IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,2/10
1235
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuTillie dreads another blind date with Pete Seltzer, who hides his insecurities behind jokes and flirting. Though initially resistant, she gradually warms to him as their relationship develop... Alles lesenTillie dreads another blind date with Pete Seltzer, who hides his insecurities behind jokes and flirting. Though initially resistant, she gradually warms to him as their relationship develops into marriage.Tillie dreads another blind date with Pete Seltzer, who hides his insecurities behind jokes and flirting. Though initially resistant, she gradually warms to him as their relationship develops into marriage.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Für 2 Oscars nominiert
- 1 Gewinn & 7 Nominierungen insgesamt
Rene Auberjonois
- Jimmy Twitchell
- (as René Auberjonois)
Lee Montgomery
- Robbie
- (as Lee H. Montgomery)
Ray Ballard
- Party Guest
- (Nicht genannt)
Sandy Balson
- Party Guest
- (Nicht genannt)
Linda Burton
- Waitress
- (Nicht genannt)
Ed Call
- Party Guest
- (Nicht genannt)
Adele Claire
- Party Guest
- (Nicht genannt)
Jo de Winter
- Party Guest
- (Nicht genannt)
Don Diamond
- Policeman
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Carol Burnett and Geraldine Page battle in an all-out throw-down that, as far as I can tell, didn't involve stunt doubles. They get their purses swinging. Garbage cans. Garden hose. But the funniest part of the movie might be the scene immediately preceding the fight, where Page struggles to avoid disclosing her real age. Burnett, who was surely America's greatest TV comic of the 70s and adored by millions, plays it straight down the line. Classy move.
In fact, as a kid in the 70s who watched The Carol Burnett Show with my family pretty much every week, this movie was a revelation. Burnett avoids all of her usual broad mugging that made her so popular. Whether it's in a comic scene or a dramatic scene, she has the acting chops. Watch her face - she speaks no words - as she sits back into her chair after receiving some tragic news. Most ''serious" actresses would have overplayed that scene to the point of pathos.
Walter Matthau shows once again that he had few peers when it came to moving seamlessly from comedy to drama and back to comedy again, often in the same scene.
Rene Auberjonois shows up as the gay friend. I don't know whether that portrayal would be considered overly broad in these perilous times, but he had me convinced. His proposal scene is heart-breaking on so many levels. I mean, this is 1972 we're talking about. It's still a long way from members of the Rainbow crowd being considered among the cool kids, so to speak.
I'm not sure the movie is as good as the sum of its parts. But for the individual performances it's well worth watching.
In fact, as a kid in the 70s who watched The Carol Burnett Show with my family pretty much every week, this movie was a revelation. Burnett avoids all of her usual broad mugging that made her so popular. Whether it's in a comic scene or a dramatic scene, she has the acting chops. Watch her face - she speaks no words - as she sits back into her chair after receiving some tragic news. Most ''serious" actresses would have overplayed that scene to the point of pathos.
Walter Matthau shows once again that he had few peers when it came to moving seamlessly from comedy to drama and back to comedy again, often in the same scene.
Rene Auberjonois shows up as the gay friend. I don't know whether that portrayal would be considered overly broad in these perilous times, but he had me convinced. His proposal scene is heart-breaking on so many levels. I mean, this is 1972 we're talking about. It's still a long way from members of the Rainbow crowd being considered among the cool kids, so to speak.
I'm not sure the movie is as good as the sum of its parts. But for the individual performances it's well worth watching.
Carol Burnett and Walter Matthau provide moving performances as a couple struggling through maintaining a marriage in the wake of a heart-wrenching tragedy. An ode to a more eloquent age, this film engrosses the viewers in a world of two people who did everything right, but end up with life turning horribly wrong. Carol Burnett and Walter Matthau are brilliant and a surprise for DS9 fans: there is a comical and touching performance by Rene Auberjonois (Odo).
Time has not been kind to PETE-N-TILLE,a 1972 film starring Walter Matthau and Carol Burnett. I remember seeing this film in the theaters when it was released and thinking how good it was, but as the years have worn on and I have seen this film several more times, it comes off as a muddled and confusing film that isn't sure if it wants to be a comedy or a drama. Matthau and Burnett play middle-aged singles who court, marry, have a child, and find their marriage tested by tragedy. The movie makes jarring switches from fall-down hilarity to soap opera tragedy in the blink of an eye and it's hard to keep track of what we are supposed to be feeling. Director Martin Ritt has also kept a tight rein on his two stars, making sure they never go over the top; however, I think this is to the film's detriment. There is one hysterically funny scene of a knock down drag out fight between Burnett and her best friend, played by Geraldine Page (who inexplicably received an Oscar nomination for this), but other than that, this is a muddled and confusing film barely watchable because of the natural charisma and legendary reputations of its stars.
