Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. 13 de abr. de 2018 · Directed by John Cassavetes with Gena Rowlands, John Cassavetes and Diahnne Abbott.Blu-ray (Amazon) : https://amzn.to/4aaNy8BBlu-ray (Criterion) : https://ww...

  2. Gena Rowlands teoriza mais de uma vez. Tentando soar verdadeira e intensa, sua personagem exala desequilíbrio e instabilidade. Por duas horas, Cassavetes (seu irmão em cena, e então marido na vida real) a desnuda sem piedade, revelando os frangalhos de uma criatura que tem na esperança de um amor absoluto a única conexão com a realidade.

  3. Love Streams is a solitary film by an unorthodox filmmaker. As we weave through this emotional labyrinth, and wander through an endless sequence of dimly lit rooms, frantic car rides, and the occasional perfectly framed still, we see characters who are in desperate need to give love and to be loved. It is a ...

  4. John Cassavetes's "Love Streams" is the kind of movie where a woman brings home two horses, a goat, a duck, some chickens, a dog, and a parrot, and you don't have the feeling that the screenplay is going for cheap laughs. In fact, there's a tightening in your throat as you realize how desperate an act you're witnessing, and how unhappy a person ...

  5. Description by Wikipedia. Love Streams is a 1984 American film directed by John Cassavetes that tells the story of a middle-aged brother and sister who find themselves caring for one another after the other loves in their lives abandon them. The film was Cassavetes' 11th and penultimate film. He later made the more mainstream Big Trouble.

  6. LOVE STREAMS. Directed by. John Cassavetes. United States, 1984. Drama, Comedy. 141. Synopsis. The film describes a few days in the life of the writer Robert Harmon and his sister Sarah, two closely bound, emotionally wounded siblings reunited after years apart. Synopsis.

  7. 12 de ago. de 2014 · Love Streams: A Fitful Flow. By Dennis Lim. Essays —. Aug 12, 2014. T he film’s title is a hopeful manifesto, a wish of the heart stated as a law of physics. “Love is a stream—it’s continuous,” the unhappily divorced Sarah Lawson (Gena Rowlands) tells her uncomprehending psychiatrist early on in John Cassavetes’s last masterpiece ...