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Raquel, Raquel

Título original: Rachel, Rachel
  • 1968
  • R
  • 1h 41min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,1/10
4,4 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Nell Potts and Joanne Woodward in Raquel, Raquel (1968)
Ver Trailer
Reproducir trailer2:54
1 vídeo
66 imágenes
DramaRomance

Rachel es una maestra de escuela solitaria que vive con su madre. Cuando un hombre de la gran ciudad la invita a salir, empieza a pensar en hacia dónde quiere que vaya su vida.Rachel es una maestra de escuela solitaria que vive con su madre. Cuando un hombre de la gran ciudad la invita a salir, empieza a pensar en hacia dónde quiere que vaya su vida.Rachel es una maestra de escuela solitaria que vive con su madre. Cuando un hombre de la gran ciudad la invita a salir, empieza a pensar en hacia dónde quiere que vaya su vida.

  • Dirección
    • Paul Newman
  • Guión
    • Stewart Stern
    • Margaret Laurence
  • Reparto principal
    • Joanne Woodward
    • James Olson
    • Kate Harrington
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,1/10
    4,4 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Paul Newman
    • Guión
      • Stewart Stern
      • Margaret Laurence
    • Reparto principal
      • Joanne Woodward
      • James Olson
      • Kate Harrington
    • 53Reseñas de usuarios
    • 32Reseñas de críticos
    • 74Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado para 4 premios Óscar
      • 7 premios y 11 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:54
    Trailer

    Imágenes66

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    Reparto principal24

    Editar
    Joanne Woodward
    Joanne Woodward
    • Rachel Cameron
    James Olson
    James Olson
    • Nick Kazlik
    Kate Harrington
    • Mrs. Cameron
    Estelle Parsons
    Estelle Parsons
    • Calla Mackie
    Donald Moffat
    Donald Moffat
    • Niall Cameron
    Terry Kiser
    Terry Kiser
    • Preacher
    Frank Corsaro
    • Hector Jonas
    Bernard Barrow
    • Leighton Siddley
    Geraldine Fitzgerald
    Geraldine Fitzgerald
    • Rev. Wood
    Nell Potts
    Nell Potts
    • Rachel as a Child
    Shawn Campbell
    • James
    Violet Dunn
    • Verla
    Beatrice Pons
    Beatrice Pons
    • Florence
    Dortha Duckworth
    Dortha Duckworth
    • Mae
    • (as Dorothea Duckworth)
    Simm Landres
    Izzy Singer
    • Lee Shabab
    Tod Engle
    Tod Engle
    • Nick as a Child
    Connie Robinson
    • Dirección
      • Paul Newman
    • Guión
      • Stewart Stern
      • Margaret Laurence
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios53

    7,14.3K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    8Wuchakk

    Conservative Rachel and libertine Rachel

    Joanne Woodward effectively plays a bored and boring middle-aged school teacher who still lives with her mother at a funeral home in Connecticut. She's on the verge of mental collapse, but hides it well and pretends everything's okay. A guy from her childhood comes to town from the big city (James Olson) and her appetite for change comes to the fore.

    This potent drama was Paul Newman's first stab at directing and it's the best cinematic depiction of the inward struggle of flesh and spirit -- id and superego -- I've ever seen. This struggle explains why it's called "Rachel, Rachel." Rachel is experiencing the undercurrent conflict between spiritual and carnal impulses. She's stuck between goody-goody Rachel and libertine Rachel and is therefore in living limbo. Various outside factors encourage this lifeless state: Disturbing childhood memories of living in a funeral home, a mother who essentially views Rachel as her personal servant and a genuine friend who's love is starting to become unhealthy (Estelle Parsons).

    The film features a mind-blowing pentecostal church sequence that lasts 10-12 minutes. I can't believe Newman had the cojones to include this scene and it's pulled off expertly with Terry Kiser as the guest preacher who "speaks in tongues," which is what Calla (Parsons) tells Rachel when it's reveal that he's the speaker. Parsons is fabulous here, by the way.

