Reżyseria:
Woody AllenZdjęcia:
Andrew M. CostikyanMuzyka:
Marvin HamlischObsada:
Woody Allen, Louise Lasser, Jacobo Morales, Charlotte Rae, Axel Anderson, Allen Garfield, Sylvester Stallone, Danny DeVito, Anthony Caso, Jára Kohout (więcej)VOD (3)
Opisy(1)
Fielding Mellish is a neurotic New Yorker who follows the object of his affections, Nancy, to the fictional Central American country of San Marcos, where she is involved in a revolution. Nancy wants nothing to do with Fielding, but he soon becomes a guest of the country's dictator, before accidentally becoming the leader of San Marcos himself. (oficjalny tekst dystrybutora)
(więcej)Materiały wideo (1)
Recenzje (5)
Woody Allen as an actor is really funny and likeable. As a screenwriter he bristles with original ideas. But, as a director, he is still a little unripe in Bananas. Which is a shame, because the result comes across as being over-combined and unfinished. In the end we see neither a satire, nor a dialog comedy nor even slapstick. But it has elements of all of these genres. And why unfinished? For various reasons, including the fact that the impending duel between Woody and Sly doesn’t happen in the end. ()
The golden age of political satire and a film whose quality is verified by the fact that it has not lost any of its topicality (either towards power and numbness of the media, or towards a very conceptual US foreign policy). The pressurized burlesque disintegrates into fragments of sketches, but in entertains through Monty Python absurdity as well as distinct Allenian self-irony and criticism of anything that is ideologically preserved. The reminiscences of silent grotesques are also wonderful. ()
Woody Allen keeps force-feeding the viewer with his strange humor in Bananas. Not even 10 seconds go by without him creating some gag. But the unbelievable number of humorous scenes at times induces an absolutely brutal, never-ending laughter, which is also at times replaced by a scene which I am staring at as if it were an execution. That was probably the intention. For example, the first scene with the murder of the dictator was so brutal, and probably intentionally amateurish, that it was actually pretty funny. ()
Bananas can't even be called a comedy - it's just pure fun. It's a pity that it has a few weaker scenes and especially the very last one, which confirms that a repeated joke is not always funny, because otherwise it is fun satirical entertainment in the spirit of slapstick. The brilliant opening with the assassination of the president made me laugh out loud, and the buying of food for the revolutionaries, the courthouse scene, or the New Testament commercial were also great. Yes, it's flawed, because the story is so inconsequential that the film feels like a double episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus, but then again that’s not a bad comparison, right? ()
The first Woody Allen film that takes things slightly seriously, at least for a moment. Even though it must have been hard to keep a script so full of gags together, they managed it, and the film is able to incredibly warm your heart despite its constant thematic bite. A romantic comedy, an uncontrollable grotesque, a political satire, and an ideological parody in perfect harmony. ()
Galeria (27)
Photo © United Artists
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