Ну... это тоже длинный разговор. Текст... читать дальшеNa na na na na na na na na Na na na na na na na na na Ooh Johnny Johnny come home Ooh Johnny Johnny come home
(CHORUS Johnny Johnny come home Na na na na na na na na na Ooh Johnny Johnny come home Ooh Johnny Johnny come home Johnny come home Na na na na na na na na na Ooh Johnny Johnny come home Ooh Johnny Johnny come home
When time had come (time had come) He made his decision (he made his decision) Oh, Johnny was tired (oh, Johnny was tired) And filled with desire (filled with desire) He closed the door (he closed the door) Steped out into nowhere (steped out into nowhere) Not leaving a track (not leaving a track) Will he ever come back
(CHORUS)
At break of day they found his letter Few words of regret, will he never come back
(CHORUS)
Oh Johnny (oh Johnny, oh Johnny) You never said a word (you never said a word, you never said a word) How could we know (how could we know, how could we know) Oh, Johnny (Johnny) please come home
Johnny Johnny come home (Ooh Johnny, Johnny come home) Ooh Johnny Johnny come home Ooh Johnny Johnny come home
Johnny come home Na na na na na na na na na Ooh Johnny Johnny come home Ooh Johnny Johnny come home
(REPEAT TO FADE) Для кого-то в этом ничего. А для меня получилось, что много. Целое лето. На самом деле не целое, а конец июля или даже только август... Но все равно целое лето! Бывает же так, что фонит в обе стороны. И в июнь, и в сентябрь...
Хм... интересный отзыв. Хотя многие ругают фильм. Stars In Training 10/10 Author: bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York 18 November 2009 S.E. Hinton's classic novel for young people has become a classic motion picture as well. The Outsiders with its all star cast of budding young Brat Packers reminds me a lot of the studio system films from days of yore. Francis Ford Coppola could never have afforded to pay all the players when they entered their prime earnings years which would be not to long in the future. Ironic that the biggest name in this film, Tom Cruise, has the smallest role in The Outsiders.
The main character of the film is C. Thomas Howell who is the youngest of three brothers who are orphaned with oldest Patrick Swayze raising his siblings as best he can. The middle brother is Rob Lowe. All of them are from the wrong side of the tracks of their small Oklahoma town and are just referred to as 'greasers' or 'hoods'.
In the pecking order above them are the upper middle class kids, preppies or jocks who are referred to as 'Sosh'. We never do find out exactly what the origin of the name was, probably it's in the novel. But the Soshs look down on the greasers and the greasers resent the soft life of privilege they see the other group apparently has. It's a dividing line they don't cross.
When Howell's best friend Ralph Macchio kills Leif Garrett trying to save Howell from Garrett and his friends trying to drown him, the two boys have to run away. The film follows them on their journey which contains both tragedy, but also a realization that life isn't just made up of greasers and Soshs.
Besides those already mentioned Matt Dillon and Emilio Estevez are also greasers in good standing. Dillon has a key role in the film as kind of a mentor greaser to the younger kids like Macchio and Howell.
Watching The Outsiders takes me back to my youth when I was doing basic training for the Army Reserve. I saw so many kids like the greasers in basic training for a hitch in the real army. This is exactly where the military gets a lot of its recruits, kids like the greasers who have no real life and look to get away from kind of situation all the greaser kids are in.
Francis Ford Coppola got perfect performances from his cast of budding stars. My favorite has to be Ralph Macchio as Johnny Cade. He's a kid from an abusive home who seeks acceptance and identity with the gang, he envies C. Thomas Howell for at least having the two older brothers. His scene with Howell where he sobs and wishes for a world without greasers or Soshs is a poignant heartbreaker. If Macchio didn't later become the Karate Kid, The Outsiders would have given him a career role.
The Outsiders, book and film, is destined to be a classic centuries from now. It's one of the best films from the Reagan Eighties.
One of the best ever translations from novel to the big screen... 9/10 Author: BSS from Barbourville, KY 9 February 2001 There are few movies that can hope to be as good as the great literature they are based on, but _The Outsiders_ comes close.
The cast is star-studded, to be sure, but the most impressive thing about the casting is how the stars match the characters from S.E. Hinton's novel. Matt Dillon plays the "elfish-looking" and dangerous Dallas Winston to perfection in what is probably the best performance of the movie. Patrick Swayze is a perfect fit for the brawny Darry Curtis; Ralph Macchio plays Johnny Cade, the "beaten puppy dog" of the Greasers very well; C. Thomas Howell has the toughest job, playing Ponyboy, the coming-of-age narrator of the story, and he comes through with a memorable performance. The list goes on and on... Emilio Estevez as Two-Bit; Rob Lowe as the handsome Sodapop Curtis... and so on.
