Stripes

    Stripes
    1981

    Synopsis

    John Winger, an indolent sad sack in his 30s, impulsively joins the US Army after losing his job, his girlfriend and his apartment.

    Votre Filmothèque

    Cast

    • Bill MurrayJohn Winger
    • Harold RamisRussell Ziskey
    • Warren OatesSgt. Hulka
    • P.J. SolesStella Hansen
    • Sean YoungLouise Cooper
    • John CandyDewey 'Ox' Oxberger
    • John LarroquetteCapt. Stillman
    • John VoldstadStillman's Aid
    • John DiehlCruiser
    • Lance LeGaultCol. Glass

    Recommandations

    • 90

      Film Threat

      Bill Murray is as funny here as anyone has ever been funny and I can’t see anyone else getting away with half the things he says here much less have them sound so cool and inspired.
    • 88

      Chicago Sun-Times

      Stripes is an anarchic slob movie, a celebration of all that is irreverent, reckless, foolhardy, undisciplined, and occasionally scatological. It's a lot of fun.
    • 80

      Empire

      Murray's initial transition from the small screen is a classic.
    • 75

      Chicago Tribune

      Finally, a word about John Candy, the Second City-trained performer who has worked with great success on the "SCTV" shows. Candy, the plump one of the troupe, is more than just a jolly fat man in "Stripes." He becomes one of Murray's allies, because his comic persona allows him to be as sharp-witted as the next man. This is a switch, because the fat man in a comedy usually is the butt of a lot of physical humor...The point is this: Candy deserves to star in his own movie. He's that funny.
    • 75

      TV Guide Magazine

      Though it's occasionally tasteless and eventually crumbles, STRIPES is an often hilarious film that provided Bill Murray with a perfect opportunity in which to display his comedic skills.
    • 70

      The New York Times

      The chief thing it counts on is a built-in appreciation of the Murray sense of humor, which is growing ever more refined as Mr. Murray proceeds with his movie career. Mr. Murray hasn't yet reached the point at which his routines can be sustained for more than 10 minutes at a time. But he has achieved a sardonically exaggerated calm that can be very entertaining.
    • 70

      Time Out London

      Reitman, who also originated Animal House and Meatballs, manages a reasonable success rate at pulling off the numerous verbal and sight gags with which the script is peppered.
    • 60

      Chicago Reader

      Bill Murray is the star of this pleasant 1981 comedy, but the late-60s values he incarnates (skepticism, spontaneity, antiauthoritarianism) are seriously out of step with the values of director Ivan Reitman, who prefers conformity, loyalty, and even something a little like patriotism. As a result the second banana of this service comedy, the affable Harold Ramis, becomes its genuine dramatic center: his struggles to keep his buddy Bill in line have a strange urgency and poignance.

    Aimé par

    • aykroyd