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Jennie

Título original: Portrait of Jennie
  • 1948
  • Approved
  • 1h 26min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.6/10
8.2 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Joseph Cotten and Jennifer Jones in Jennie (1948)
Eben is a talented but struggling artist in Depression era NY. One day, after he finally finds someone to buy a painting from him, a pretty but odd young girl named Jennie Appleton appears and strikes up an unusual friendship with Eben.
Reproducir trailer1:44
1 video
27 fotos
DramaFantasíaMisterioRomance

Una chica misteriosa inspira a un artista con problemas.Una chica misteriosa inspira a un artista con problemas.Una chica misteriosa inspira a un artista con problemas.

  • Dirección
    • William Dieterle
  • Guionistas
    • Robert Nathan
    • Paul Osborn
    • Peter Berneis
  • Elenco
    • Jennifer Jones
    • Joseph Cotten
    • Ethel Barrymore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.6/10
    8.2 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • William Dieterle
    • Guionistas
      • Robert Nathan
      • Paul Osborn
      • Peter Berneis
    • Elenco
      • Jennifer Jones
      • Joseph Cotten
      • Ethel Barrymore
    • 153Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 44Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 1 premio Óscar
      • 5 premios ganados y 2 nominaciones en total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:44
    Trailer

    Fotos27

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    Elenco principal20

    Editar
    Jennifer Jones
    Jennifer Jones
    • Jennie Appleton
    Joseph Cotten
    Joseph Cotten
    • Eben Adams
    Ethel Barrymore
    Ethel Barrymore
    • Miss Spinney
    Lillian Gish
    Lillian Gish
    • Mother Mary of Mercy
    Cecil Kellaway
    Cecil Kellaway
    • Matthews
    David Wayne
    David Wayne
    • Gus O'Toole
    Albert Sharpe
    Albert Sharpe
    • Moore
    Henry Hull
    Henry Hull
    • Eke
    Florence Bates
    Florence Bates
    • Mrs. Jekes
    Felix Bressart
    Felix Bressart
    • Pete
    Clem Bevans
    Clem Bevans
    • Capt. Cobb
    Maude Simmons
    • Clara Morgan
    Robin Bryant
    • Woman
    • (sin créditos)
    Robert Dudley
    Robert Dudley
    • Another Old Mariner
    • (sin créditos)
    John Farrell
    • Policeman
    • (sin créditos)
    Anne Francis
    Anne Francis
    • Teenager in Art Gallery
    • (sin créditos)
    Brian Keith
    Brian Keith
    • Ice-Skating Extra
    • (sin créditos)
    Nancy Olson
    Nancy Olson
    • Teenager in Art Gallery
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • William Dieterle
    • Guionistas
      • Robert Nathan
      • Paul Osborn
      • Peter Berneis
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios153

    7.68.1K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    9Boyo-2

    Very interesting, very hard to forget

    This movie has quite a lot going for it.

    First of all, it is beautifully photographed - at times it looks as though you are watching a portrait moving. The acting is all terrific - Joseph Cotten is perfect as a down-on-his-luck artist who begins by selling a print to Cecil Kellaway and Ethel Barrymore. They encourage him to draw people rather than the still life pictures he'd been doing. He eventually runs into Jennie in Central Park and she intrigues him, to say the least. She mentions places and times that have long passed and sings a song that he cannot forget. The next time he runs into her she's grown up a little, then every time they see one another she'd matured more and more. They normally see each other in Central Park but he does her portrait and its a masterpiece.

    Movie is very unconventional for its time - there are no opening credits, the end credits are listed as "The actors are Jennifer Jones, etc., The Supporting Actors are Ethel Barrymore, etc."; a black woman is used as an actual character rather than some sort of domestic; and its not all wrapped up in a pretty bow at the end. It might seem wordy and silly to some, but I really loved it.

    I've admired Jennifer Jones since seeing "The Song of Bernadette" as a kid. Aside from that movie and "Beat the Devil", unfortunately I haven't seen a lot of her movies that seemed up to her talent. In this, she is exceptionally good and its not just a showcase for her talents put on screen by David O. Selznick - in reality, she's in it far less than Cotten.

    I understand the movie won an Oscar for the special effects, which are good but I didn't need them to love the movie. 9/10.
    dbdumonteil

    Old Father Time ,you 're out of time.

