Conteúdos(1)

Swayze is Dalton, a legendary bouncer who comes to Jasper, Missouri, for a special purpose: to restore order at the notorious Double Deuce bar. In one spectacular fight after another, Dalton rids the bar of thugs and henchmen. But when he runs afoul of a ruthless crime boss (Gazzara) who controls the town, the stage is set for a blistering showdown that'll leave only one man standing! (texto oficial do distribuidor)

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Críticas (3)

POMO 

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português O duro lutador pelo bem carismático Patrick Swayze está sentado, o filme imediatamente envolve com o seu personagem. E a simplicidade da história é apenas a sua vantagem - os filmes leves dos anos 80 de qualidade sempre agradam com sinceridade direta. O mesmo carisma é trazido para o filme pelo ótimo Sam Elliott, equilibrando as forças contra a gangue de bandidos. Ben Gazzara como o principal mafioso lembra que o pior vilão de filme sempre funciona melhor com a cara de um tio bonzinho. Com muita ação de bandido e brigas masculinas, o filme é muito mais digno do que os filmes B com Chuck Norris. Apenas é uma pena o clímax ingénuo e tentar parecer-se com Van Damme e companhia usando motivos de karaté. Não precisava disso. ()

Kaka 

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inglês It is hard to believe that humanity has made such a huge leap forward, not only in terms of technology but also fundamentally in the field of cinematography in these roughly 25 years. No matter how you look at this accomplishment, you will always laugh and shake your head in disbelief. It is not a comedy, it is not a proper action movie, you do not understand the motivations of the characters, and neither do you understand the actions of the protagonists. It is not even a cool, crazy action film that would not worry about image and dramaturgy. It is an incredible mess with a few decent action scenes. Let's move away from that. Only out of nostalgia – Patrick Swayze was in great shape here. ()

Quint 

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inglês A superb caricature of 1980's guy movies with five Golden Raspberry nominations, it often tops the best guilty pleasure film lists. Road House is essentially a kind of modern macho western with kung fu action, combining Western culture with Eastern philosophy and containing so many memorably absurd moments that it's impossible to be bored for a moment. Patrick Swayze plays a world-famous bar bouncer and Zen warrior with a PhD in philosophy whose life's work includes philosophizing, making out, smoking, practicing Tai Chi, and, for that matter, kicking ass and ripping bites out of necks. Swayze's character is tasked with bringing order not only to one wild bar, but to an entire town that is controlled by a gang of local rich guys. With a stoic expression, he at first tries to resist the unnecessary violence, but in a world dominated by testosterone and toxic masculinity, that can't last long. Road House is entertaining for its simple black and white, maddening stupidity and complete disconnect from reality. It's set in a world where characters beat each other up, blow up their houses without the police ever showing up, and where drunks smash up an entire bar every night that's as good as new the next day. The local hangout, where bands have to play behind an iron fence to avoid being hit by flying shards and pieces of furniture, must have been the inspiration for the vampire hangout Titty Twister in Rodriguez's From Dusk Till Dawn (both films, incidentally, feature the band Tito & Tarantula). As in every 1980s actioner, there is the mandatory batch of unwanted homoerotic undertones. Swayze doesn't waste a single opportunity to take his shirt off, while his fully-clothed adversaries never take their eyes off him. The film is reportedly shown to New York police officers as part of their training, apparently because of the main character's moral code of even if someone calls you a dick, be nice. ()