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IMDbPro

Bailando con lobos

Título original: Dances with Wolves
  • 1990
  • A
  • 3h 1min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
8,0/10
306 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
1076
256
Kevin Costner in Bailando con lobos (1990)
Trailer for Dances With Wolves
Reproducir trailer1:31
1 vídeo
99+ imágenes
Drama de épocaDrama históricoÉpica occidentalÉpicoAventurasDramaOccidental

El teniente John Dunbar, asignado a un remoto puesto avanzado de la guerra de Secesión en el oeste, se hace amigo de lobos y nativos americanos, lo que le convierte en una aberración intoler... Leer todoEl teniente John Dunbar, asignado a un remoto puesto avanzado de la guerra de Secesión en el oeste, se hace amigo de lobos y nativos americanos, lo que le convierte en una aberración intolerable en el ejército.El teniente John Dunbar, asignado a un remoto puesto avanzado de la guerra de Secesión en el oeste, se hace amigo de lobos y nativos americanos, lo que le convierte en una aberración intolerable en el ejército.

  • Director/a
    • Kevin Costner
  • Guionista
    • Michael Blake
  • Estrellas
    • Kevin Costner
    • Mary McDonnell
    • Graham Greene
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    8,0/10
    306 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    1076
    256
    • Director/a
      • Kevin Costner
    • Guionista
      • Michael Blake
    • Estrellas
      • Kevin Costner
      • Mary McDonnell
      • Graham Greene
    • 666Reseñas de usuarios
    • 75Reseñas de críticos
    • 72Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 7 premios Óscar
      • 55 premios y 40 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos1

    Dances With Wolves: 20th Anniversary Edition
    Trailer 1:31
    Dances With Wolves: 20th Anniversary Edition

    Imágenes250

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    Reparto Principal59

    Editar
    Kevin Costner
    Kevin Costner
    • Lieutenant Dunbar
    Mary McDonnell
    Mary McDonnell
    • Stands With A Fist
    Graham Greene
    Graham Greene
    • Kicking Bird
    Rodney A. Grant
    Rodney A. Grant
    • Wind In His Hair
    Floyd 'Red Crow' Westerman
    Floyd 'Red Crow' Westerman
    • Ten Bears
    • (as Floyd Red Crow Westerman)
    Tantoo Cardinal
    Tantoo Cardinal
    • Black Shawl
    Robert Pastorelli
    Robert Pastorelli
    • Timmons
    Charles Rocket
    Charles Rocket
    • Lieutenant Elgin
    Maury Chaykin
    Maury Chaykin
    • Major Fambrough
    Jimmy Herman
    Jimmy Herman
    • Stone Calf
    Nathan Lee Chasing His Horse
    • Smiles A Lot
    Michael Spears
    Michael Spears
    • Otter
    Jason R. Lone Hill
    • Worm
    Tony Pierce
    • Spivey
    Doris Leader Charge
    • Pretty Shield
    Tom Everett
    Tom Everett
    • Sergeant Pepper
    Larry Joshua
    Larry Joshua
    • Sergeant Bauer
    Kirk Baltz
    Kirk Baltz
    • Edwards
    • Director/a
      • Kevin Costner
    • Guionista
      • Michael Blake
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios666

    8,0306.3K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    10Wuchakk

    Rediscover "Dances With Wolves"

    I haven't seen "Dances With Wolves" for years but recently rediscovered its brilliance. Released in 1990, the story involves Lt. Dunbar (Kevin Costner), a Civil War hero, singlehandedly manning a desolate prairie post in South Dakota. He becomes intrigued by his Native American neighbors, a small tribe of Lakota Sioux, and slowly develops good relations with them. He ultimately adopts a Sioux name - Dances With Wolves - and assimilates with the tribe. When the U.S. Army discovers his actions he is treated as a treasonous deserter. Mary McDonnell and Graham Greene have key roles.

    This is, simply put, filmmaking of the highest order. Everything magically works in this absolutely engaging 3-hour epic Western. The extended director's cut is an hour longer and most of the added material is worthwhile and fleshes out the characters more than the theatrical cut. I recommend watching the 3-hour version and, if you want more, check out the expanded version.

