Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuNumbed by career demands and a recent divorce, Dr. Alexandra Kendall (Marsha Mason) hides behind a hard shell of professional detachment, until she treats Buffy Koenig (Kathleen Beller), a d... Alles lesenNumbed by career demands and a recent divorce, Dr. Alexandra Kendall (Marsha Mason) hides behind a hard shell of professional detachment, until she treats Buffy Koenig (Kathleen Beller), a dying 17-year-old cancer patient who reawakens Kendall to life's possibilities. Soon the co... Alles lesenNumbed by career demands and a recent divorce, Dr. Alexandra Kendall (Marsha Mason) hides behind a hard shell of professional detachment, until she treats Buffy Koenig (Kathleen Beller), a dying 17-year-old cancer patient who reawakens Kendall to life's possibilities. Soon the courageous girl's condition takes a downturn, and the physician must carefully, even agonizi... Alles lesen
- Auszeichnungen
- 2 Nominierungen insgesamt
Empfohlene Bewertungen
At the time this movie was made, the subject was topical. Cancer was in the throes of coming to the forefront of conversations; and it was movies like this that confronted the viewer with certain realities not addressed before. That being said, there are some elements that don't jive, as the IMDb reviewer who rated it 3 points out.
It drags around the middle mark; nonetheless, the directing is actually pretty good. The music score is tender. The "extra songs" are a nice touch. This was about the time that movies started incorporating Billboard Top 20 selections, which would change the face of movie soundtracks forever.
Good, but not fantastic. A definite for fans of Marsha Mason.
The more compelling story is Buffy. The doctor's romantic issues just don't measure up. I get the premise of her finding herself by helping Buffy. In the end, her romance don't feel anywhere near as important. The emotional climax is Buffy's talk with her boyfriend. This movie is better off concentrating on Buffy.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesLorenzo Lamas: in a pre-fame role as Josh, Buffy's football player friend.
- PatzerWhen Ned Beatty rushes in to put the girl on oxygen during her coughing episode, he opens the valve that controls flow from the tank to the regulator. Once that valve is open even a bit, the full pressure from the tank is then at the regulator. He keeps going back to that valve and turning it. That would do nothing to regulate the flow of oxygen to the patient. He never touches the regulator knob, which is the only way to adjust the amount of oxygen getting to the patient. Oxygen flow was not seen in the humidifier (the bottle of water at the end of the regulator). The oxygen tank was probably an empty prop tank. And the sound of oxygen flowing was probably a sound effect.
- Zitate
Dr. Alexandra Kendall: You are asking for yes-and-no answers and all I have are essay-type answers.
- Crazy CreditsThere are a number of doctors and nurses in the cast list mentioned as playing themselves i.e. that each of their real life professional role is that of their onscreen character.
- Alternative VersionenCBS edited 19 minutes from this film for its 1983 network television premiere.
- VerbindungenFeatures Let's Make a Deal (1963)
- SoundtracksI'm Gonna Lock My Heart and Throw Away the Key
Written by Jimmy Eaton (uncredited) and Terry Shand (uncredited)
Performed by Billie Holiday and Her Orchestra
Courtesy of Columbia Records
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 58 Minuten
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1