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La trama

Título original: Family Plot
  • 1976
  • 18
  • 2h
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,8/10
26 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Alfred Hitchcock, Karen Black, Bruce Dern, and Barbara Harris in La trama (1976)
Theatrical Trailer from Universal Pictures
Reproducir trailer2:03
1 vídeo
68 imágenes
ComedyCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

Una falsa vidente y su novio taxista se encuentran con un par de secuestradores en serie mientras siguen la pista de un heredero desaparecido en California.Una falsa vidente y su novio taxista se encuentran con un par de secuestradores en serie mientras siguen la pista de un heredero desaparecido en California.Una falsa vidente y su novio taxista se encuentran con un par de secuestradores en serie mientras siguen la pista de un heredero desaparecido en California.

  • Dirección
    • Alfred Hitchcock
  • Guión
    • Ernest Lehman
    • Victor Canning
  • Reparto principal
    • Karen Black
    • Bruce Dern
    • Barbara Harris
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,8/10
    26 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Alfred Hitchcock
    • Guión
      • Ernest Lehman
      • Victor Canning
    • Reparto principal
      • Karen Black
      • Bruce Dern
      • Barbara Harris
    • 152Reseñas de usuarios
    • 92Reseñas de críticos
    • 79Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 premios y 6 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos1

    Family Plot
    Trailer 2:03
    Family Plot

    Imágenes68

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    Reparto principal29

    Editar
    Karen Black
    Karen Black
    • Fran
    Bruce Dern
    Bruce Dern
    • George Lumley
    Barbara Harris
    Barbara Harris
    • Blanche Tyler
    William Devane
    William Devane
    • Arthur Adamson
    Ed Lauter
    Ed Lauter
    • Maloney
    Cathleen Nesbitt
    Cathleen Nesbitt
    • Julia Rainbird
    Katherine Helmond
    Katherine Helmond
    • Mrs. Maloney
    Warren J. Kemmerling
    Warren J. Kemmerling
    • Grandison
    Edith Atwater
    Edith Atwater
    • Mrs. Clay
    William Prince
    William Prince
    • Bishop
    Nicholas Colasanto
    Nicholas Colasanto
    • Constantine
    Marge Redmond
    Marge Redmond
    • Vera Hannagan
    John Lehne
    John Lehne
    • Andy Bush
    Charles Tyner
    Charles Tyner
    • Wheeler
    Alexander Lockwood
    • Parson
    Martin West
    Martin West
    • Sanger
    Elisabeth Brooks
    Elisabeth Brooks
    • Woman in Cafe with Priest
    • (sin acreditar)
    Carl Byrd
    • Lieutenant Peterson
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • Alfred Hitchcock
    • Guión
      • Ernest Lehman
      • Victor Canning
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios152

    6,826.1K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    7bkoganbing

    A Tale Of Two Con Games

    Alfred Hitchcock's final film Family Plot is a story of two male and female criminal partnerships. The first pair is Bruce Dern and Barbara Harris who are a pair of small time grifters and we meet them in the process of fleecing a rich old spinster Cathleen Nesbitt with a phony psychic act.

    The second pair are William Devane and Karen Black who have a lovely line in ransom kidnappings. They've really got it worked out to a science, including a soundproof hidden room in Devane's basement where the victims can be stashed until the ransom is paid.

    Nesbitt confesses that she had her late sister give up an out of wedlock child during a séance and now she'd like to make amends by finding him and making him her heir. So with a finder's fee in mind Dern and Harris start digging.

    Their paths cross Devane and Black as the police are hunting them so it becomes quite an interesting set of circumstances as Devane and Black suspect the others of being police operatives.

    Hitchcock cleverly interweaves the stories of the two couples into a very cohesive plot. The players all hit the mark with their roles,] especially Devane, a smooth talking killer in the Hitchcock tradition of Otto Kruger in Saboteur, Tom Helmore in Vertigo, and James Mason in North By Northwest.

    The ending is a bit of a surprise though, it comes rather abruptly. I have to confess I didn't like it at first, but it does kind of grow on you with repeated viewings.