Not only does the movie stay true to the book as far as characterization goes, but the movie's plot is also fairly close to the novel. It's nice to see Hollywood realizing that they can't outdo a great author's work, at least in this case.
Although the movie is not quite as good as the book, as is usually the case, _The Outsiders_ certainly does the book justice, and if you liked the book when you read it in school and you never got to see the movie, you should definitely check it out.
My all-time favorite movie. 10/10 Author: JGH-BR from Baton Rouge, Louisiana 31 August 2003 "The Outsiders" is my all-time favorite movie. The cinematography is beautiful, the score gorgeous, the acting excellent, and the writing -- the most important part of any movie that isn't a musical or a travelogue -- first rate. Put that all together -- with emphasis on the writing -- and it adds up to an extremely entertaining film. And that is what I want from a movie: entertainment, the opposite of boredom.
The great thing about "The Outsiders" is that it not only entertains, but it does so in every area. I'll start with the cinematography. That isn't something that I normally think about when I see a movie. Here, however, I couldn't not think about it. Nowhere else have I seen such rich and vibrant landscapes, such exquisite multi-colored sunsets, and even such effective use of shadow and darkness to portray the grittiness of the city. The individual scenes themselves, combined with the interesting contrast between the city and country shots, keep one's eyes glued to the screen.
The score isn't quite so gripping, but it is powerful, nonetheless. The main song, "Stay Gold," sung by Stevie Wonder, is beautifully and painfully sentimental. And the true score itself is lovely and helps to keep one's emotions at high tension during this emotion-rich film.
Regarding the acting, this all-star cast picked from the young Hollywood of the early 1980s is so formidable that even the great, though admittedly not well-known, Tom Cruise is relegated to a minor part. As for the leads, C. Thomas Howell and Ralph Macchio are especially good. While Howell unfortunately ended up as the king of straight-to-video flops, he is excellent here as the sweet and sensitive Ponyboy Curtis, a smart but poor 14-year-old who is caught between the worlds of the haves and the have-nots. Macchio also turns in a fine performance as Ponyboy's friend Johnny Cade. His southwestern accent is so good you'd think he was actually from Oklahoma.
Of course it really all comes down to the writing, and "The Outsiders" most definitely scores here as well. The story pulls you in from the beginning and never lets you go. And the dialogue, even the unimportant small talk, is incredibly natural. This is especially true in a scene involving a haircut. The one flaw I find -- and this is really an editing mistake -- is the absence of a scene necessary to conclude a key element of the main storyline. The scene was filmed, and used to be included when the movie was shown on broadcast television. I can't understand why it was left out of the theatrical version.
The omission of the scene shows that "The Outsiders" isn't perfect; but a movie doesn't have to be perfect in order to get a ten. It merely needs to be excellent. For all the reasons I've given, this movie is precisely that.
My all-time favorite movie. 10/10 Author: JGH-BR from Baton Rouge, Louisiana 31 August 2003 "The Outsiders" is my all-time favorite movie. The cinematography is beautiful, the score gorgeous, the acting excellent, and the writing -- the most important part of any movie that isn't a musical or a travelogue -- first rate. Put that all together -- with emphasis on the writing -- and it adds up to an extremely entertaining film. And that is what I want from a movie: entertainment, the opposite of boredom.
The great thing about "The Outsiders" is that it not only entertains, but it does so in every area. I'll start with the cinematography. That isn't something that I normally think about when I see a movie. Here, however, I couldn't not think about it. Nowhere else have I seen such rich and vibrant landscapes, such exquisite multi-colored sunsets, and even such effective use of shadow and darkness to portray the grittiness of the city. The individual scenes themselves, combined with the interesting contrast between the city and country shots, keep one's eyes glued to the screen.
The score isn't quite so gripping, but it is powerful, nonetheless. The main song, "Stay Gold," sung by Stevie Wonder, is beautifully and painfully sentimental. And the true score itself is lovely and helps to keep one's emotions at high tension during this emotion-rich film.
Regarding the acting, this all-star cast picked from the young Hollywood of the early 1980s is so formidable that even the great, though admittedly not well-known, Tom Cruise is relegated to a minor part. As for the leads, C. Thomas Howell and Ralph Macchio are especially good. While Howell unfortunately ended up as the king of straight-to-video flops, he is excellent here as the sweet and sensitive Ponyboy Curtis, a smart but poor 14-year-old who is caught between the worlds of the haves and the have-nots. Macchio also turns in a fine performance as Ponyboy's friend Johnny Cade. His southwestern accent is so good you'd think he was actually from Oklahoma.
