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IMDbPro

Más poderoso que la vida

Título original: Bigger Than Life
  • 1956
  • Approved
  • 1h 35min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,4/10
8,6 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Más poderoso que la vida (1956)
A seriously ill schoolteacher becomes dependent on a "miracle" drug that begins to affect his sanity.
Reproducir trailer2:40
1 vídeo
55 imágenes
Medical DramaPsychological DramaDrama

Un profesor de escuela gravemente enfermo se vuelve dependiente de una droga milagrosa que empieza a afectar a su cordura.Un profesor de escuela gravemente enfermo se vuelve dependiente de una droga milagrosa que empieza a afectar a su cordura.Un profesor de escuela gravemente enfermo se vuelve dependiente de una droga milagrosa que empieza a afectar a su cordura.

  • Dirección
    • Nicholas Ray
  • Guión
    • Cyril Hume
    • Richard Maibaum
    • Burton Roueche
  • Reparto principal
    • James Mason
    • Barbara Rush
    • Walter Matthau
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,4/10
    8,6 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Nicholas Ray
    • Guión
      • Cyril Hume
      • Richard Maibaum
      • Burton Roueche
    • Reparto principal
      • James Mason
      • Barbara Rush
      • Walter Matthau
    • 76Reseñas de usuarios
    • 69Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:40
    Trailer

    Imágenes55

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    + 49
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    Reparto principal51

    Editar
    James Mason
    James Mason
    • Ed Avery
    Barbara Rush
    Barbara Rush
    • Lou Avery
    Walter Matthau
    Walter Matthau
    • Wally Gibbs
    Robert F. Simon
    Robert F. Simon
    • Dr. Norton
    • (as Robert Simon)
    Christopher Olsen
    Christopher Olsen
    • Richie Avery
    Roland Winters
    Roland Winters
    • Dr. Ruric
    Rusty Lane
    Rusty Lane
    • Bob LaPorte
    Rachel Stephens
    • Nurse
    Kipp Hamilton
    Kipp Hamilton
    • Pat Wade
    Dee Aaker
    • Joe
    • (sin acreditar)
    David Bedell
    • X-Ray Doctor
    • (sin acreditar)
    Gail Bonney
    Gail Bonney
    • Mother at PTA Meeting
    • (sin acreditar)
    Harold Bostwick
    • Gentleman
    • (sin acreditar)
    Lovyss Bradley
    Lovyss Bradley
    • Churchgoer
    • (sin acreditar)
    Mary Carroll
    • Mother at PTA Meeting
    • (sin acreditar)
    Virginia Carroll
    • Mrs. Jones
    • (sin acreditar)
    Mary Carver
    Mary Carver
    • Saleslady
    • (sin acreditar)
    Betty Caulfield
    • Mrs. LaPorte
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • Nicholas Ray
    • Guión
      • Cyril Hume
      • Richard Maibaum
      • Burton Roueche
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios76

    7,48.5K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    surfbird

    Great 1950s Subversive Cinema!

    This film, much like the melodramas of Douglas Sirk, has far more going on than meets the eye. James Mason's character, after getting whacked out of Cortizone (a "Miracle Drug") indeed becomes hysterical and abusive. But he was made ill in the first place by the strain caused his intensely driven lifestyle, where he kept two jobs to finance his family's social and financial ascent.

    What the viewer has to watch for is what his character says during his cortizone-induced delusions. His criticisms of his wife, kid, PTA and society in general are over-the-top, but essentially valid. It's a classic narrative device: by allowing a main character a way out of societal responsibility and place (In this case, being bombed on Cortizone), he is allowed to comment on and criticize American society directly without actually threatening the status quo. and in the case of 1950s America, that's a monolithic status quo to criticize.
    10kinsler33

    Terrifying

    This is an excellent movie. I saw it once, and I never wish to see it again. I grew up in a household like this, only there was never a solution to my father's mania, depression, and incredible anger.

    About all I can say about Mr Mason's performance, and that of Ms Rush, is that they could have been my parents, and I could have been that kid. It never got to the point where I was offered up like Isaac, but the rest of it was right, right down to the speech where the father condemns all children because they're ignorant. I'd heard that one. His wife was helpless; they all are.

    I do not know where the screenwriters got their dialog, but I hope they didn't learn it the way I did. As it happened, I was terrified and transfixed while watching it, only calming down after the father realized that something was wrong, and vowed to correct it, and there was a means of correcting it.

    When the movie was over--I don't know if I watched it in the theater or on TV--I had to go home, where there was still rage, and no solution to it. I would have been nine years old.

    There was a time that I wanted my parents to see that movie, in the hope that they'd realize that this was how they acted, and stop it.

    It never happened. They were divorced years later. My father was angry and crazy right up to the day he died three years ago. My mother, in her nursing home in Cleveland, maintains that I must be making it all up.

    M Kinsler
    7adrian290357

    Sincere film-making

    Back in 1956 this must have been a very daring flick indeed. Of course it has dated and today it packs less of a punch but it still remains a very sincere film anchored by a superb James Mason performance. Walter Matthau is similarly top rate though in a smaller and less flashy role. The direction is absolutely mesmerizing and I only felt slightly uneasy about the psychiatric approach of the day and the flashing red screen reflecting Mason's mental disintegration which was so in fashion in films of the time.