    Due to the subject matter and the fact that this is a drama there are some boring stretches, so you have to be in the mood for a serious drama. Nevertheless, the film deserves credit for having the gonads to show real life and refusing to be politically correct -- an amazing drama.

    In case you didn't know, Newman and Woodward were husband & wife for 50 years, up to his death in 2008.

    The film runs 101 minutes and was shot in Connecticut.

    GRADE: A-
    Bolesroor

    Too Beautiful

    I saw "Rachel, Rachel" early one summer morning on cable. I woke up in the dark and turned the television on and the film began. I was hypnotized. The movie is so honest, and moving, and true that I thought I was still dreaming.

    I grew up in Connecticut, and several of my aunts were schoolteachers, so I can tell you that every moment in the film is absolutely true. Paul Newman gets everything right... the repressed woman who is still under her mother's control, the judgmental small-town, the wild children, even the sound of the heat bugs on the country road! Joanne Woodward is absolutely mesmerizing as a woman lost in the shuffle, doing everything everyone wants her to and dying in the process...

    This movie is not for everyone. There are no explosions or car crashes or digitally-animated comic book characters. But if you would like to see a genuine "slice-of-life" along the lines of "Midnight Cowboy" or even "The Graduate," then "Rachel, Rachel" is a film that will move you and make you think. Definitely worth seeking out.

    Grade: A-
    8bkoganbing

    A Few Life Altering Decisions

    For Paul Newman's directorial debut, a property was chosen that was a real star vehicle for his spouse Joanne Woodward. In a distinctly unglamorous part, Rachel Rachel is about a 30 something spinster schoolteacher who lives with her perpetually sick mother and yearns to have something more out of life. She's inexperienced in a whole lot of different ways.

    The script written by Stewart Stern which did receive an Oscar nomination uses the technique of Eugene O'Neill perfected on stage and screen in Strange Interlude. It's confined in this star vehicle to the lead character of Woodward. We get to hear her inner thoughts and see them acted out in her drab existence.

    Looming in front of her consciousness is her unseen sister who did leave the nest and got married and started a family of her own. Mother Kate Harrington always uses that example to berate Woodward. At the same time Woodward must not entertain thoughts of leaving mother. The two live above a funeral parlor that was once her father Donald Moffat's business, but now has been taken over by Frank Corsaro who lets them stay on the premises. Not exactly an atmosphere to encourage romance of any kind.

    After a night on the town with James Olson who quite frankly was just looking to make an easy score on a sex starved spinster, Woodward has to make a few life altering decisions.

    Rachel Rachel got 3 other Oscar nominations for Best Picture, Best Actress for Joanne Woodward and Best Supporting Actress for Estelle Parsons. Parsons has an interesting role herself as fellow teacher and confidante to Woodward. She's got herself wrapped in some fundamentalist church which serves as her vehicle for a social life. But that is far from Woodward's scene.

    Purportedly Woodward was miffed that husband Newman got no nomination for Best Director. But I think the one who really should have been miffed is Kate Harrington. A veteran of a couple TV soap operas this was clearly her big screen career role. And she's really the only one who matches Woodward in any scene they're in. She definitely should have gotten some Academy recognition.

    Rachel Rachel is a fine character study and a great vehicle for Joanne Woodward. And having it filmed in and around Paul and Joanne's Connecticut home must have been a blessing for both of them.
    8evanston_dad

    Repressed in New England

    In the turbulent cultural and political year of 1968, movies hadn't quite yet figured out how they wanted to address current events, or indeed whether they wanted to address them at all. The year's Oscar winner for Best Picture was "Oliver!," an entertaining but utterly irrelevant big-budget musical; "Funny Girl," another stage-to-screen musical that hasn't aged at all well, was also among the nominees. "The Lion in Winter" found Peter O'Toole and Katharine Hepburn bickering in period costumes, while "Romeo and Juliet" gave Shakespeare a jolt of sexiness for the younger generation. Movies that actually felt like they had their finger on the uneasy pulse of the changing times, like "2001: A Space Odyssey," "Rosemary's Baby," "Faces," and "The Battle of Algiers," were nominated in lesser categories but none were up for the big prize. That fifth slot went to "Rachel, Rachel," in which Paul Newman directed his wife, Joanne Woodward, to a Best Actress nomination.

