Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Drugstore Cowboy. Marido e esposa viciados, Bob e Diane Hughes (Matt Dillon, Kelly Lynch), e um casal mais jovem de ladrões roubam farmácias para continuar drogados. Apesar do trágico estilo de vida, eles compartilham momentos de compaixão e de humor. Os quatro quebram a lei com maestria usando a perspicácia e a natureza supersticiosa de ...

  2. Robert Yeoman. "Drugstore Cowboy" is one of the best films in the long tradition of American outlaw road movies - a tradition that includes "Bonnie and Clyde," "Easy Rider," "Midnight Cowboy" and "Badlands." It is about criminals who do not intend to be particularly bad people, but whose lives run away with them.

  3. Drugstore Cowboy is my way of saying screw fashion. A brand that created digital art shirts for over a year is now flowing into what it actually does best- unconventional art onto varied tailored garments.

  4. DRUGSTORE COWBOY. Directed by. Gus Van Sant. United States, 1989. Drama, Crime. 102. Synopsis. Bob Hughes is the leader of a “family” of drug users consisting of his wife, Dianne, and another couple who feed their habit by robbing drug stores as they travel across the country. After a tragedy befalls a member of his group, Bob decides he ...

  5. 43 de 53 usuarios han encontrado esta crítica útil. Correcta, entretenida, liviana y a veces imprecisa representación del mundo de la drogodependencia. Enmarcada por la cámara de Gus Van Sant (“Elephant”) -quien debutaba como director-, la película está protagonizada notablemente por Matt Dillon, que deja constancia de una gran ...

  6. Drugstore Cowboy (1989) Portland, Oregon, 1971. Bob Hughes is the charismatic leader of a peculiar quartet, formed by his wife, Dianne, and another couple, Rick and Nadine, who skillfully steal from drugstores and hospital medicine cabinets in order to appease their insatiable need for drugs. But neither fun nor luck last forever.

  7. Boston Globe. Drugstore Cowboy, Gus Van Sant's fresh, gutsy societal underbelly film, never wallows in picturesque down-and-outism, except at the end, when Dillon's character, frightened by the death of a girl he didn't like much and spooked by his own paranoiac suspicion, checks into a seedy hotel while trying to go cold turkey and not yield ...