    Over the years I've heard some grumbling about the film's PC-influenced negative portrayal of whites in general and also its supposed romanticized portrayal of Indians as super-virtuous. Hence, before viewing the film again I was braced for the worst. After seeing it, I must say that most of these grumblings are hogwash. No kidding. Really, only a rigid white redneck "patriot" would take offense to this story (and, don't get me wrong, I'm patriotic but not mindlessly so). The film rings of authenticity and the characters are anything but one-dimensional. Want proof? (No major spoilers).

    • The Pawnee are the first Indians the viewer encounters in the film and they are portrayed as completely hostile to whites and other NA tribes - so hostile that they'll kill a white person on sight without mercy. I'd say this is a negative, stereotypical portrayal of Indians, wouldn't you agree?


    • Also, Wind In His Hair (Rodney A. Grant) clearly states that the Sioux should kill Dunbar at the council meeting; I'm sure there were others who agreed with him but it was ultimately decided that killing Dunbar would likely cause more problems than solve.


    • Not all white people are shown in a negative light; in fact, Dunbar himself - the film's protagonist - is white. What about the "foul" guy, Timmons, who escorts Dunbar to the abandoned fort? I've met people just like him. He's not portrayed as evil, but merely uncouth in dress and manners. Anyway, when Timmons gets savagely murdered by a band of Pawnee he begs over and over that the Indians not hurt his mules; his dying words are words of love (for his animals!). Also, when he says goodbye to Dunbar at the fort he says, "Good luck, Lieutenant" and you know he means it; the words show love and respect. Obviously this was a disgusting guy with a heart of gold. Again I know people just like him; it rings of authenticity.


    • The story takes place during the Indian Wars where there's very little love & compassion of whites towards Indians and vice versa. The U.S. Army is there to do a job and, as usual, go by the book. Is this a negative portrayal or simply the way it was? The answer is obvious. Hence, most of the officers are not shown in a negative light but merely as military leaders carrying out their duty. Although some of the main enlisted soldiers come off as clueless sheetheads, again, the characters ring of true life. I met people just like 'em in the military.


    • Besides, I repeat, not all Natives are depicted as virtuous. The Pawnee are obviously ruthless villains and quite a few Indians are shown helping the U.S. Army and are, therefore, traitors to their people.


    • Is the small tribe of Lakota Sioux really super-virtuous? Is their lifestyle really a paradise? No, they're merely portrayed as real people living, pursuing happiness, uncertain about the amassing whites, fighting and persevering through hardships (like the winter camp).


    • Is the massive annihilation of Bison (leaving their skinless carcasses to rot in the sun) a negative depiction of whites or just the way it was? Such people would likely shoot a wolf for the "fun" of it. Again, it smacks of reality.


    This is just a taste. Clearly, the people in the film are not as one-dimensional as some maintain. Neither is the movie as pro-Indian/anti-white as some insist. It's more complicated than that.

    As to the accuracy of the story itself, the fact is that many whites have "gone injun" and many Natives have assimilated with whites. The story explores the possibility of what would happen if a white man dropped all prejudices and tried to get along with some Sioux neighbors; and what if this small band of Natives was open and curious enough to accept him? Is it unlikely that this band would have an available good-looking white woman amongst them that Dunbar could fall in love with? Is there a bit of romanticization? Yes, but it IS a Hollywood movie, after all. Regardless, it's presented in a believable, compelling and captivating way.

    "Dances" is almost 20 years old but remains timeless like most great films; it is the definition of why films are made.

    The film was shot mostly in Western South Dakota with additional shooting in Jackson, Wyoming, as well as Nebraska and Kansas.

    GRADE: A+
    10The_Stuff_of_Dreams

    Magnificent

    Dances With Wolves is three hours long, but that is not long enough, it is so wonderful. It is set in the Civil War-era prairie, and it captures the encounter between a white man and a Sioux tribe. However, it is timeless. It is romantic, adventurous, active, comical, tragic, and educational. It demonstrates the color of one race and the cruelty of another. It forces us to view our own culture with a different eye. It features redemption, nay, salvation. The camera captures the prairie beautifully, the bluest of blue skies and the whitest and puffiest of white clouds, the most colorful of colorful ground, the roundest of rolling hills, and the largest of buffalo herds. This movie was a risky project. The story and the symbolism is simple, but it was filmed and performed masterfully. It deserved the seven Academy Awards it received and then some. A must-see masterpiece. Ten out of ten does no justice. See for yourself.
    9gbill-74877