    "Rachel, Rachel" certainly did not deserve a place at the Oscar podium above those titles just mentioned that weren't even nominated, but it does have much to recommend it, and the themes it's about speak more to a modern-day audience than those of many of its contemporaries, because they're both universal and timeless. Woodward plays a woman in her 30s, living with her annoying and needy mother and watching her life slowly drip away from her day by day. It's about that moment -- and I have to believe anyone over a certain age has experienced it at least to some degree -- where one realizes that he/she isn't so much living a life as dying a slow and inevitable death. What one does with the time in between suddenly becomes urgent in a way it hasn't ever felt before, and one understands how easy it would be to do nothing and let that slow death gradually come. Woodward's character, brought up in a mortuary and morbidly obsessed with death, doesn't exactly figure out what to do with the time left to her, but she does figure out that she needs to try something different, which is perhaps the best any of us can hope for. Woodward gives a beautiful and nuanced performance as a shy turtle coming out of her shell one painful inch at a time. The movie is melancholy and sad, but it's also hopeful in its conclusion that it's never too late to at least make a grab for, if not happiness, then at least contentment.

    In addition to its nominations for Best Picture and Best Actress, the film also received nominations for Best Supporting Actress (Estelle Parsons, as Rachel's closet lesbian friend), and Best Adapted Screenplay (Stewart Stern). Newman himself was not nominated for Best Director, which doesn't really surprise me. The Academy has always shown a penchant for acknowledging the showy over the subtle when it comes to that particular category.

    Grade: A
    8Nazi_Fighter_David

    A gentle, rich1y emotional, melancholy but, amazingly, never depressing experience

    In a variation on her "Long Hot Summer" role, Woodward plays a sexually repressed schoolteacher in a small New England town who realizes that life is passing her by… She is thirty-five, a virgin, and dominated by her mother… During the summer, she has an affair with an old schoolmate… It proves disappointing, but she now knows that she can be loving, and determines to leave town and do something about her life—a move that seems only tentatively hopeful…

    Woodward gives her finest performance as the confused, frequently beaten but ultimately indestructible woman… She has an extraordinary ability to look natural or simple and still reveal an inner radiance…

    There are many touching moments: her timidness at the religious meeting; her awkward experiences with men; her late-night discussion with a likable male friend; and, most unforgettable, her face causing change from joyous expectancy to merely suppressed hysteria to a painful outburst of tears when she discovers that, contrary to her hopes, she is not pregnant...

    Newman shows a natural cinematic sense in his perceptive depictions of small town life, the frenzied activity of a revival meeting and the anxieties of a first sexual experience; and in his clever, rarely impressive juxtaposition of Rachel's present with her fantasies and childhood memories… He gets excellent performances from Estelle Parsons as another lonely teacher and James Olson as the cynical big-city man who lets Rachel down…

    Both Newman and Woodward won Golden Globe Awards… Woodward won the coveted New York Film Critics' Award, and was nominated for an Oscar

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Nell Potts, who plays Rachel as a young girl, is actually Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman's daughter.
    • Pifias
      Rachel's hair pattern changes in two continuous shots on the hospital bed. The front camera angle shows her hair in front of her ears, but the side camera shows her hair behind her ears.
    • Citas

      Nurse: The operation was a success. You're out of danger.

      Rachel Cameron: How can I be out of danger if I'm not dead?

    • Versiones alternativas
      Joanne Woodward's character's name, Rachel, is changed to Jennifer for the Italian version in order to make it sound more American.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Queersighted: The Gay Best Friend (2023)
    • Banda sonora
      Les tres valses du precieux degoute
      Written by Erik Satie

      [Heard when Rachel picks flowers]

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    Preguntas frecuentes17

    • How long is Rachel, Rachel?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 26 de agosto de 1968 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Rachel, Rachel
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Redding, Connecticut, Estados Unidos
    • Empresa productora
      • Kayos Productions
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • 700.000 US$ (estimación)
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 589 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      • 1h 41min(101 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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