En 1945, durante una licencia de 48 horas, un soldado se encuentra accidentalmente con una chica en la estación de Pensilvania y pasa su licencia con ella, y finalmente se enamora de la enca... Leer todoEn 1945, durante una licencia de 48 horas, un soldado se encuentra accidentalmente con una chica en la estación de Pensilvania y pasa su licencia con ella, y finalmente se enamora de la encantadora neoyorquina.En 1945, durante una licencia de 48 horas, un soldado se encuentra accidentalmente con una chica en la estación de Pensilvania y pasa su licencia con ella, y finalmente se enamora de la encantadora neoyorquina.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 4 premios ganados en total
- First Subway Official
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- Woman in Penn Station
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- Man in Penn Station
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- Woman in Penn Station
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- Woman in Penn Station
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- Man in Subway
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- Seal Act Spectator in Park
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- …
- Hymie Schwartz
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- Child
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- Information Clerk
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- Nurse
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Opiniones destacadas
Generally, the best reason for having Garland in the cast is for her singing, yet here she carries the role without using her best-known talent. By keeping the character simple but believable, it works all right. Whenever you see Walker, it's almost impossible not to think of "Strangers on a Train" (although, of course, that film came later), yet here he also succeeds with a very different, sensitive character.
In contrast, Gleason plays exactly the kind of character role that he does best and most naturally, and it's hard to see the movie working without him.
He comes along at just the right time to keep things from petering out, and his character seems to provide exactly what was needed to keep the story from getting off-track.
Much of the movie is not especially memorable, and the production is unspectacular, though solid. Yet it's hard not to come away with a positive feeling from watching this simple yet pleasant and thoughtful film.
But the most genuine moments in the film are the performances of the two stars--Judy Garland (in her first non-singing dramatic role) and Robert Walker. The freshness of their appeal is evident in every scene--whether it's their first awkward meeting, the night they spend helping milkman James Gleason deliver his goods, or their last desperate moments together. Vincente Minnelli's sensitive direction shows Garland at her most poignant and vulnerable. Robert Walker makes an excellent co-star.
By all means, catch this little gem if you can. It's one of the best wartime films, a simple romance, honest and warmly appealing. Should make servicemen recall the hectic moments some of them may have gone through themselves.
Robert Walker (Joe) and Judy Garland (Alice) are the romantic couple.
But, first, Joe, a country boy arrives at Penn Station in New York, goes out on the sidewalk, and is awe-struck by the skyscrapers of the city. He sees a wonderful panorama of New York City as it was in the spring of 1945.
Joe has no idea how he will spend his 48-hour leave. He is caught up in the crowd, pushed here and there, and finally, sits at the foot of the stair rail on the steps in front of Penn Station between the steps and an escalator.
Alice stumbles on Joe's gear, nearly falls, and gets her shoe heel caught in the escalator and broken off.
She yells for somebody to retrieve her shoe heel and Joe is accommodating.
From this point on in the movie, the couple are together almost constantly and visit various landmarks and attractions in New York.
Alice finally goes back to her apartment and is quizzed about her long absence during the afternoon and told by her roommate not to fool with military guys. Alice's response is half-hearted at first, but then she begins to think her roommate is right.
Alice's thoughts drift back to Joe, who is waiting at the clock of a prominent hotel, their meeting place at 7 p.m. Joe is in despair when Alice doesn't show. Eventually, she arrives.
As one would say, the plot thickens, and there are twists and turns, but most of all, accidental separations that are heartbreaking.
The longer the couple is together they realize they love each other and should get married, which is a further complication in the plot.
The previous reviewer threatened to turn this movie off from boredom? Why does this movie even around today and why is it highly rated? First, it was what the public wanted then. It is 1945 and people are war-weary. They wanted some about the war but from a different point of view.
Also, up to this time Judy Garland was in musicals or sang in each movie in which she played. It shows what a dramatic actress she could be.
Robert Walker is at his best even though he was recently divorced from Jennifer Jones.
So, this is WWII without blood and guts, rationing, etc. It is a love story that filled a need at a previous time in our history. For those of us who saw it on its first run, it is a special joy to see it in our twilight years because of all of the wonderful memories it brings back.
The young lovers are Robert Walker and Judy Garland. Walker the previous year had scored with a couple of breakthrough roles in Since You Went Away and See Here Private Hargrove. Garland was doing her first non-singing part on screen.
It's a tender and touching story about young people in war time. Walker is playing an extension of the earnest young soldier he played in Since You Went Away. You can see his character living home and hearth and grandfather Monty Woolley from Since You Went Away and having a 48 hour leave and meeting Judy Garland.
Originally Fred Zinneman was to direct The Clock, but he and Garland had no rapport and Zinneman himself got Arthur Freed to take him off. Judy's then husband Vincente Minnelli finished his work on Ziegfeld Follies and came over to direct his wife. This was also Minnelli's first non-musical effort in any medium since on the stage he had done nothing but musicals.
James Gleason almost steals the film from Walker and Garland as the romantic minded milkman who gives them a lift and then when he gets injured, they finish his deliveries. Walker and Garland then join Gleason for breakfast at his home where his wife is played by his real life wife Lucille Gleason. They would suffer a horrific tragedy that year when their son Russell Gleason was killed in a fall from a window, circumstances still unknown. In fact this was a tragic film all around because both Walker and Garland died way too young.
Keenan Wynn is in the film for one scene and it's a good one as he does a great drunk act.
The Clock is a fine romantic story that still holds up well for today. For lovers of young love everywhere.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe escalator in the Penn Station scene where Alice loses her shoe heel had unusually high sides to disguise that fact that it wasn't a real escalator at all. Wartime material shortages and restrictions prohibited MGM from building a real escalator, so the studio compromised with a conveyor belt. At no time in the scenes do you actually see escalator steps.
- ErroresAs they're riding up Fifth Avenue on the bus, she points out Radio City and St. Patrick's Cathedral. Radio City isn't on Fifth Avenue, it's on Sixth Avenue. A moment or so later, as the continue riding up Fifth Avenue, the statue of Atlas at Rockefeller Center is seen in the rear projection background. The statue is directly across from the cathedral, which they should've passed already.
- Citas
Alice Maybery: Sometimes when a girl dates a soldier she isn't only thinking of herself. She knows he's alone and far away from home and no one to talk to and... What are you staring at?
Corporal Joe Allen: You've got brown eyes.
- Versiones alternativasAlso shown in computer colorized version.
- ConexionesFeatured in The Men Who Made the Movies: Vincente Minnelli (1973)
- Bandas sonorasIf I Had You
(uncredited)
Music by Ted Shapiro, Jimmy Campbell and Reginald Connelly
Heard as background music
Selecciones populares
- How long is The Clock?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 1,324,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 30 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1