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Chargement... Moonstruck (édition 1998)par Cher (Actor), Nicolas Cage (Actor), Olympia Dukakis (Actor), Danny Aiello (Actor), Vincent Gardenia (Actor) — 9 plus, Julie Bovasso (Actor), John Mahoney (Actor), Louis Guss (Actor), Feodor Chaliapin Jr. (Actor), Anita Gillette (Actor), Leonardo Cimino (Actor), Paula Trueman (Actor), Norman Jewison (Directeur), John Patrick Shanley (Writer)
Information sur l'oeuvreMoonstruck (Deluxe Edition) par Norman Jewison (Director)
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. Pleasant enough light viewing, albeit rather caricatured. Some mildly amusing scenes, some poignancy. Made in 1987 and rather sexist, but perhaps that was typical for Italian-American families of the era. Cher is excellent as Loretta, and Olympia Dukakis as her mother. They manage to look alike and both succeed in coming across as Italian. Rated PG but the storyline is unlikely to appeal to anyone under the age of about 15. Longer review here: https://suesdvdreviews.blogspot.com/2020/12/moonstruck-cher.html Substance: Another modern romance where the wedding comes after the honeymoon. Italian family in NYC plays to the stereotypes, but entertainingly so. Style: The screenplay is actually good, barring the moral sell-out to seventies sensibilities. Cher is gorgeous, and a good actress. I loved her mother (O. Dukakis). aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Appartient à la série éditorialeThe Criterion Collection (1056) Prix et récompensesListes notables
An "unlucky in love" Italian-American widow just weeks away from her wedding falls for her fiance's younger brother. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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And at the heart of the story, there is Cher’s astonishing discovery that she is still capable of love. As the movie opens, she becomes engaged to Mr. Johnny Cammareri (Danny Aiello), not so much out of love as out of weariness. But after he flies to Sicily to be at the bedside of his dying mother, she goes to talk to Mr. Johnny’s estranged younger brother (Nicolas Cage), and is thunderstruck when they are drawn almost instantly into a passionate embrace.
“Moonstruck” was directed by Norman Jewison and written by John Patrick Shanley, and one of their accomplishments is to allow the film to be about all of these people (and several more, besides). This is an ensemble comedy, and a lot of the laughs grow out of the sense of family that Jewison and Shanley create. There are small, hilarious moments involving the exasperation that Dukakis feels for her ancient father-in-law (Feodor Chaliapin), who lives upstairs with his dogs. (In the course of a family dinner, she volunteers, “Feed one more bite of my food to your dogs, old man, and I'll kick you to death!”) As Cher’s absent fiance lingers at his mother’s bedside, Cher and Cage grow even more desperately passionate, and Cher learns the secret of the hatred between the two brothers: One day Aiello made Cage look the wrong way at the wrong time, and he lost his hand in a bread-slicer. Now he wears an artificial hand and carries an implacable grudge in his heart