Negli anni Cinquanta, un ragazzino di dodici anni vive le gioie e le scoperte della sua età, nonostante i drammi familiari.Negli anni Cinquanta, un ragazzino di dodici anni vive le gioie e le scoperte della sua età, nonostante i drammi familiari.Negli anni Cinquanta, un ragazzino di dodici anni vive le gioie e le scoperte della sua età, nonostante i drammi familiari.
- Candidato a 2 Oscar
- 15 vittorie e 5 candidature totali
- Ingemars mamma
- (as Anki Liden)
- Berit
- (as Ing-Mari Carlsson)
- Farbror Sandberg
- (as Leif Ericsson)
- Mannes farfar
- (as Arnold Alfredson)
- Farbror Arvidsson, Ullas far
- (as Didrik Gustavsson)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizKurt Vonnegut Jr.'s favorite film, as he writes in his book, Timequake.
- BlooperA part of the helicopter can be seen while Ingmar is sitting on the train down to his uncle for the second time
- Citazioni
Ingemar: In fact, I've been kinda lucky. I mean, compared to others. You have to compare, so you can get a little distance from things. Like Laika. She really must have seen things in perspective. It's important to keep a certain distance. I think about that guy who tried to set a world record for jumping over buses with a motorcycle. He lined up 31 buses. If he'd left it at 30, maybe he would have survived.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Cider House Rules: The Making of an American Classic (1999)
- Colonne sonoreFar, jag kan inte få upp min kokosnöt
(original song title "I've Got a Lovely Bunch of Coconuts")
Written by Fred Heatherton (joint pseudonym of Elton Box, Desmond Cox and Irwin Dash) (uncredited)
Swedish lyrics by Povel Ramel
Performed by Povel Ramel (uncredited)
This is a true story based on the life of a real child whose mother was a famous Swedish writer, who had a terrible temper and also died of a disease of the lungs. As a special, there is a delightful interview with the director which is insightful on several levels. He talks about what it was like working with the child actors and how natural they were about their work. He talked about how he only realized how unconsciously hooked into the film he had become after seeing it several years after completion. The reason given was that he too was the child of a famous writer/mom who needed her space and privacy. He too had children and then was divorced. So, on many levels he found the film a cathartic experience AFTER he had watched it in a theater and watched how other people responded.
What is clear about this film is that it is charming without being cheap or smarmy. The unpretentious manner in which a touching and sad story is told is such a joyful antidote to the average Hollywood film. Unlike most American films which say too much, are too loud and spoon feed all thinking into the audience with the assumption that we are dumb, insensitive and unable to connect the dots, this drama delights with it's simplicity, allowing the drama to come to us in an unhurried telling. This film won several awards and most deserving it was. At the end we both cry and smile at the outcome. What is strengthening to know, is that the real life boy whose story this is, thrived. A really great film indeed.
- fred-houpt
- 7 mar 2005
- Permalink
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Dettagli
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- 8.349.284 USD
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