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Tropic of Cancer

1970

Biography / Drama

1
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh75%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled25%
IMDb Rating5.610618

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Ellen Burstyn Photo
Ellen Burstyn as Mona Miller
Rip Torn Photo
Rip Torn as Henry Miller
Phil Brown Photo
Phil Brown as Van Norden
Magali Noël Photo
Magali Noël as The Princess
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
803.4 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
NC-17
24 fps
1 hr 27 min
P/S 7 / 42
1.46 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
NC-17
24 fps
1 hr 27 min
P/S 11 / 60

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by verna-a5 / 10

Men behaving badly

As it's many years since I read the book I can't recall whether it had the same impression on me as the film, which was to profoundly depress me about the nature of man. The protagonist seems pretty much without redeeming features. He chases women in order to get them into bed, but seems to be basically hostile to them. He has friends in order to sponge off them. His sneering smile just makes me want to slap his face. I suspect however that this was not the intention of the film and we're really supposed to think he's quite a guy. In the context of the times the explicit language and sex scenes exploit a new permissiveness, but fundamentally it's an ugly and sexist depiction of men and women : the men trying to get sex with the minimum of commitment, and the women trying to pin the men down or get their money. It's really dated in this respect. On the plus side, I enjoyed the beautiful female bodies. The Parisian landscape shots also lift the ugliness from time to time.

Reviewed by JasparLamarCrabb4 / 10

Racy

Director Joseph Strick gets props for even attempting to film Henry Miller's expat manifesto. It's unfortunate that it's simply not very cinematic. Rip Torn is Miller, roaming Paris looking for a meal and sex with pretty much every woman he encounters. The film consists mainly of a series of amusing vignettes involving Miller & cronies. There's a certain amount of naughtiness with most of the interest derived from Torn's narration/reading from Miller's racy prose. Torn is fine and Ellen Burstyn plays his not so tolerant wife. James Callahan is outstanding as the least stable of Torn's friends (engaged to a equally unstable Parisian hooker). Strick & co-writer Betty Botley infuse the film with a lot of oddball characters.

Reviewed by SampanMassacre4 / 10

Torn at the Seams

Henry Miller's rousing poetic pornography is brought to the screen in the form of Rip Torn as the controversial author wandering Paris from one situation to the next, either narrating Miller's words over various shots of the famous city, or dealing with, and suffering through, random confrontations with crazy women and even crazier men.

Reminiscent of how Charles Bukowski's life would be attempted years later in BARFLY and FACTOTUM... stream-of-conscious odysseys never settling into one particular melodrama for too long... this film's progressively-racy dialog seems awkward and forced. Some of the side-actors don't fit the (for 1970) groundbreaking template, at times feeling like an X-rated episode of MARY TYLER MOORE.

Torn, although not entirely believable as Miller, is intriguing to watch, and along with a few quick sexy scenes with Ellen Burstyn, solely owns this obscure curio that seems borrowed otherwise.

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