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Bigger Than Life

  • 1956
  • Approved
  • 1h 35min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.4/10
8.6 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Bigger Than Life (1956)
A seriously ill schoolteacher becomes dependent on a "miracle" drug that begins to affect his sanity.
Reproducir trailer2:40
1 video
55 fotos
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
  • Guionistas
    • Cyril Hume
    • Richard Maibaum
    • Burton Roueche
  • Elenco
    • James Mason
    • Barbara Rush
    • Walter Matthau
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.4/10
    8.6 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Nicholas Ray
    • Guionistas
      • Cyril Hume
      • Richard Maibaum
      • Burton Roueche
    • Elenco
      • James Mason
      • Barbara Rush
      • Walter Matthau
    • 76Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 69Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 nominaciones en total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:40
    Trailer

    Fotos55

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    Elenco 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 créditos)
    David Bedell
    • X-Ray Doctor
    • (sin créditos)
    Gail Bonney
    Gail Bonney
    • Mother at PTA Meeting
    • (sin créditos)
    Harold Bostwick
    • Gentleman
    • (sin créditos)
    Lovyss Bradley
    Lovyss Bradley
    • Churchgoer
    • (sin créditos)
    Mary Carroll
    • Mother at PTA Meeting
    • (sin créditos)
    Virginia Carroll
    • Mrs. Jones
    • (sin créditos)
    Mary Carver
    Mary Carver
    • Saleslady
    • (sin créditos)
    Betty Caulfield
    • Mrs. LaPorte
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Nicholas Ray
    • Guionistas
      • Cyril Hume
      • Richard Maibaum
      • Burton Roueche
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios76

    7.48.6K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7secondtake

    Ignore a few stilted moments and relish some amazing acting and a curious new social problem

    Bigger than Life (1956)

    Tightly made, vividly acted film about a contemporary crisis--the use and abuse of a new "miracle" drug. Watching James Mason suffer, and then make other people suffer, and then face the final bells of his life, is half the movie. He's such a uniquely subtle and powerful actor (at the same time), always filled with poise and a whiff of kindly diffidence.

    In a way, this is a precursor to the recent movie idea in "Limitless," where a drug makes you "bigger than life," though this is no fantasy. The drug here is cortisone, ingested orally. It had been understood as a natural (adrenal gland) steroid hormone and was manufactured (by Merck) and on the market by around 1950. And by 1956 when this movie came out it was considered a new kind of penicillin, but rather than just be an antibiotic, it seemed to just make you stronger against all kinds of ailments, especially those that involved swelling of some kind.

    Director Nicholas Ray does his usual wonders with interpersonal drama and makes this quite believable, as well as dramatic, and Joe MacDonald does his usual wonders with the camera-work. The writing, too, is crisp and believable (both Ray and Mason helped with the screenplay). In all, it's a top shelf production and a great story.

    But it fails somehow to be a great film, and I think the main reason is the hook to the plot, about the wonder drug, is a little too neatly packaged, with a few scenes that are almost like public service announcements. We sort of know before we are "supposed" to know that it's going to go bad--the clues go beyond foreshadowing--and so when we find out we are right, the edge is off of the narrative. Only the very end is left hanging, though you figure, with Merck keeping an eye on things, that events really can't go too wrong. According to Wikipedia, the American response at the time was shock and the movie did poorly (I guess because it looked like an attack on the nuclear family, such was the 1950s).

    But the critics loved it then and like it now. A movie this well made is still a thrill to watch for all the small things--Walter Matthau in a caricatured side role as the good Uncle, the psychological effects as manifest in Mason, and even the glimpse into the attitude toward medicine at the time. I don't think it's a typical reaction to cortisone, however (from what I've read)--this is a particular case where some inherent manic-depression is triggered, and exaggerated. It would be interesting to see this re-calibrated and filmed again in modern times, but with the subtlety here, the destruction of an ordinary family without shameless excess.
    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
    9evanston_dad

    Father Knows Best

    How is it that I'd never heard of this movie before?

    "Bigger Than Life" is a dream come true for those movie fans (I count myself among them) who love the decade of the 1950s for its total cinematic schizophrenia. I can't think of another decade that created whole omnibuses of films more strongly opposed to one another. It seems that half of the filmmakers of the 50s were churning out earnest Technicolor pap that tried to sell the American public a version of the 50s that simply didn't exist yet which everyone so desperately wanted to believe did, while the other half were making movies about everything that was wrong with the very version of America the other half was clinging to. If you're a fan of subtext in films, and especially interested in seeing how filmmakers could work within the conventions of a genre while turning those conventions against themselves, the 50s are your decade. And for the ultimate master of subtext, look no further than Nicholas Ray.

    There isn't a Ray film I've seen that isn't dripping in subtext, socio-political, sexual, gender-based, you name it. "Bigger Than Life" stars a towering James Mason as a family man who's turned into a literal monster when he becomes addicted to a drug that helps keep a life-threatening medical problem at bay. The film goes to some jaw-dropping places, especially toward the end, as Mason's character evolves from protector to worst nightmare and the picture-perfect family life depicted in the earlier parts of the film dissolve before our very eyes. However, Ray's point all along is that that picture-perfect family never really existed in the first place, and the drug on which Mason gets hooked brings out the "id" in him and the family dynamic that's been lurking there all along.

    Ray was the rare director who could make the saturated Technicolor and massive Cinemascope aspect ratios of 1950s filmmaking work to his advantage and serve his artistic purposes, rather than simply be used to photograph pretty gowns and landscapes. In fact, despite its Cinemascope grandeur, "Bigger Than Life" is all about cramped interiors -- offices, bedrooms, one's own feverish mind -- and the skeletons in the closets, real and imagined, that are hiding there.

    Grade: A
    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.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      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.
    • Errores
      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: A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese Through American Movies (1995)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is Bigger Than Life?
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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 5 de septiembre de 1956 (Canadá)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Japonés
    • También se conoce como
      • One in a Million
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Robinsons-May Department Store - 9900 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, California, Estados Unidos(department store)
    • Productora
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 1,000,000 (estimado)
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 35 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.55 : 1

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