    Family Plot is a good for the master of suspense to go out on.
    7w2amarketing

    Better than Expected

    Having seen "Torn Curtain" about a year ago, I wasn't all that enthusiastic about seeing another of Hitchcock's "late" works (indeed, his final film). "TC" was absolutely abysmal, as reflected in my comments there, so I had no great expectations for "Family Plot." I was pleasantly surprised, however. Although true Hitchcock buffs may not rank "FP" alongside the "classics" like "Psycho" and "NxNW," "FP" is an evenly-paced film with strong central characters, an interesting supporting cast, good acting, humor, innuendo, mystery and, of course, suspense. A good all-around film by the master in his final effort. It won't leave your palms sweating and your blood running cold, and there are a couple of flaws that a younger Hitch might have caught (I, for one, wonder how Blanche's car got fixed so quickly -- hard to believe it wasn't totaled in the first place).

    Nonetheless, Family Plot will hold your attention and keep you guessing until the very end. I'm glad I took the time to seek it out and watch it.
    9alicecbr

    Murder Mystery as Comedy: last Hitchcock Film

    Get ready for the tricks and suspense you've seen in other films, but be sure to get the commentary on DVD. Barbara Harris looks just like Hitchcock's daughter, as you'll see from the interview, just a younger version. A extra lesson: You will never get a facelift once you see the interviews with Karen Black. If she had allowed herself to age naturally, she would have been so much more attractive than the gargoyle you'll wince at seeing.

    Here's a treat: the winding mountain road and no brakes scenario as never you've seen it. I loved the comic touches and the risqué language. It is indeed a unique film. If you happen to love the mountain of California and San Francisco, you'll also love the cinematography. The stills are mostly of Hitchcock in the graveyard, which makes you wonder if he wasn't a little clairvoyant himself. The whole movie centers around a phony psychic and her attempt to cheat an old woman out of her money.

    In our cynical world of today, you'll expect them just to dress Dern up as the missing heir, but nope, they play it straight. Having read of Hitchcock's misogyny, you'll appreciate the cuts and slices between the lovers. Both pairs of grifters have their own love thing going. Rather touching to see the fidelity among the crooks. Inspired writing, indeed.

    Hitchcock did have a pacemaker installed while this movie was being made, so you have to wonder if his own thoughts of his impending death might have caused as much concentration on the graveyard scenes. Buy the DVD; the added features will make the movies itself 3 times more interesting.
    7AlsExGal

    quite enjoyable and comical

    This last Hitchcock film may seem out of step with all of the others, but then it has to be. The sexual/cultural revolution is over. The cynical 70s are in full swing. You can't just insinuate "the act" anymore and cut to the seashore.

    Into this environment comes "Family Plot". It is basically two sets of crimes, one minor and one major, hitting an intersection with one group of criminals having no idea what the other group is up to.

    Blanche Tyler (Barbara Harris) is a fake psychic. She has her cabbie boyfriend get information for her based on the hints she gets from the séances. In this case a wealthy woman, Julia Rainbird, claims her sister's spirit and her own conscience torment her because in 1933 she made her sister put her illegitimate child up for adoption because of the scandal that would have occurred given the conventions of the times. Nobody knows what happened to him since the adoption was closed. Now Julia Rainbird, in her old age, wants to accept her nephew into the family and leave the entire estate to him. There is 10K in it for Blanche if she can find him.

    What Blanche and cabbie lover George (Bruce Dern) don't know is that the long lost heir is basically Lex Luther with hair - William Devane as Arthur Adamson, a true sociopath who loves thumbing his nose at conventions and loves crime. Together he and his girlfriend, Fran (Karen Black) kidnap wealthy people in exchange for jewels. Adamson has a legitimate business as a jeweler as a front.

    The misunderstandings come in when Adamson discovers that somebody is digging into his past, specifically his faked death which was a cover for the murder of his adoptive parents back in 1950. Blanche and George can't figure out why they would be getting attempts on their life. Adamson has no idea of his true identity and has no idea why these two amateurs are trying to find him, figuring it has either to do with his current kidnappings or the past murder of his parents.

    It all comes together in a suspenseful and comical way. I'll let you watch and find out how.

    Blanche and George are a hilarious couple just perfect for 1975. In one scene, at the end of the day, she is basically ordering him to come inside the house and sexually service her. George replies she is wearing him out and he has to work tomorrow. She asks "what are you saving it for?". This is a long way from the stolen glances, passionate kisses, and hand holding in "Dial M For Murder", but this is a different time and they are just right for it.

    Even at the end Hitchcock did know how to change with the times. I'd recommend it.
    8secondtake

    A lighthearted suspense thriller? Yes, a la Hitchcock...