    Fantastic

    It's hard to think of blockbuster films that portray Native Americans as well as this one does. They are human beings here, with different personalities, intelligence, dignity, culture, and humor. The fact that a major Hollywood film had a good portion of its dialogue spoken in Lakota, subtitled in English, is fantastic. The portrayal of white cruelty, such as in the scene with rotting buffalo carcasses littering the prairie, invert the classic narrative, both in the genre of Westerns and in how history is often taught. The film identifies who the real savages were, and Kevin Costner should get a lot of credit for that.

    The film is of epic length, and by no means perfect. I would have preferred it without the love story, and for more centering on the native characters. The soundtrack is also intrusive, and there were many instances where I found myself thinking that the scene would have played more effectively had it been set to minimal audio. As for the criticism that it uses the 'white savior' trope, I didn't see it that way - if anything, Costner's character is the one saved, both spiritually and then physically as he's about to be hanged for treason. It's much more about the beauty of coexistence and of respecting other cultures, and how tragic the historical genocide was.

    The film is clearly a labor of love, and Costner took a lot of risks with it. The casting of Native actors quite honestly felt decades ahead of its time, and Graham Greene (Kicking Bird), Rodney A. Grant (Wind In His Hair), and Floyd Red Crow Westerman (Chief Ten Bears) are all wonderful. The cinematography on location mostly in South Dakota is simply stunning. However, what I love most about it is its heart, and how it shows simple appreciation for the Sioux people. "They were a people so eager to laugh, so devoted to family, so dedicated to each other. The only word that comes to mind is harmony," the main character says. Would love to see more films like this, and from a native perspective. 31 years later, it's long overdue, but give Costner credit for what he accomplished in 1990.
    You-Dont-Know-Me

    Hard to believe

    It's hard for me to believe this movie is not in the top 250 on IMBD all time list. Without question my favorite movie. We live in a strange world when Pulp Fiction ranks #18, and Dances with Wolves just misses the top 250. Maybe people thought the movie was too long. I thought it was too short if anything. I wish they would have gone on forever. What an incredible story. The way Costner continued to get closer and closer to the Indians way masterfuly done.
    10hitchcockthelegend

    It is the trail of a true human being. I think you are on this trail and it is good to see.

    Dances With Wolves Is directed by Kevin Costner who also stars. It's adapted by Michael Blake from his own novel of the same name. Starring along side Costner are Graham Greene, Mary McDonnell & Rodney A. Grant. Dean Semler provides the cinematography & John Barry the musical score. Set during the American Civil War, the story tells how Lieutenant John Dunbar (Costner) goes to a military outpost on the American frontier, where confronted with alienation he befriends nature, the Lakota Indians and finds himself in the process.

    "I had never known a people so eager to laugh, so devoted to family, so dedicated to each other. And the only word that came to mind was harmony"

    The critics were rubbing their hands with glee, getting ready to tear Costner apart for what undoubtedly would be a failure. An epic Western movie made in 1990, had he not learnt from Heaven's Gate? It was long in production, and with only a $15/$22 million budget afforded it, word came that Costner had to put in $3 million of his own cash to aid production. It was beset with production delays as the problems mounted up with the weather, animal training and with action scenes taking up to three weeks to shoot, all contributing to the belief that it was doomed to failure. "Kevin's Gate" they cried, what's that? It's partially sub-titled too? Never work.

    Dances With Wolves went on to make $424 million in Worldwide theatre tickets alone. Heaven knows what the total would be if we added the VHS & DVD returns as well! Come Academy Award time the film won 7 Oscars, including Best Picture (making it the first Western to win the prestigious award since Cimarron in 1931) & Best Director. It was also nominated in five other categories with Costner up for Best Actor, Graham Greene for Best Supporting Actor & Mary McDonnell for Best Supporting Actress. It was, all told, a personal, artistic and commercial triumph for Costner. One can see him post Oscar night sitting there on his porch sipping sour mash and flipping the finger at all those critics who willed him to fail.