    Even so, it was not enough to spoil the pleasure afforded by the many good aspects in this movie that I found quite riveting and intelligent for the most part. The bit where Mason snips the phone cord is as frightening as it is memorable, to me the highpoint of a honest yet never predictable work.
    7blanche-2

    The effects of a miracle drug

    James Mason becomes "Bigger than Life" in this 1956 Nicholas Ray film that also stars Barbara Rush and Walter Matthau. Mason plays Ed Avery, a schoolteacher who also is a part-time cab dispatcher. He is suffering from severe spasms that are getting worse.

    Ed learns that he has a terminal illness that perhaps can be cured with a steroid, cortisone. He is helped, but he also begins to suffer from mood swings and depression and, as he takes more and more, veers completely out of control. Barbara Rush plays his suffering wife, and Walter Matthau is a family friend and coworker.

    I actually had a family member who went into profound depressions because of continuing to take black market cortisone, so this film resonated with me. Mason, who produced the film, is terrifying. Barbara Rush is very good, though her character puts up with an awful lot before she makes a move. Matthau is good in a supporting role, but roles showcasing his true strengths as an actor were a few years away.

    This is much more than a cautionary tale about steroids, which need to be taken and tapered off very carefully. In his cortisone-induced mindset, Ed Avery spouts off on the problems in society, very unusual in the repressed '50s. His ideas are a tad over the top, but there's a good kernel in them. Ray always did well with a rebellious mindset.
    8Irene212

    Ten Feet Tall

    "We are dabbling in the unknown with dangerously potent tools." That is from the magazine article on which this film is based: "Ten Feet Tall," by Berton Roueché, from his brilliant "Annals of Medicine" series in The New Yorker (10 September 1955). Before I watched this Nicholas Ray film for the 2nd time, I read the original article and was quite astonished to find that the film is both faithful and unfaithful to the truth, and in surprising ways.

    The most stunning thing is how quickly Ed (James Mason) is affected by the cortisone he is given to treat his rare and dire disease, a typically fatal inflammation of the arteries. I doubted that the derangement that made him feel "ten feet tall" would have happened as quickly as in the movie, which needs to get the plot going.

    Well, I was wrong. The Long Island teacher on whom the article was based had a psychotic break almost as soon as he started taking the corticosteroid. The entire episode of his psychosis lasted only three weeks, but during that time, he was a terrifying presence. His threatening, dictatorial behavior toward his wife and son, not to mention his colleagues, were, yes, exaggerated for dramatic effect (especially the scorn he heaps on his wife), but Mason's portrayal is strikingly close to the real teacher's experience: the madly impulsive spending, the manic speeches and wild philosophical brainstorms, as well as his demand to be absolute ruler in his home and his unveiled contempt for everyone because they're all fools, except him.

    James Mason, Barbara Rush, and Walter Matthau do solid work, as does Christopher Olsen, a child actor who also worked with Hitchcock, Cukor, and Sirk. Much has been said about Nicholas Ray's choices as director, and what interests me most is the ways he chose to be unfaithful to the original story.

    First, location. Although the actual teacher lived in Forest Hills in Queens, "Bigger than Life" is set in a nameless suburbia, and it was filmed it in color for the big screen even though it's a domestic drama of the sort that was still shot in black-and-white at the time. Much has been made of those two choices, which are taken to be a commentary on stifling, conformist suburban lives in the 1950s. But I think Ray's decision to move it to a more typical American landscape than New York City, and to treat it as a big-screen color feature, had to do with the dramatic weight of the subject: drugs that save lives can cripple them at the same time, and the film has strong references to the deep shame that was (and to some extent still is) attached to mental illness. The wife won't even hear the word psychiatrist.

    Second, the doctors. In the movie, Ed tricks doctors and druggists to increase his intake of cortisone-- if he feels ten feet tall on one pill, why not take two? In the true story, it was the doctor who increased the dosage, but did not schedule frequent follow-ups, even though he knew the risks from side effects. That's a much more damning situation than a mentally ill outpatient doubling his own dosage. So why shift the blame from doctor to patient in the movie? Here's a possibility: There was concern about blowback from pharmaceutical companies and/or the American Medical Association. But on the whole, I can see why "Bigger Than Life" has come to be so highly regarded, if not sufficiently well known.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

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    • Curiosidades
      The main manufacturers of cortisone at the time, Merck in the US and Glaxo in the UK, were worried about the impact of this film on the public and their willingness to take the drug if prescribed by their physician. However, by the time of this film's release, newer and better formulations of the drug, along with greater knowledge of its uses and limitations had reduced (but not eliminated) the side-effects experienced by Ed in this film.
    • Pifias
      When Ed has a barium X-ray, the image of the swallowed fluid is anatomically inaccurate. The fluid falls straight down to an extremely large "stomach" in his groin area.
    • Citas

      Ed Avery: God was wrong!

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Century of Cinema: Un viaje personal con Martin Scorsese a través del cine americano (1995)

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    Preguntas frecuentes16

    • How long is Bigger Than Life?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 5 de septiembre de 1956 (Canadá)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Japonés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Bigger Than Life
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Robinsons-May Department Store - 9900 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, California, Estados Unidos(department store)
    • Empresa productora
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • 1.000.000 US$ (estimación)
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      1 hora 35 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.55 : 1

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