    The Family Plot (1976)

    It all is a playful gag by the end--not the end of the movie, but of the career, the long cat and mouse movie-making career of Alfred Hitchcock. This, his last film, is both cute and clever and a tiny bit suspenseful. It reuses some of the same kinds of tricks we've seen from him before, with a twist here or there: the innocent protagonists, for example, are themselves up to a little bit of a scam. And in Hitchcock fashion, the antagonists, a parallel couple, are lighthearted in their murderousness. Their angst over crime is theatrical.

    There are usually moments in his movies that are vividly disturbing, and he contrasts these with either lightly comic scenes, downright silliness, or charming, everyday life. Think of the family in Shadow of a Doubt or Cary Grant in North by Northwest for starters. In this movie, beginning even with the pun of the title (the family plot is a cemetery plot), everything is chipper. The hair-raising runaway car scene is so scary and absurdly silly at the same time I think a lot of people will give up on the movie as just plain "stupid." Part of me agrees, but I laughed out loud through the whole scene in appreciation, and not because of comic timing or original sight gags or whatnot, but because I could imagine the director laughing. Movies are supposed to entertain, he would insist (supposedly saying to the impassioned Ingrid Bergman once, "Ingrid, it's just a movie.") Hitchcock wants it to be carefully silly and disarming at the same time. I mean, he's winking at us just as we are supposed to be scared.

    The evil-doers are really not very evil here, though the man does propose some pretty ruthless behavior, and the people out to do good (eventually, anyway, with dollar signs in their eyes all the same) are truly fun and natural as a couple. The plots of the two couples are separate at first, and once they join it gets complicated but never confusing. The Mustang is already eleven years old for this film--a sign of how far into our current era Hitchcock has come, and perhaps a reminder that his style of making movies is starting to look like just that, a style, something artificial and quaint when hard edged, elegant realism has stormed back into Hollywood (from Chinatown to the Godfather to, in 1976, uh, Rocky).

    If Hitch is out of touch with the times, he's completely in touch with his own approach. This is a Hitchcock film, through and through, and if you are tired of me saying that, it's because I think you might hate it without knowing how much it depends on knowing, liking, and understanding that kind of movie. It's totally enjoyable. Not his best, but enjoyable and well made and almost heartwarming, of all things.

    Más del estilo

    Frenesí
    7,4
    Frenesí
    Topaz
    6,2
    Topaz
    Cortina rasgada
    6,6
    Cortina rasgada
    Marnie, la ladrona
    7,1
    Marnie, la ladrona
    El hombre que sabía demasiado
    7,4
    El hombre que sabía demasiado
    Pero... ¿quién mató a Harry?
    7,0
    Pero... ¿quién mató a Harry?
    Sabotaje
    7,1
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    Falso culpable
    7,4
    Falso culpable
    Yo confieso
    7,2
    Yo confieso
    La sombra de una duda
    7,8
    La sombra de una duda
    Pánico en la escena
    7,0
    Pánico en la escena
    Los pájaros
    7,6
    Los pájaros

    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      At one point during filming, Bruce Dern questioned Sir Alfred Hitchcock about why he was cast. Hitchcock replied, "Because Mr. Packinow wanted a million dollars, and Hitch doesn't pay a million dollars." It took Dern a while to realize that "Mr. Packinow" was Al Pacino.
    • Pifias
      When the runaway car is careening down the mountain, George is almost strangled by Blanche as she hangs on to his tie while flailing around in the back of the car. George's tie is clearly loose around his neck in several shots. When he crashes and climbs out of the car, the tie knot is perfect.
    • Citas

      George: Smells fishy to me.

      Blanche: Well even fish smells good when you're starving to death.

    • Créditos adicionales
      The Universal logo does not appear anywhere on this film.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Marlene (1984)
    • Banda sonora
      Rejoice, the Lord Is King
      (1744) (uncredited)

      Music by John Darwall

      Lyrics by Charles Wesley

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    Preguntas frecuentes29

    • How long is Family Plot?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Is Blanche Tyler a real psychic?
    • Is "Family Plot" based on a book?
    • How closely does the movie follow the book?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 9 de abril de 1976 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Family Plot, la trama
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Angeles Crest Highway, Angeles National Forest, California, Estados Unidos(runaway car downhill sequence)
    • Empresas productoras
      • Universal Pictures
      • Alfred J. Hitchcock Productions
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • 4.490.375 US$ (estimación)
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 111 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      2 horas
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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