Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Putney Swope, a 1969 film written and directed by Robert Downey, Sr. and starring Arnold Johnson as Swope, is a comedy satirizing the advertising world, the portrayal of race in Hollywood films, the white power structure, and nature of corporate corruption.

  2. Putney Swope: Directed by Robert Downey Sr.. With Stan Gottlieb, Allen Garfield, Archie Russell, Ramon Gordon. The board of directors at a Madison Avenue ad agency must elect a new chairman. In the maneuvering to make sure that enemies don't get votes, all the members accidentally cast their ballot for the board's token black man, Putney Swope.

  3. 19 de abr. de 2020 · Putney Swope is the kind of film I won’t even attempt to make excuses for. 50 years on, many of its provocations seem quaint and just as many of its offhanded jokes now seem crass.It’s the kind of film one could cheerfully call “an equal-opportunity offender,” if one was so inclined; it’s the kind of film many modern viewers would simply turn away from, and I can’t argue with those ...

  4. 2 de dic. de 2022 · Putney Swope (Arnold Johnson) is a middle-aged black man on the board of directors at a white-bread Madison Avenue advertising agency. When the agency’s chairman keels over during a board meeting, the members vote to determine who will succeed him. All of them believe that no one else will vote for Swope, so they all do so, each thinking that ...

  5. Putney Swope. 1969. 1 hr 24 mins. Comedy. R. Watchlist. Robert Downey's satire on the Madison Avenue Establishment. Contains color sequences. Arnold Johnson.

  6. Classic scene from Robert Downey, Sr's Putney Swope.Putney says the Borman 6 girl is got to have soul. Classic scene from Robert Downey, ...

  7. Putney Swope is the token black man on the executive board of a large Madison Avenue advertising agency. During a promotional meeting, the elderly company chairman, while addressing the board, drops dead of a heart attack. The other board members vote to elect a successor and, through a company rule which prohibits voting for oneself, Swope wins by a landslide because every member thinks ...