking him.

    This is a good character study, if a little on the slow side. It would have been dreadful without Mirren and Pacino, however. Pacino plays Spector as a pathetic has-been who brags about his past accomplishments as he sits isolated in his home,"The Castle." He loses his temper often and goes off on tangents. "Would I have lost everything for her?" he asks Mirren about Clarkson. Because of his crazy behavior and history with guns and women, Spector is in a lot of trouble.

    The film brings us through the mock trial and Baden's attempts to have Spector take the stand to see if he can do it. It's a disaster. On the day of the trial, he shows up in a huge fright wig and looks terrifying. Baden has her work cut out for her.

    Mirren is wonderful as a woman with a cold that turns into pneumonia who is nonetheless vigorous in her defense. The best scene is when she receives a suggestion from an associate. To illustrate a point, she shows a young attorney the yellow piece that used to go in the middle of a .45 record - he doesn't know what it is. She shows him a .45 record and he guesses, "something for the computer?" She turns to her associate and says, "None of these people are going to know what you're talking about." Mirren is masterful.

    In the end, which is not part of the movie, the first trial was a mistrial, but Baden could not take part in the second trial and he was convicted.

    This HBO movie is worth seeing for the performances. It is slow at times, but then again, it's not very long.
    7donaldgilbert

    Not about Phil Spector- it's about judgment and human perception

    I just read through the reviews (9 as of this writing) and I find reactions interesting yet predictable. Yes, we can talk about performances- Pacino is "masterful"! Mirren is "pure class"! Yes, we can talk about Mamet's writing style. I guess that, for me, these are reviews seemingly by film students and not people who paid attention to not the technical details but what the movie is about.

    It is, in my mind, less about Phil Spector, and more about the legal system, about understanding society's inclination toward prejudging, presuming guilt, casting the first stone, and it's inability to distinguish between an eccentric and a psychotic.

    As for the performances, did we suddenly expect poor acting from the talent of this cast? They're good actors and they delivered as expected. I don't think the reviews are helpful when they focus on such trivialities.

    Anyway, I thought it was interesting, reflective... but not a "masterpiece". Absolutely recommended- I'd say 7 stars.
    8StevePulaski

    The damndest sorta-true, sorta-false story in years

    "This is a work of fiction. It's not 'based on a true story.' It is a drama inspired by actual persons in a trial, but it is neither an attempt to depict the actual persons, nor to comment upon on the trial or its outcome." Above is the disclaimer that precedes David Mamet's Phil Spector. If I didn't know what to think of a biopic on the extreme eccentric character Spector was and remains, I really didn't know what to think after seeing that. This is a film that is just as enigmatic as its title figure, and earns its first strength by not judging, objectifying, or even shortchanging him despite his conviction. To make a biopic that lacks a viewpoint on its subject is a difficult, and often rare thing to do, yet the closer I look, the more I feel that Mamet made this film solely off of the fact that Spector is a compelling and unique figure.

    For those unaware, Phil Spector was a renowned record producer in the sixties and seventies, known for helping The Ronettes, John Lennon, and The Ramones achieve untold heights with their music. Spector, himself, achieved notoriety in the public eye for being a true force of energy and uncompromising in his pursuit for greatness with his artists. In 2003, a woman named Lana Clarkson was found dead in his mansion from a gunshot wound through her mouth. Spector was quoted that night saying, "I think I killed somebody," and has had a known history with threatening violence to his girlfriends. But Spector's defense team has fought day-in and day-out to prove that it would be impossible for him to have committed the murder, due to the lack of evidence on crucial pieces (IE: lack of blood on his jacket).

    Mamet decides to set his sights on the events preceding the first trial and the events of it, with Al Pacino assuming the role of Spector and Helen Mirren embodying Linda Kenney Baden, his attorney. The first act of the film focuses on the interworkings of Spector's defense team, where we see Baden and Bruce Cutler (Jeffrey Tambor) try to enact a plan for going about Spector's impending trial. Only until about twenty-minutes in do we see Spector, who is portrayed as a ruthless, foul-mouthed, arrogant, frustrated time-bomb on the verge of an implosion due to media scrutiny and constant false allegations. The film's most powerhouse scene comes when we first meet Spector, and him and Baden have a long, fifteen minute monologue together in Spector's luxurious mansion. During the course of it, the dialog is fast-paced, always engaging, and buoyed greatly by two terrific performers.