Of course it really all comes down to the writing, and "The Outsiders" most definitely scores here as well. The story pulls you in from the beginning and never lets you go. And the dialogue, even the unimportant small talk, is incredibly natural. This is especially true in a scene involving a haircut. The one flaw I find -- and this is really an editing mistake -- is the absence of a scene necessary to conclude a key element of the main storyline. The scene was filmed, and used to be included when the movie was shown on broadcast television. I can't understand why it was left out of the theatrical version.
The omission of the scene shows that "The Outsiders" isn't perfect; but a movie doesn't have to be perfect in order to get a ten. It merely needs to be excellent. For all the reasons I've given, this movie is precisely that.
S.E. Hinton on the movie: The Outsiders was my second movie - what a cast!
I couldn't have asked for better actors for the parts, and couldn't have had nicer people to work with.
The Outsiders was a lot of fun to shoot because of the cast, who were ordinary, goofy, sweet teen-agers off-camera and serous artists in front of it.
I was sort of a greaser den-mother - I still miss my boys.
I think some readers are unhappy with the way The Outsiders was edited, and there are parts we shot I wish were in the final version, but it is a very faithful adaptation.
I play the nurse in Dallas' room - Matt and I had a hard time keeping a straight face during that scene!
www.imdb.com/title/tt0086066/reviews?ref_=tt_ur... - обсуждение фильма.
outsidersfullbook.blogspot.ru/2010/02/chapter-7...
www.fanfiction.net/s/10464286/2/Say-Something
перевод гугл и оригинал: translate.google.ru/translate?hl=ru&sl=en&tl=ru...
какой-то фанфик: www.fanfiction.net/s/10475080/6/Reading-The-Fut...
Сайт Ральфи: www.fanpop.com/clubs/ralph-macchio
www.wizardworld.com/ralphmacchio.html
рутрекер: rutracker.org/forum/tracker.php?nm=The%20Outsid...
Что нужно помнить про Америку: www.youtube.com/watch?v=OAdlVRn1xYc
Stars In Training
10/10
Author: bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
18 November 2009
S.E. Hinton's classic novel for young people has become a classic motion picture as well. The Outsiders with its all star cast of budding young Brat Packers reminds me a lot of the studio system films from days of yore. Francis Ford Coppola could never have afforded to pay all the players when they entered their prime earnings years which would be not to long in the future. Ironic that the biggest name in this film, Tom Cruise, has the smallest role in The Outsiders.
The main character of the film is C. Thomas Howell who is the youngest of three brothers who are orphaned with oldest Patrick Swayze raising his siblings as best he can. The middle brother is Rob Lowe. All of them are from the wrong side of the tracks of their small Oklahoma town and are just referred to as 'greasers' or 'hoods'.
In the pecking order above them are the upper middle class kids, preppies or jocks who are referred to as 'Sosh'. We never do find out exactly what the origin of the name was, probably it's in the novel. But the Soshs look down on the greasers and the greasers resent the soft life of privilege they see the other group apparently has. It's a dividing line they don't cross.
When Howell's best friend Ralph Macchio kills Leif Garrett trying to save Howell from Garrett and his friends trying to drown him, the two boys have to run away. The film follows them on their journey which contains both tragedy, but also a realization that life isn't just made up of greasers and Soshs.
Besides those already mentioned Matt Dillon and Emilio Estevez are also greasers in good standing. Dillon has a key role in the film as kind of a mentor greaser to the younger kids like Macchio and Howell.
Watching The Outsiders takes me back to my youth when I was doing basic training for the Army Reserve. I saw so many kids like the greasers in basic training for a hitch in the real army. This is exactly where the military gets a lot of its recruits, kids like the greasers who have no real life and look to get away from kind of situation all the greaser kids are in.
Francis Ford Coppola got perfect performances from his cast of budding stars. My favorite has to be Ralph Macchio as Johnny Cade. He's a kid from an abusive home who seeks acceptance and identity with the gang, he envies C. Thomas Howell for at least having the two older brothers. His scene with Howell where he sobs and wishes for a world without greasers or Soshs is a poignant heartbreaker. If Macchio didn't later become the Karate Kid, The Outsiders would have given him a career role.
The Outsiders, book and film, is destined to be a classic centuries from now. It's one of the best films from the Reagan Eighties.
9/10
Author: BSS from Barbourville, KY
9 February 2001
There are few movies that can hope to be as good as the great literature they are based on, but _The Outsiders_ comes close.