    Dieterlé's film is magic itself.Borrowing from "Peter Ibbetson " (Hathaway,1935) ,from "the portrait of Dorian Gray" (Lewin ,1944,the final trick is the same)or from the "the Ghost and Mrs Muir" (Mankiewicz,1947) ,it succeeds in connecting all the links of the chain .Moreover,I'm almost sure that Richard Matheson saw this movie for its influence on his "bid time return" novel (transferred to the screen as "Somewhere in time" (1981) ) is obvious.

    A painter down on his luck meets a strange girl.Her clothes are old-fashioned and she seems out of nowhere .Dieterlé marvelously creates an offbeat poetic atmosphere.Using urban landscapes,an ominous sky or the stairs in the lighthouse shrouded in a green light,he 's got an extraordinary sense of mystery.The cast is ideal:Jennifer Jones was par excellence the romantic heroine ("Duel in the sun" which was the first time she had played opposite Cotten,"Ruby Gentry" "Madame Bovary" "Love is a many -splendored thing" ) with an adequate timeless beauty,Joseph Cotten could play everything ,and Lilian Gish made a short but conspicuous appearance as Mother Superior.The Cotten/Jones meeting in the convent could have been mushy and disastrous with any lesser talent:Dieterlé makes it a moving scene ,intimate and grandiose all at once.

    We all live with our past.Some of us would give everything to relive scenes of their past .Einstein told one day that time was the form of his powerlessness while space was the form of his power.Who knows if (and the lines which open the movie open any door) somewhere we are not living in our past,or in our future?
    Tommy-5

    1940's Classic

    Although it is a story that no doubt stands on its own as a cinema classic, this film for sure reminded me of Somewhere In Time, which came along a generation later. Both stories dealt with men of artistic temperament with perhaps too vivid imagination, (Was it imagination, or something more?), that met extraordinary women out of their respective places and time. But, Portrait of Jennie is unique for several reasons. Joseph Cotten has never been given his due as one of the excellent actors of his generation and it is truly a pity that he and female lead Jennifer Jones as Jennie are not well known as one of screendoms great male/female screen teams. As always, it is not only the enchanting story that makes this film a classic, but just as important are the presence of the capable players. Players such as Ethel Barrymore, Cecil Kellaway and Lillian Gish are only a few of the many who appeared and made this a very unique and excellent film. In 1934 New York City, starving artist Eben Adams (Cotten) is having trouble selling his paintings. It seems there just isn't enough emotion in them. However, all of this changes when befriended by a pair of sympathetic art dealers (Kellaway and Barrymore), but more importantly, when he meets Jennie for the first time. Jennie appears to him first as a young girl, but promises to `grow up quickly.' Each succeeding time that Adams encounters her, she is older and the relationship deepens. Adams is disturbed by her comments and realizess that, if statements concerning her past and family are true, she should be perhaps 20 years older. In the meantime, Adams is inspired to begin a portrait of her, the `Portrait of Jennie.'

    By film's end we have the final encounter between Adams, who has gone to great lengths to determine if Jennie's past is as she says it is, and Jennie on a rocky seashore during a violent storm. I will not divulge the ending. I'll say Adams survives the storm and, with new found emotion and compassion, becomes a highly successful artist. The very last scene shows the portrait, classified a masterpeiece, hanging in a museum. There are excellent location shots of 1940's New York City and it's various areas of interest. The Portait of Jennie, which we see in all it's glory at film's end, could well be a masterpiece in itself as a painting of the beautiful Jennifer Jones. As the saying goes, they don't make ‘em like this anymore but, in this case, `they' don't have to. We have our Portrait of Jennie, a film which transcends time and has withstood the test of time very, very well.
    10ccthemovieman-1

    May I Echo All The Praise For This Film?

    Prior to my review, 50 people have done theirs on this website and there isn't much I can add to the adjectives they have used, such as "beautiful,"" "haunting," "underrated," etc.

    "Portrait Of Jennie" continues to be my all-time favorite romance story, probably because it features time travel, which I usually find fascinating, and two of my most-liked classic actors: Jennifer Jones and Joseph Cotten.

    Once you get past that beginning narration consisting of stupid New Age mumbo-jumbo, the film is pure charm and who better to exhibit that than Jones? Few women ever looked more wholesome, sounded sweeter and looked more beautiful than this actress, who really projected innocence as she showed in her Academy Award winning debut in "The Song Of Bernadette" earlier in the decade.

    Cotten is a good match for her in this film. An underrated star, he had a great voice and magnetism of his own.

    However, the more I watch this film the more I am fascinated with Ethel Barrymore, who plays the kindly, spinster art museum owner. She has an extremely knowledgeable countenance and delivery of speech. Cecil Kellaway plays her art museum partner and rounds out this very likable cast.. The are no "bad guys" in this film......just good people.