    Costner's movie is a simple tale, of that there is no arguing. But Dances With Wolves (the name given to Dunbar by the Sioux) is magnificently told, as enchanting a Western that has ever been made. It boasts everything needed to make a first class Oater. The story may be simple but it's rich on detail, the characters have real depth and it never sags, not even in its magnificent elongated directors cut that runs 236 minutes. The credit has to go to Costner, who in his debut as director lest we forget, has managed to blend everything together in the style of one of the old masters from the classic Western period. Every tonal avenue ventured down pays off handsome rewards, it all goes somewhere, awash with wistfulness, romanticism and elegiac poetry. The action sequences are expertly crafted, with a buffalo hunt particularly breath taking; no CGI here, the odd animatronic for a close encounter, but mainly the real deal, as are the wolves and the Lakota Sioux, too, who are played by Native Americans. Its humorous too, with its fun being intentional and aiding the flow of the friendships forming.

    As most Western fans will tell you, a lyrical horse opera needs great location work and a score to match. Thankfully Dances With Wolves has both, as both Semler & Barry produce work that picked up the Golden Baldy on Oscar night. Lensed predominantly in South Dakota around the Black Hills & Badlands regions, Semler infuses the film with natural landscapes that send the frontier bursting thru the screen, his framing explains things better than words can in this environment. While Barry's score, lifting nicely from A View To A Kill at times, is suitably grand, deft in touch for the main theme and blood pumping for the buffalo hunt and the Pawnee attacks. Acting wise the award nominations received for Costner, Greene & McDonnell were richly deserved. The boys are quiet and undemonstrative, at one with the essence of the story and infusing it with a sincerity so lacking in many epics. Playing Stands With A Fist, a white woman raised by the Sioux after her family were slaughtered when she was a child, McDonnell has to reach different character levels as the story unfolds, and she delivers emotional depth on every level. No nomination for Grant, but his work is top dollar also, his latter scenes with Costner really nail the shift in tone.

    There's some historical missteps that will no doubt annoy the purists, like I don't believe the Pawnee were the aggressors they are painted as here. While the central romance between Costner & McDonnell is delicate but not fully formed; tho it does improve in the directors cut. But it's hard to criticise little itches when such vision and ambition comes together as well as it does here. Structured with precision and showing respect for tradition, this is a movie about loving people for people lovers. And one can quite easily believe that some genre legends up in the sky were looking down and nodding approvingly. 10/10

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    Occidental

    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Because of the film's enormous success and sympathetic treatment of the Native Americans, the Lakota Nation adopted Kevin Costner as an honorary member.
    • Pifias
      Electric power lines are visible during the buffalo hunt.
    • Citas

      Wind In His Hair: [in Lakota; subtitled] Dances with Wolves! I am Wind In His Hair. Do you see that I am your friend? Can you see that you will always be my friend?

    • Versiones alternativas
      The 236-minute "extended version" or "Director's Cut" has been released on home video, altering the movie as such:
      • 38 x new scene
      • 15 x extended scene
      • 12 x alternative footage
      • 5 x alternative text
      • 1 x new text
      • 3 x postponed scene
      • 3 x altered arrangement of scenes
      • 3 x shortened scene.
      There is also a 233-minute version which cuts out the 3 minute Intermission at around 133 min featuring John Barry music.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Jacob's Ladder/Waiting for the Light/Tune in Tomorrow.../Vincent & Theo (1990)
    • Banda sonora
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      By Peter Buffett

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    Preguntas frecuentes26

    • How long is Dances with Wolves?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Is this based on any real facts? Did any European person live with natives as one of them?
    • Is it true that around that time the Sioux tribe was finished? Are the buffalo extinct?
    • Why did Major Fambrough act so strangely?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 8 de marzo de 1991 (España)
    • Países de origen
      • Estados Unidos
      • Reino Unido
    • Sitios oficiales
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Siux
      • Pawnee
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Ballant amb llops
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Badlands National Park, Dakota del Sur, EE.UU.(Fort Hays to Fort Sedgewick Wagon journey)
    • Empresas productoras
      • Tig Productions
      • Majestic Films International
      • Allied Filmmakers
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • 22.000.000 US$ (estimación)
    • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
      • 184.208.848 US$
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • 598.257 US$
      • 11 nov 1990
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 424.208.848 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      • 3h 1min(181 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.39 : 1

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