Sabrina

Sabrina

  • Director: Sydney Pollack
  • Writer: Samuel A. Taylor,Billy Wilder,Ernest Lehman
  • Countries of origin: Germany, United States
  • Language: English, French
  • Release date: December 15, 1995
  • Sound mix: Dolby Digital
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85 : 1
  • Also known as: Сабріна
  • "Sabrina" is a comedy directed by Sydney Pollack and starring Harrison Ford, Julia Ormond , and Nancy Marchand. It was released in the United States on December 15, 1995.
    The film tells the love story in which the heroine turns from an ugly duckling to a white swan, which attracts the wealthy sons to chase   .

    Details

    • Release date December 15, 1995
    • Filming locations Salutation House, West Island, Glen Cove, Long Island, New York, USA
    • Production companies Constellation Entertainment, Mirage Enterprises, Mont Blanc Entertainment GmbH

    Box office

    Budget

    $58,000,000 (estimated)

    Gross US & Canada

    $53,672,080

    Opening weekend US & Canada

    $5,563,259

    Gross worldwide

    $53,672,080

    Movie reviews

     ( 31 ) Add reviews

    • By Houston 2022-03-25 09:01:15

      Delicate, reminiscent of fairy tale love

      As the years go by, reminiscing about the eternal theme of love, it would be nice if love had always been simple and fresh. The Hepburn version is completely unimpressive except for its beauty. On the contrary, the heroine of this script has a girly feeling, nervous and shy, which is nice. As a business elite, the male protagonist's lines don't quite match his identity, and what people say. The layout of the set is not delicate, especially the layout of the harbour hut is quite tacky. In...

    • By Letha 2022-03-25 09:01:15

      This is an ideal country

      Many years ago and many years later, I watched movies for Bo Fu. As time goes by, my thoughts also change. My first impression after watching the movie is what an ideal world this is: hard work pays off, true love Invincible, the world is full of love...

      Old-fashioned stories are full of positive energy. If you want to blow water, it is undoubtedly "If I bloom, the breeze will come."

      The heroine, Sabrina, lost her mother when she was young, but she has a good father, a wise...

    • By Karelle 2022-03-25 09:01:15

      Love to Paris: On the Return of Gender Equality

      We can only sleep peacefully at night when people realize that gender traits are just organs and not classes.

      Recently, I turned to the composition I wrote in the previous English test. I wrote about the after-view of the movie "Love to Paris". After reading it, I felt that there are many points worth discussing in the article.

      The original translation is as follows:

    • By Coby 2022-03-24 09:02:52

      The new century adaptation has less taste and more calculation

      I thought it was Billy Wilder who participated in the screenwriting of this version of the story, but it was just the original screenwriter.
      In contrast, the overall feeling is that it has done a proper modern adaptation, trying to express its own style and attitude, but it is relatively mediocre and boring.
      The original version was a farce. The heroine was silly. Fortunately, Hepburn used the peerless beauty of the long dress and the little black dress to win the hearts of the...

    • By Dennis 2022-03-23 09:02:41

      Love to Paris. You have to find yourself. Live more fully

      Loved "Homecoming in Paris" and "Under the Tuscan Sun" since "I was a kid," both of which are often on my hard drive when I travel "as an adult."
      I like the looks of Harrison Ford and the heroine, the aura of Paris and the English accent of the heroine and all the music in this movie.
      These two films are both nostalgic and nostalgic tributes to their homeland by busy Americans, or the descendants of these Europeans, in a thriving and rushing New World.
      At the same time, Americans...

    User comments

      ( 102 ) Add comments

    • By Jaron 2023-09-06 06:01:37

      It's been a long time since I scored 2 points. It's been a long time since I watched a movie so impatiently, I couldn't help but fast forward. Ah, how can it be so...

    • By Jermaine 2022-12-26 15:52:25

      I can't bear to see that the heroine is still so ugly after her transformation. . . And it has completely turned into a love movie, without ups and downs or funny, I can’t finish watching it and don’t want to watch...

    • By Barrett 2022-11-22 01:01:45

      The name Sabrina is so...

    • By Morris 2022-11-14 21:06:58

      If I had to tell such a story, I think this one is more...

    • By Keeley 2022-10-07 22:02:16

      My childhood favorite, I really want to go to Paris after watching it. I always remember Sabrina explaining the origin of her name to Harrison Ford on a private jet, a poem about water fairies, and Sabrina is not a...

    Movie plot

    Sabrina ( Julia Ormond ) is the daughter of a driver from a wealthy manor in Long Island. She has a love affair with the host’s handsome second master David (Greg Kinnear) . But David, who likes beauty, dismissed the ordinary Sabrina at all. An ordinary girl like this is not the type he likes at all. David's mother, Mrs. Lerriby, asked her friend to find Sabrina a job in Paris, planning to send her to the Parisian "Vogue" magazine to...
    more about Sabrina Movie plot

    Movie quotes

    • Airline attendant: First time on the concorde, Mr. Larrabee?

      Linus Larrabee: Yes.

      Airline attendant: But not your first time in Paris?

      Linus Larrabee: It is my first everything.

    • Sabrina: It never rained on the night of a Larrabee party, the Larrabees wouldn't have stood for it.

    • Linus Larrabee: So, what do they say about me?

      Sabrina: Oh, you know...

      Linus Larrabee: No.

      Sabrina: That you're the world's only living heart donor.

      Linus Larrabee: Oh, that.

      Sabrina: And how does this one go? He thinks that morals are paintings on walls and scruples are money in Russia.

      Linus Larrabee: How droll.

      Sabrina: And then there's my favorite...

      Linus Larrabee: No, that's okay.