    Pacino and Mirren unsurprisingly carry the film to heights it may not have seen had lesser performers been placed in their roles. Think of the drudgery that would've taken place had those two cinematic greats been swapped for second/third-rate performers in their first moderately big film. I'm already a tad shocked that Phil Spector has been sidelined to primetime programming on HBO, when it clearly has the names to make it to the theaters (besides Pacino, Mirren, and Mamet, director Barry Levinson is credited as producer). But I suppose the real question is, would this film have made it out of the theaters with its budget and then some? Is this a story that could be universally appealing? My answer is no, because Phil Spector is not a perfect film and is story could be viewed as mundane with the abundance of other courtroom dramas. The trouble the film runs into the most is its length; it feels like Mamet was given a specific runtime before he even started shooting the film and couldn't make it any longer or shorter than ninety-five minutes. For this reason, some scenes (take the courtroom ones) feel short and undercooked, and the ending wraps everything up untidily after the first trial, which was declared a mistrial. With the wealth of information on only Spector's case, but the possibilities that could've resulted because of Spector's true enigma and personality as a whole, a whole hour could've been attached on to the ending. It seems silly to hire big names like Pacino, Mirren, Tambor, and Mamet for an ambitious project, but only utilize them for ninety-five minutes entirely.

    Even though the picture remains unbiased, it is a relatively unsurprising fact that both sides of the Spector case have been able to get fired up about some element in the film. Clarkson's family feels that she was portrayed in an overly dramatic, unstable manner, while Spector defenders say that the "time-bomb" personality Pacino generates on screen isn't accurate at all. The way I see it, you can judge Mamet on the way he portrays the characters here, but you can't say he takes sides here. Both sides seem to have truths to them, and neither of them are given cold hard facts.

    Mamet conducts the picture fluently and interestingly, even offering something of a commentary on the current state of our legal system and how we may have a problem at judging personality over person or something along those lines. Pacino's embodiment of Spector is wholly memorable, Mirren provides the picture with true elegance, and the supporting performances are forbidden to tread the line of unimportance. It's just a shame the scope wasn't broader, and the story more inclusive.

    NOTE: Phil Spector will be playing on HBO for the remainder of March and April.

    Starring: Al Pacino, Helen Mirren, Jeffrey Tambor, and Matt Molloy. Directed by: David Mamet.

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    Música

    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      This movie revolved around the murder of Lana Clarkson. Clarkson appeared in Scarface (1983) with Al Pacino, who played Phil Spector in this movie.
    • Erros de gravação
      In one of the interviews with Phil Spector, he says "Sam Cooke, in bed with some girl, the husband comes home - bam bam bam!". In reality, Sam Cooke was killed by a manager at a motel to which he had brought a prostitute. Sam Cooke was using the toilet in his room when the prostitute ran off with all his clothes, presumably to rob him. Cooke went into frenzy and headed for the manager's office, wearing nothing but shoes and a jacket, to ask where the prostitute had gone. The manager perceived Cooke's aggressive manner as an attack and shot him in the stomach. Court ruled the case as "justifiable homicide" and the manager was freed of all charges.
    • Citações

      Bruce Cutler: She shot herself.

      Linda Kenney Baden: You bet she did!

      Bruce Cutler: Why?

      Linda Kenney Baden: Not our problem anymore.

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      'This is a work of fiction. It's not "based on a true story." It is a drama inspired by actual persons in a trial, but it is neither an attempt to depict the actual persons, nor to comment upon the trial or its outcome.'
    • Conexões
      Featured in The 65th Primetime Emmy Awards (2013)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Unchained Melody
      Written by Alex North and Hy Zaret

      Performed by The Righteous Brothers

      Courtesy of Universal Records

      Under license from Universal Music Enterprises

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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 24 de março de 2013 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • 菲爾史佩克特傳奇
    • Empresa de produção
      • HBO Films
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 32 min(92 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 1.78 : 1

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