Streaming (1)

Sinopsis(1)

Una serie de entrevistas, con quienes lo conocieron, nos introduce en la vida del incompetente atracador Virgil Starkwell, que desde el principio estuvo abocado a la delincuencia: durante su infancia vivió sometido y humillado por los chicos más fuertes, y cuando descubrió que su carrera musical no tenía futuro, a Virgil no le quedó más remedio que robar, pero su escaso talento pronto lo conduciría a la cárcel. (Filmin)

(más)

Reseñas (3)

J*A*S*M 

todas reseñas del usuario

inglés I like Woody when he plays the clumsy intellectual (because I can easily relate to him :-P), but I have a problem when he plays a moron, which is the case with Take the Money and Run. His début is not precisely a cavalcade of fun, many of the gags are predictable, especially in the end. It left me with rather mixed feelings. If it was split into two twenty-minute episodes of a comedy series, it would be better, after all, it’s nothing but a series of comedy scenes. ()

Marigold 

todas reseñas del usuario

inglés A very unworked and wild mixture of humorous sketches, which are similar to Monty Python with exaggerated absurdity and the stupidly exalted voice of the narrator. The result is a sequence of stories, which for the most part are well-thought-out and realized, and a frail story skeleton, from which it is all too evident that it is just a hanger for Allen's social and film-parody humor. ()

novoten 

todas reseñas del usuario

inglés For Woody's fans, it is an infinite pleasure to watch how the dialogues, gags, and overall atmosphere are polished in his first purely authorial film. I would probably be disappointed if it were just a gangster parody, so I had to start laughing when Janet Margolin appeared on the screen for the first time and Woody began teasing her with sweet words, and later explained in voiceover how he feels when he is with her. I am infinitely glad that he has maintained this explanation throughout his career. ()