Una simple campesina de Connecticut es reclutada por un pariente lejano, un patrono aristocrático, para ser institutriz de su pequeña hija en su mansión del Valle de Hudson.Una simple campesina de Connecticut es reclutada por un pariente lejano, un patrono aristocrático, para ser institutriz de su pequeña hija en su mansión del Valle de Hudson.Una simple campesina de Connecticut es reclutada por un pariente lejano, un patrono aristocrático, para ser institutriz de su pequeña hija en su mansión del Valle de Hudson.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 3 premios en total
- Klaas Bleecker
- (as Henry Morgan)
- Nurse
- (sin acreditar)
- Farmer
- (sin acreditar)
- Boy Dancer
- (sin acreditar)
- Farmer
- (sin acreditar)
- Tom Wilson
- (sin acreditar)
- Farmer
- (sin acreditar)
- Man
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
A high drama, historical drama, and drama drama. And the drama part works, so that's most of the movie. It's a fairly stiff arrangement, however, including the purposely stiff Vincent Price, who plays a noble Dutch American (a patroon) with a fabulous estate on the Hudson. Director Mankiewicz is great at nuanced characterizations, including a zealous father played by Walter Huston. This may not be his best product, but it's rich with details and lush textures both visually and in the narrative, and it gets more intense as the small events come to conflict by the end.
What sometimes hobbles the whole thing is the simplified tenant farmer revolt, whatever its roots. (I live near to where this is fictionally set, and there is no trace of this kind of culture at all here, just some place names, and I have a suspicion it was never this exaggerated, not in the 1800s, though perhaps in the 1600s, when the Dutch really ruled the area, then called New Netherland.) The pageantry, the great house, the storms, and the big dances, all of this is romantic Bronte territory, well done, and great atmosphere. The music by Alfred Newman and the photography by Arthur C. Miller, both great talents at their professional best, do their usual best, as well.
So what works best, beyond the overall mood, is the presence of the two women: the visiting niece of course, the star, Gene Tierney, and equally, in a subtle way, Connie Marshall, the suffering wife of the patroon. Tierney has a kind of cool reserve that works here, letting the light work on her pretty head. Eventually, the handsome doctor's role takes on more complex importance (played by Glenn Langan), and Price has a fine end, which Price fans will greatly admire.
"Dragonwyck" is the debut of Joseph L. Mankiewicz as director. The screenplay also by Mankiewicz is based on a successful novel by Anya Seton with modification in the ending. The cinematography By Arthur C. Miller and the music score by Alfred Newman call the attention of the viewer since the very beginning. The Gothic romance with supernatural touches shows the confrontation between an atheistic arrogant man and his naive religious wife. The performance of Vincent Price is top-notch and the gorgeous Gene Tierney performs a naive character but with strong principles. Walter Huston, despite a secondary role, is also amazing. My vote is seven.
Title (Brazil): "O Solar de Dragonwyck" ("The Manor of Dragonwyck")
I always had trouble accepting Tierney as poor farm girls. Once she puts on a ballgown she becomes more like herself while Price, in the best of his early roles, is excellent as the rich patroon, (that's basically a landowner to you and me), and there's good work, too, from Walter Huston and Anne Revere, (everybody's mother in the movies), as Tierney's parents. Only the dreadfully wooden Glenn Langan, (he grew up to be "The Amazing Colossal Man"), hampers proceedings as the local doctor in love with Tierney.
It's certainly a handsome looking picture. beautifully designed and photographed in black and white by the great Arthur Miller, and there's oodles of plot to be getting on with. In the Mankiewicz canon, it's been somewhat overlooked but it's very enjoyable; 'a women's picture' to be sure but one with a very sturdy backbone.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesVincent Price had to work hard could to convince producer Joseph L. Mankiewicz to cast him as Van Ryn. Mankiewicz remembered him as the good-natured guy in Laura (1944) or as a portly prelate in his last film,Las llaves del reino (1944). But determined to convince him, Price lost the 30lbs he had gained for the film, auditioned, and won the coveted role.
- PifiasAs Miranda and Van Ryn dance through the doorway from the balcony into the ballroom, she holds her closed fan in her hand. When the shot changes after they enter the room, the fan dangles from her wrist.
- Citas
Nicholas Van Ryn: But I will not live by ordinary standards. I will not run with the pack. I will not be chained into a routine of living which is the same for others. I will not look to the ground and move on the ground with the rest: so long as there are those mountaintops, and clouds, and limitless space.
- Créditos adicionalesThe 20th Century Fox logo plays without the fanfare.
- ConexionesFeatured in Grandes biografías: Vincent Price: The Versatile Villain (1997)
- Banda sonoraCreole Lullaby
(uncredited)
Written by Alfred Newman
Lyrics Charles Henderson
Sung by female voice off camera
Selecciones populares
- How long is Dragonwyck?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 1.900.000 US$ (estimación)
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 5434 US$
- Duración
- 1h 43min(103 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1