The main accomplishment of Pete 'n' Tillie is the skill put into it for hitting the symmetry amongst the hilarious and the heartbreaking, between moments of earnest gravitas and other moments of priceless high comedy and even slapstick. What happens in the story is supposed to happen. Life's like that. In one go, Pete 'n' Tillie is an entertainment feat, with its high comic panache, its dexterity with bittersweet dramaturgy and its star turns for its two tremendously talented leads. The special thing about this movie is the way it merges those two tonal styles, with even more subtlety and naturalism than the films of later periods.
Indeed, this is a sharp, surprisingly heartfelt and charming movie of the early '70s, with a skillfully lasting and subdued tone of melancholy. Writer-producer Julius J. Epstein has seized hold of priceless dialogue and a theme of togetherness. The title characters are two sardonically mileage-developing San Francisco pragmatists who meet at a party and like one another virtually in spite of themselves. Owing to their age, they're seasoned enough to realize that "love without irritation is just lust." They get going, wed, raise a bright son and experience a paralyzing family predicament whose subtle, poignant handling is the most appreciable thing about this offbeat love story beholden to George Stevens' superior Penny Serenade.
It's a straightforward comedy that soaks up tragedy without an awkward wrinkle. This owes to the always subtle, sophisticated and refined direction of Martin Ritt, normally helming much less sentimental material, shrewdly of course. Then there is Geraldine Page, as Burnett's well-heeled friend, whose succinct, horrified charade at a police station and the subsequent catfight pack that beautiful release of laughter after a tragic peak. Like most great comics, Burnett, held in rein by a somber, down-to-earth story, is impressive, even in graver moments that feel as if the material was contrived to the point of bathos. Matthau has given more cumbersome performances but none more disarming since The Odd Couple.
Indeed, this is a sharp, surprisingly heartfelt and charming movie of the early '70s, with a skillfully lasting and subdued tone of melancholy. Writer-producer Julius J. Epstein has seized hold of priceless dialogue and a theme of togetherness. The title characters are two sardonically mileage-developing San Francisco pragmatists who meet at a party and like one another virtually in spite of themselves. Owing to their age, they're seasoned enough to realize that "love without irritation is just lust." They get going, wed, raise a bright son and experience a paralyzing family predicament whose subtle, poignant handling is the most appreciable thing about this offbeat love story beholden to George Stevens' superior Penny Serenade.
It's a straightforward comedy that soaks up tragedy without an awkward wrinkle. This owes to the always subtle, sophisticated and refined direction of Martin Ritt, normally helming much less sentimental material, shrewdly of course. Then there is Geraldine Page, as Burnett's well-heeled friend, whose succinct, horrified charade at a police station and the subsequent catfight pack that beautiful release of laughter after a tragic peak. Like most great comics, Burnett, held in rein by a somber, down-to-earth story, is impressive, even in graver moments that feel as if the material was contrived to the point of bathos. Matthau has given more cumbersome performances but none more disarming since The Odd Couple.
I'll treasure this movie for having given me of the my favourite lines, which I have used continually since first seeing this film... when on their first date... given a choice of beverages from Burnett, Matthau says 'whatever's the most trouble'.... that's pure Groucho... and of course the fight between Page and Burnett. A good woman on woman fight is rare in this type of film and the scene on the lawn with the hose is a gem,
I like to revisit this film every few years and still enjoy it immensely. Yeah, it degenerates to soap...too bad...if it hadn't this one might have been WAY up there in the ratings.
I like to revisit this film every few years and still enjoy it immensely. Yeah, it degenerates to soap...too bad...if it hadn't this one might have been WAY up there in the ratings.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesFirst starring role in a feature for Carol Burnett.
- PatzerThe song Strangers In The Night, first recorded in 1966, is heard on a jukebox in a scene set several years earlier.
- Zitate
Tillie Shlain: Honeymoon's over. Time to get married.
- VerbindungenFeatured in American Masters: Carol Burnett: A Woman of Character (2007)
- SoundtracksLove's the Only Game in Town
Music by John Williams (as John T. Williams)
Lyrics by Alan Bergman and Marilyn Bergman
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Pete 'n' Tillie
- Drehorte
- Mill Valley, Kalifornien, USA(fight scene in front of police station)
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 18.966.000 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 40 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.39 : 1
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By what name was Peter und Tillie (1972) officially released in India in English?
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