CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.7/10
10 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un experto en fonética y dicción apuesta a que puede enseñarle a una florista a hablar inglés correctamente y hacerse pasar por una dama de la alta sociedad.Un experto en fonética y dicción apuesta a que puede enseñarle a una florista a hablar inglés correctamente y hacerse pasar por una dama de la alta sociedad.Un experto en fonética y dicción apuesta a que puede enseñarle a una florista a hablar inglés correctamente y hacerse pasar por una dama de la alta sociedad.
- Ganó 1 premio Óscar
- 4 premios ganados y 5 nominaciones en total
Leueen MacGrath
- Clara Eynsford Hill
- (as Leueen Macgrath)
Irene Browne
- Duchess
- (as Irene Brown)
Cathleen Nesbitt
- A Lady
- (as Kathleen Nesbitt)
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe scene in which Eliza accidentally swallows a marble while having an elocution lesson does not appear in the original play. During rehearsals for this scene, a pained expression came over Wendy Hiller's face. When she spat out the marbles she had in her mouth, she said, "Leslie, I've swallowed one!" to which Leslie Howard replied, "Never mind, there are plenty more." This caused such amusement among the watching crew that it was added to the movie and to its musical version, Mi bella dama (1964).
- ErroresAfter the ball when Mrs. Pearce serves Professor Higgins his tea, the shadow of the camera can be seen in the bottom left, moving back across his blanket.
- Citas
Eliza Doolittle: Walk? Not bloody likely. I'm going in a taxi.
- Créditos curiososOpening credits prologue: PYGMALION WAS A MYTHOLOGICAL CHARACTER WHO DABBLED IN SCULPTURE. HE MADE A STATUE OF HIS IDEAL WOMAN-GALATEA. IT WAS SO BEAUTIFUL THAT HE PRAYED THE GODS TO GIVE IT LIFE. HIS WISH WAS GRANTED.
BERNARD SHAW IN HIS FAMOUS PLAY GIVES A MODERN INTERPRETATION OF THIS THEME.
- Versiones alternativasThis film was made a year before the Hays Office gave Clark Gable permission to say "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn", so while in the British prints of this film Leslie Howard often utters the word, in the American prints the word "damn" is replaced by either "hang" or "confounded".
- ConexionesFeatured in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's Big Parade of Hits for 1940 (1940)
Opinión destacada
Perfect cinema. That was my reaction when I first saw Pygmalion, the first of 50 viewings and counting, and I still think so. Who could not fall in love with Leslie Howard, one of our greatest actors, so tragically assassinated in the Second World War? Wendy Hiller IS Eliza. The cast is flawless. The script... words fail me, for George Bernard Shaw was a genius, he did not simply adapt his play for the screen, it is so good that it is like it's happening before your eyes. My God, after seeing this is there anyone out there who thinks 'My Fair Lady', the slowest film musical on record, is the best screen version of Shaw? If they do, they are mad.
That film moves me not one jot, everything is so clean, so smug, so unreal. Here we see poverty, but also hope. These are not actors and actresses moving through the sets garbed in Cecil Beaton, but real people, real suffering, but humanity lights every scene like a beacon. The unbearably moving scenes of Eliza capturing society at the ball, the irresistible waltz, watch this with no tears in your eyes, I dare you. Halliwells Film Guide calls this 'one of the most heartening and adult British films of the thirties'. Too right. I cannot fault this film, it is priceless. By the way, I saw 'My Fair Lady' on stage recently, and it's miles better than the film version. Warner Bros really let Shaw down, and it's impossible to put it right. But this...well it is a big compensation. And I don't miss the songs one little bit.
There are so many classic scenes I can't pick any out. Of course viewers will spot that it was 'updated' to 1938, and the original play set in the Edwardians. That doesn't hurt it at all, 'polite' society didn't change much in the intervening years and gives the play an added 'contemporary' edge. Please, please, please see this film. You will be gripped.
That film moves me not one jot, everything is so clean, so smug, so unreal. Here we see poverty, but also hope. These are not actors and actresses moving through the sets garbed in Cecil Beaton, but real people, real suffering, but humanity lights every scene like a beacon. The unbearably moving scenes of Eliza capturing society at the ball, the irresistible waltz, watch this with no tears in your eyes, I dare you. Halliwells Film Guide calls this 'one of the most heartening and adult British films of the thirties'. Too right. I cannot fault this film, it is priceless. By the way, I saw 'My Fair Lady' on stage recently, and it's miles better than the film version. Warner Bros really let Shaw down, and it's impossible to put it right. But this...well it is a big compensation. And I don't miss the songs one little bit.
There are so many classic scenes I can't pick any out. Of course viewers will spot that it was 'updated' to 1938, and the original play set in the Edwardians. That doesn't hurt it at all, 'polite' society didn't change much in the intervening years and gives the play an added 'contemporary' edge. Please, please, please see this film. You will be gripped.
- ted puff
- 7 oct 1999
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Pygmalion
- Locaciones de filmación
- Pinewood Studios, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(studio: made at Pinewood Studios England)
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- GBP 87,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 36 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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