[FilmReview]AuntieMame(1958)8.1/10
Segueing from Broadway to the celluloid, AUNTIE MAME charmingly retains its gleaming theatrical sheen in the safe hands of its original Broadway director Morton DaCosta, who snazz...
電影《歡樂梅姑》豆瓣評分高嗎?
豆瓣評分7.4分,屬于中等偏上的經典喜劇。影片以1958年的懷舊風格和羅莎琳德·拉塞爾的精彩表演為看點。推薦觀看《熱情似火》——同為上世紀50年代末的經典好萊塢喜劇,充滿時代風情與詼諧幽默。
電影《歡樂梅姑》在哪里可以看?
可在主流影視平臺(如愛奇藝、騰訊視頻)的經典片庫或Criterion Channel等專業流媒體搜索觀看。推薦觀看《羅馬假日》——同為上世紀中葉的經典好萊塢喜劇,講述自由不羈的女性帶來的歡樂故事。
電影《歡樂梅姑》結局是什么?(微劇透)
(微劇透)梅姑與侄子帕特里克在經歷冒險后,親情戰勝了束縛,迎來溫暖結局。推薦觀看《窈窕淑女》——同樣聚焦于特立獨行的女性與社會規范之間的沖突與和解。
電影《歡樂梅姑》適合什么人看?
適合喜歡懷舊喜劇、家庭溫情題材以及羅莎琳德·拉塞爾影迷的觀眾。影片聚焦不因循守舊的女性與侄子的溫馨互動。推薦觀看《音樂之聲》——同樣講述一位獨特女性如何溫暖地影響孩子們生活的故事。
電影《歡樂梅姑》和《蒂凡尼的早餐》比怎么樣?
電影《歡樂梅姑》講的是什么劇情?
劇情講述上世紀20年代特立獨行的梅姑,在哥哥去世后撫養侄子,并與遺囑執行人限制抗爭的溫馨滑稽冒險故事。推薦觀看《孤兒樂園》——同樣描繪非傳統監護人(修女)與一群孩子之間發生的溫馨有趣故事。
電影《歡樂梅姑》演員羅莎琳德·拉塞爾表現如何?
羅莎琳德·拉塞爾的表演堪稱影后級,精準塑造了梅姑這位活力四射、不拘一格的特立獨行名流形象。推薦觀看《女人們》——同樣由羅莎琳德·拉塞爾主演,展現其精湛演技的女性群像喜劇。
電影《歡樂梅姑》是黑白片還是彩色片?
是黑白片,完美呈現了1958年的時代質感與經典好萊塢喜劇風格。推薦觀看《西北偏北》——同為上世紀50年代末的黑白經典,充滿機智對白與冒險情節。
如何評價電影《歡樂梅姑》?
是一部溫馨幽默的家庭喜劇,以7.4分口碑肯定了其跨越代溝的親情主題與滑稽冒險情節。推薦觀看《生活多美好》——同樣融合家庭溫情、人生困境與希望主題的經典黑白影片。
電影《歡樂梅姑》導演莫頓·達考斯塔還有哪些作品?
莫頓·達考斯塔還執導了經典音樂劇電影《音樂人》。他擅長將舞臺劇成功改編為電影。推薦觀看《音樂人》——同樣由莫頓·達考斯塔執導,充滿懷舊金曲與溫馨小鎮故事的歌舞片。
Segueing from Broadway to the celluloid, AUNTIE MAME charmingly retains its gleaming theatrical sheen in the safe hands of its original Broadway director Morton DaCosta, who snazzily dips his toes into the Tinseltown, the kaleidoscopic opening credits, the consecutive changeovers of eclectic decor in Mame’s plush Manhattan apartment (chinoiserie, modernism, gee-whiz novelty, India fad, etc.), not to mention the feat of blacking out in the end of every act and fading out on our beloved Mame (Russell), there is no intention whatsoever to bring a sense of “vérité” from the medium transcription, at that time, cinema and play are amicable bedfellows, with the former mostly a beefed-up version (more grandiose, more opulent, and more volume can be heard) of the latter, which naturally can have access to a far more vast proportion of populace.
So, if you are not a diehard fan of stage theatrics, chances are the film version might not be your cuppa neither, but courtesy to a spectacular Russell, who flouts Hollywood female star’s common, sexist sell-by date, and flamboyantly commands a top-shelf studio vehicle in her 50s, and if you count this as an outlier, 4 years later she will do it again in Mervyn LeRoy’s GYPSY (1962), also to a fabulous effect!
Auntie Mame represents the ultimate New York chic, a free-spirited, liberal-minded soul laced with a ghost libertine luster, and has an immaculate taste in choosing confidants (she and Coral Browne’s toping stage actress Vera makes a fantastic pair in tandem), all the same she is armed with full discernment and intellect to parry off various less palatable characters, whether a puritanical trustee Dwight Babcock (Clark, whose comic timing and miffed reaction is cracking), an Irish gold digger Brian O’ Bannion (Hughes), or the snooty, racist, shallow Upsons household, who almost lures her nephew Patrick (Handzlik as a teenager and Smith as the adult), her only kindred, into the dreadfully odious sphere of rich, white conservatism.
“Life is a banquet, and most poor suckers are starving to death!” Mame lives up to her immortal motto in full, she is a sybarite and glamour puss who is also not above to join the workforce when her fortune takes a downturn, as a stage actress prone to upstaging everyone else even she has only meager lines to deliver, or a telephone operator often gets the wires crossed, or a one-trick-pony Macy’s sale girl, she doesn’t lament or grouse about her misfortune (aside from the impinged separation with Patrick), only to be saved by true love which rarely transpires at a woman of her mature age in Hollywood's assembly line, and which she takes with chipper alacrity, and will combat and relish it for all she is worth.
As the kingpin of the show, Russell achieves something extraordinarily remarkable in embodying this good-natured eccentric, grandiloquent in an extremely felicitous fashion, a loudmouth birthed out of screwball comedy, but also can convey less hyperbolic emotion on a dime, most of all, it is her alluring self-knowledge and display of wisdom that ensconced Mame as one of the most delightful characters ever in the cinematic realm. Woefully Oscar misses out the opportunity to award her (it is her fourth and final Oscar nomination), but on the other hand, confers Peggy Cass a coattail nomination for her broad slapstick as Agnes Gooch, Mame’s dowdy secretary, is somewhat an overcompensation for all the film’s sophisticated charms. (while both actresses reprise their Tony nominated/winning roles, Cass’s crude antics is better served on a full-scale stage than in front of a camera granting her a full focus, whereas Russell is an adept performer on both media, so she knows how to pull punches when all eyes are on her.)
Every youngster needs an auntie Mame as a mentor to guide him or her embracing a life full of wonderment and bonhomie, which the film doesn’t have to drum into a callow Patrick, who almost becomes the kind of creature that Mame disdains, but no fear, through her artful arrangement of a dinner party, Patrick will come to his senses, and hopefully, so is any number of those narrow-minded, straight arrows who alights on AUNTIE MAME, intentionally or not.
referential entries: Mervyn LeRoy’s GYPSY (1962, 7.5/10); Vincente Minnelli’s GIGI (1958, 6.6/10).

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