The cast is star-studded, to be sure, but the most impressive thing about the casting is how the stars match the characters from S.E. Hinton's novel. Matt Dillon plays the "elfish-looking" and dangerous Dallas Winston to perfection in what is probably the best performance of the movie. Patrick Swayze is a perfect fit for the brawny Darry Curtis; Ralph Macchio plays Johnny Cade, the "beaten puppy dog" of the Greasers very well; C. Thomas Howell has the toughest job, playing Ponyboy, the coming-of-age narrator of the story, and he comes through with a memorable performance. The list goes on and on... Emilio Estevez as Two-Bit; Rob Lowe as the handsome Sodapop Curtis... and so on.
Not only does the movie stay true to the book as far as characterization goes, but the movie's plot is also fairly close to the novel. It's nice to see Hollywood realizing that they can't outdo a great author's work, at least in this case.
Although the movie is not quite as good as the book, as is usually the case, _The Outsiders_ certainly does the book justice, and if you liked the book when you read it in school and you never got to see the movie, you should definitely check it out.
10/10
Author: JGH-BR from Baton Rouge, Louisiana
31 August 2003
"The Outsiders" is my all-time favorite movie. The cinematography is beautiful, the score gorgeous, the acting excellent, and the writing -- the most important part of any movie that isn't a musical or a travelogue -- first rate. Put that all together -- with emphasis on the writing -- and it adds up to an extremely entertaining film. And that is what I want from a movie: entertainment, the opposite of boredom.
The great thing about "The Outsiders" is that it not only entertains, but it does so in every area. I'll start with the cinematography. That isn't something that I normally think about when I see a movie. Here, however, I couldn't not think about it. Nowhere else have I seen such rich and vibrant landscapes, such exquisite multi-colored sunsets, and even such effective use of shadow and darkness to portray the grittiness of the city. The individual scenes themselves, combined with the interesting contrast between the city and country shots, keep one's eyes glued to the screen.
The score isn't quite so gripping, but it is powerful, nonetheless. The main song, "Stay Gold," sung by Stevie Wonder, is beautifully and painfully sentimental. And the true score itself is lovely and helps to keep one's emotions at high tension during this emotion-rich film.
Regarding the acting, this all-star cast picked from the young Hollywood of the early 1980s is so formidable that even the great, though admittedly not well-known, Tom Cruise is relegated to a minor part. As for the leads, C. Thomas Howell and Ralph Macchio are especially good. While Howell unfortunately ended up as the king of straight-to-video flops, he is excellent here as the sweet and sensitive Ponyboy Curtis, a smart but poor 14-year-old who is caught between the worlds of the haves and the have-nots. Macchio also turns in a fine performance as Ponyboy's friend Johnny Cade. His southwestern accent is so good you'd think he was actually from Oklahoma.
Of course it really all comes down to the writing, and "The Outsiders" most definitely scores here as well. The story pulls you in from the beginning and never lets you go. And the dialogue, even the unimportant small talk, is incredibly natural. This is especially true in a scene involving a haircut. The one flaw I find -- and this is really an editing mistake -- is the absence of a scene necessary to conclude a key element of the main storyline. The scene was filmed, and used to be included when the movie was shown on broadcast television. I can't understand why it was left out of the theatrical version.
The omission of the scene shows that "The Outsiders" isn't perfect; but a movie doesn't have to be perfect in order to get a ten. It merely needs to be excellent. For all the reasons I've given, this movie is precisely that.
10/10
Author: JGH-BR from Baton Rouge, Louisiana
31 August 2003
"The Outsiders" is my all-time favorite movie. The cinematography is beautiful, the score gorgeous, the acting excellent, and the writing -- the most important part of any movie that isn't a musical or a travelogue -- first rate. Put that all together -- with emphasis on the writing -- and it adds up to an extremely entertaining film. And that is what I want from a movie: entertainment, the opposite of boredom.
The great thing about "The Outsiders" is that it not only entertains, but it does so in every area. I'll start with the cinematography. That isn't something that I normally think about when I see a movie. Here, however, I couldn't not think about it. Nowhere else have I seen such rich and vibrant landscapes, such exquisite multi-colored sunsets, and even such effective use of shadow and darkness to portray the grittiness of the city. The individual scenes themselves, combined with the interesting contrast between the city and country shots, keep one's eyes glued to the screen.
The score isn't quite so gripping, but it is powerful, nonetheless. The main song, "Stay Gold," sung by Stevie Wonder, is beautifully and painfully sentimental. And the true score itself is lovely and helps to keep one's emotions at high tension during this emotion-rich film.
