Давно хотела посмотреть. Захотелось снова чего-нибудь такого американского из 80х.
Фильм с ретро мальчишеским настроением. Спасибо Копполе!
Том Круз, Роб Лоу, Диллон и оо, йамми, Патрик Суэйзи!
S.E. Hinton wrote the original story when she was sixteen years old.
In the poster for the film, the Greasers are shown laughing as Johnny (Ralph Macchio) is smirking.
This was a candid shot, taken during the photo session in which the actors were supposed to look tough at the camera.
What happened was that Leif Garrett (who played Bob) was approaching the food table off-camera, and a stagehand (who didn't know who Garrett was) said
"The food is for the talent (meaning actors)," and Macchio sarcastically said, "Yeah, it's for the TALENT!"
This comment cracked up the cast, and the photo was used.
читать дальшеFrancis Ford Coppola received letters over the years from fans of the novel, many expressing disappointment that several key scenes from the book were omitted from the film version
(they were in Coppola's original cut, but were edited at the behest of the studio).
Years later, Coppola's granddaughter was reading the book in class, and was about to watch the film with her fellow schoolmates.
Feeling embarrassed, Coppola cobbled together what would eventually become his director's cut.
During filming Tom Cruise had gotten his sсript for Risky Business (1983). In the DVD commentary, Diane Lane says (very quietly)
to the other actors that he had asked her during filming to play Lana in 'Risky Business',
and her father told him there's no way in hell she was going to be a hooker in his movie.
When Dallas falls out of his chair at the drive-in, it was completely accidental, and Ponyboy (C. Thomas Howell) looks briefly at the camera while laughing.
The actors pulled some pranks in the hotel in which they stayed while shooting this movie.
Years later, Tom Cruise was introduced to someone who said he worked at the hotel Cruise and the rest of the cast stayed in while they shot this movie.
The first thing Cruise said when he heard that was "I'm sorry."
During filming, the actors playing the Socs were given leather-bound scripts and were put up in luxury accommodations,
while the "greasers" were given battered paperback scripts and had to stay in the ground floor of the hotel, as director Francis Ford Coppola wanted to create tension between the two groups.
After Matt Dillon auditioned for the part of Dally, director Francis Ford Coppola went up to him and told him, "You can go home now."
Dillon thought he didn't get the part and called his agent and told him he didn't get the part.
Later on, it turned out Coppola sent him home early because he already knew he was going to cast him as Dally.
Francis Ford Coppola wanted Matt Dillon to spend a night in jail to 'understand' Dally a bit better.
During filming, Rob Lowe asked S.E. Hinton, the original author of 'The Outsiders', what happens to Sodapop Curtis. The author responded that Sodapop dies in Vietnam.
Mickey Rourke auditioned for a part in the film, but director Francis Ford Coppola felt that he wasn't the right fit. He did use him for his film 'Rumble Fish (1983)' however.