    The mystical time-space quality in this romance, something akin to 1980''s "Somewhere In Time," fascinates throughout and special effects are pretty darn good, too, considering when it was made.

    For me, as with others, this movie was a haunting one: a film that moves me each time I see it. I have viewed perhaps 10,000 films in my 60 years and this one still ranks in the Top Ten.

    Thanks to it being available on DVD - and at a cheap price - more and more people are discovering this gem. This is one of those classic movies that would still appeal to younger people today.....at least, I hope I would.
    8e_hoffman

    PORTRAIT OF JENNIE -- beauty, fantasy and tears

    This is my first comment for this site, so be gentle. The history of PORTRAIT OF JENNIE is fairly well known...a love letter from producer David O. Selznick to Jennifer Jones...and it shows by giving her, in my opinion, one of the best showcases for her talents at that time. I have read the pros and cons about this film, but each time I watch it, which isn't often, being the romantic that I am, I can sense it in the way she was treated in the film.

    Why don't I watch it that often? Because it touches me in personal ways in terms of the loneliness of the two main characters, the yearning to find someone and not be alone. But most importantly, the music score arranged by the great Dmitri Tiomkin from the works of Claude Debussy. I am sorry that nobody has ever issued a track LP or CD of Tiomkin's score. To me it is a beautiful, sometimes haunting arrangement, with the theme used for Jennie touching me...I believe it is called THE GIRL WITH THE FLAXEN HAIR...I could be wrong. At points it became painful for me to watch as the film touches certain personal pains (the loneliness part particularly, more so since I lost my parents recently after caring for them and have no family to speak of). When the final scene occurs, showing the portrait itself in the museum in full color and Tiomkin's music plays over it, I am in tears. It sounds stupid, doesn't it...

    The film itself is not the perfect movie that Selznick had wanted but the flaws are minor to the final result. It is a film not just for those with a romantic streak still in them, but also for the lonely, maybe giving them a message of hope.

    I am glad that, unlike many classic films, this one has been preserved and is available on video. Well, that's my rambling on the subject. It may not be film criticism but its how I feel about PORTRAIT OF JENNIE.

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    Angel
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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      Producer David O. Selznick initially considered filming this movie over a period of several years, casting a young actress in the role of Jennie and shooting portions of the film over time as the actress grew older in real life. (Shirley Temple, then under contract to Selznick, was reportedly intended for the role, had the movie been filmed that way.) In the end, however, Selznick abandoned the idea as too risky and difficult to film properly.
    • Errores
      During Eben's conversation with Pete, it becomes clear that Pete's moustache is fake when it starts to come away from his face.
    • Citas

      Jennie Appleton: There is no life, my darling, until you love and have been loved. And then there is no death.

    • Créditos curiosos
      No credits at all are shown at the beginning except for the studio logo, not even the title of the film. Instead, we hear a narrator speaking the prologue, and then announcing, "And now, 'Portrait of Jennie'". The credits are saved for the end of the picture.
    • Versiones alternativas
      Originally, all television prints were completely in black-and-white, but by the 1980s the shot of the portrait at the very end was again shown in color. More recently, though, the greenish tint used in the storm scene (lasting about ten minutes) was also restored. Numerous sources, most notably "Leonard Maltin's Movie and Video Guide," have stated that the final reel, save for that color shot, was green, but it was the storm sequence alone, regardless of where it falls on the reels. While the 1990 CBS/Fox VHS release returned to black-and-white for the two scenes between the storm sequence and the painting-shot, the version currently shown on Turner Classic Movies has them in sepia tint. Which accurately reflects the original theatrical prints is undetermined, but both have the end titles in sepia.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Hollywood: The Selznick Years (1969)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Nuages
      (uncredited)

      Music by Claude Debussy

      Adapted by Dimitri Tiomkin

      Heard over opening narration

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    Preguntas Frecuentes28

    • How long is Portrait of Jennie?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • What is 'Portrait of Jennie' about?
    • Is 'Portrait of Jennie' based on a book?
    • In what year is the movie set?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 15 de septiembre de 1949 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Portrait of Jennie
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • The Cloisters Museum, West 193rd Street, Fort Tryon Park, Manhattan, Nueva York, Nueva York, Estados Unidos
    • Productoras
      • The Selznick Studio
      • Vanguard Films
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 4,041,000 (estimado)
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 26 minutos
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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