Regarding the acting, this all-star cast picked from the young Hollywood of the early 1980s is so formidable that even the great, though admittedly not well-known, Tom Cruise is relegated to a minor part. As for the leads, C. Thomas Howell and Ralph Macchio are especially good. While Howell unfortunately ended up as the king of straight-to-video flops, he is excellent here as the sweet and sensitive Ponyboy Curtis, a smart but poor 14-year-old who is caught between the worlds of the haves and the have-nots. Macchio also turns in a fine performance as Ponyboy's friend Johnny Cade. His southwestern accent is so good you'd think he was actually from Oklahoma.
Of course it really all comes down to the writing, and "The Outsiders" most definitely scores here as well. The story pulls you in from the beginning and never lets you go. And the dialogue, even the unimportant small talk, is incredibly natural. This is especially true in a scene involving a haircut. The one flaw I find -- and this is really an editing mistake -- is the absence of a scene necessary to conclude a key element of the main storyline. The scene was filmed, and used to be included when the movie was shown on broadcast television. I can't understand why it was left out of the theatrical version.
The omission of the scene shows that "The Outsiders" isn't perfect; but a movie doesn't have to be perfect in order to get a ten. It merely needs to be excellent. For all the reasons I've given, this movie is precisely that.
Ешкин же свет. Как он говорит - ни фига не понятно.
139 тыс. читают.
Стааатья. lebeauleblog.com/2014/04/19/what-the-hell-happe...
Много страниц. ((( )))) Переводить сложно, улыбаться легко.
Хм... у меня тут филиал фан-клуба РМ наклевывается. Но ссылки есть ссылки, потом поди найди. КП - это не только короткая программа. Надо же. www.fast-rewind.com/kkid/index.html
Ауты, рецензия: www.filmthreat.com/reviews/8008/
S.E. Hinton on the movie:
The Outsiders was my second movie - what a cast!
I couldn't have asked for better actors for the parts, and couldn't have had nicer people to work with.
The Outsiders was a lot of fun to shoot because of the cast, who were ordinary, goofy, sweet teen-agers off-camera and serous artists in front of it.
I was sort of a greaser den-mother - I still miss my boys.
I think some readers are unhappy with the way The Outsiders was edited, and there are parts we shot I wish were in the final version, but it is a very faithful adaptation.
I play the nurse in Dallas' room - Matt and I had a hard time keeping a straight face during that scene!
Отзывы на аутов, положительные: www.amazon.com/The-Outsiders-Complete-Novel/pro...
ауты в Википедии (не нашей) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Outsiders_(film)
карате кид - 30 фактов о mentalfloss.com/article/57156/30-facts-about-ka...
карате кид в викиквоут (там все диалоги!!!): 1) карате кид 2 en.wikiquote.org/wiki/The_Karate_Kid,_Part_II
2) карате кид en.wikiquote.org/wiki/The_Karate_Kid
3) карате кид 3 en.wikiquote.org/wiki/The_Karate_Kid,_Part_III
Сайт и ссылки на его страницы (карате кид) www.fast-rewind.com/kkid/index.html
вырезанные сцены www.fast-rewind.com/kkid/index.html
команда : www.fast-rewind.com/kkid/index.html
роберт марк кармен (сценарист) www.bohans-family.com/sensei-speaks/kmaenin-r/r...
карате кид на зет моумент thatmomentin.com/2014/08/01/the-karate-kid-1984...
Ральф на панпоп: www.fanpop.com/clubs/ralph-macchio/answers
поиск на дивид тоок (DVD Talk): www.google.com/cse?cx=002166386983877483078:x1l...
карате кид на фанпоп www.fanpop.com/clubs/the-karate-kid
ауты очередной поиск (по словам The Casting of The Outsiders" featurette): yandex.ru/yandsearch?clid=1882610&text=The%20Ca..."%20featurette%20&lr=2&p=4
по словам Staying Gold: A Look Back at the Outsiders: yandex.ru/yandsearch?clid=1882610&text=Staying%...
ауты на IMDB www.imdb.com/title/tt0484153/
ауты на филм treat www.filmthreat.com/reviews/8008/
What the Hell Happened to Ralph Macchio? lebeauleblog.com/2014/04/19/what-the-hell-happe...
ауты в обсуждениях на imdb www.imdb.com/title/tt0086066/reviews?start=210
Out текст романа outsidersfullbook.blogspot.ru/2010/02/chapter-1...
Фильмы с РМ на торрентах www.fast-torrent.ru/video/actor/ralf-machchio/