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Idolo de ébano

Título original: The Jackie Robinson Story
  • 1950
  • Approved
  • 1h 17min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.4/10
1.5 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Jackie Robinson in Idolo de ébano (1950)
Biography of Jackie Robinson, the first black major league baseball player in the 20th century. Traces his career in the negro leagues and the major leagues. Restored in original Black and White.
Reproducir trailer2:02
1 video
28 fotos
BiographyDramaSport

Biografía de Jackie Robinson, el primer beisbolista negro de Grandes Ligas en el siglo XX. Traza su carrera en las ligas negras y las Grandes Ligas. Restaurado en blanco y negro original.Biografía de Jackie Robinson, el primer beisbolista negro de Grandes Ligas en el siglo XX. Traza su carrera en las ligas negras y las Grandes Ligas. Restaurado en blanco y negro original.Biografía de Jackie Robinson, el primer beisbolista negro de Grandes Ligas en el siglo XX. Traza su carrera en las ligas negras y las Grandes Ligas. Restaurado en blanco y negro original.

  • Dirección
    • Alfred E. Green
  • Guionistas
    • Arthur Mann
    • Louis Pollock
    • Lawrence Taylor
  • Elenco
    • Jackie Robinson
    • Ruby Dee
    • Minor Watson
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.4/10
    1.5 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Alfred E. Green
    • Guionistas
      • Arthur Mann
      • Louis Pollock
      • Lawrence Taylor
    • Elenco
      • Jackie Robinson
      • Ruby Dee
      • Minor Watson
    • 34Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 15Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 premio ganado en total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:02
    Trailer

    Fotos28

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    Elenco principal38

    Editar
    Jackie Robinson
    Jackie Robinson
    • Self
    Ruby Dee
    Ruby Dee
    • Rae Robinson
    Minor Watson
    Minor Watson
    • Branch Rickey
    Louise Beavers
    Louise Beavers
    • Jackie's Mother
    Richard Lane
    Richard Lane
    • Clay Hopper
    Harry Shannon
    Harry Shannon
    • Charlie
    Ben Lessy
    Ben Lessy
    • Shorty
    William 'Bill' Spaulding
    • Bill Spaulding
    • (as Bill Spaulding)
    Billy Wayne
    Billy Wayne
    • Clyde Sukeforth
    Joel Fluellen
    Joel Fluellen
    • Mack Robinson
    Bernie Hamilton
    Bernie Hamilton
    • Ernie
    Kenny Washington
    • Tigers Manager
    Pat Flaherty
    Pat Flaherty
    • Karpen
    Larry McGrath
    • Umpire
    Emmett Smith
    • Catcher
    Howard McNeely
    • Jackie as a Boy
    • (as Howard Louis MacNeely)
    George Dockstader
    • Bill
    Marvelle Andre
    • Pete's Wife
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Alfred E. Green
    • Guionistas
      • Arthur Mann
      • Louis Pollock
      • Lawrence Taylor
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios34

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    Opiniones destacadas

    Mark_McD

    Inspirational B-Movie does the job

    If the obviously affable Robinson doesn't come across as a "good" actor, it might be more the fault of the production than himself. Though it's an important movie about a great sports pioneer, it has too many marks of a B-movie production. Too much exposition by characters who should have more interesting stories (wouldn't you want to know more about the USC athletic director who said the only color he cares about is "blue and gold?" Also, Louise Beavers gave a very subdued performance considering it was one of her few roles where she wasn't playing someone's maid. Other hallmarks of the B production were about two minutes of running used for the stock footage of calendar leaves falling to mark the passage of time, the old "spinning headlines" of newspapers with the same articles beneath, the fact that Jackie's baseball scenes were shot at just two ballparks (I'm not even sure his Dodgers scenes were shot at Ebbets Field; the field doesn't quite match the long shots of Ebbets) and the "flashback voices" that ran through Jackie's head when he was set to fight with some white hecklers. This film could also be considered as a product of the McCarthy era in which it was made. It did ignore Jackie's problems in the Army (because it's "un-American" to criticize the military) and ends with Jackie's flag-waving radio address before Congress. Branch Rickey, who in real life did spend several years trying to get pro baseball to desegregate, has a lot of "let's behave like real Americans" dialogue, but tempered with his admission to Jackie that he scouted him because we wants the Dodgers to win a pennant. Despite my quibbles, I think this is an important movie and I'm glad it's around for us to see. I am also torn between feeling that it might be better remembered had it not been a small studio picture, and the possibility that a major studio would have completely glossed over the prejudice portrayed in the film. <i>Note: Jackie's Dodger uniform number, 42, had been officially retired by every team in Major League Baseball. "42" is also the Ultimate Answer to Life, the Universe and Everything, as explained in "The Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy." Coincidence? I think not.
    8ReelCheese

    Biopic Deserves More Attention

    THE JACKIE ROBINSON STORY is a slightly formulaic, but nonetheless solid, biopic that really deserves more attention that it receives. Robinson stars as himself, the first African American to break through pro baseball's color barrier. It's by no means an easy task as he confronts a society that is far from united in wanting to see this groundbreaking endeavor succeed.

    The film is to be credited for not shying away from the racial tension of the time. Robinson endures racial slurs, unyielding boos, the indignity of sitting at the back of the bus, and so on. It's both shocking and infuriating to be reminded of how bigoted and unreasonable society was just a few decades ago. In many ways Robinson's is a heartbreaking story, even though we know it has a happy ending.

    Robinson won't be mistaken for an Academy Award winner, but his performance is decent. He proves to be a highly likable screen presence, portraying the sort of gentleman that by many accounts he was in real life. Some of his supporting cast is stiff, but by and large the performances work.

    Surely this important story will again one day be given the big screen treatment. And whoever gets behind the camera for that effort will have a solid foundation to which to refer in THE JACKIE ROBINSON STORY.
    8sol-kay

    Mister Rickey do you want a player who doesn't fight back? No Jackie I want one who's got the guts not to!

    True story of Brooklyn Dodger ballplayer Jackie Robinson the man who broke the color barrier in professional Baseball and made it possible for future black ballplayers, like Willie Mays Hank Aaron and Frank Robinson to name a few, to follow him.

    After the end of WWII it was Brooklyn Dodger owner Branch Rickey, Minor Watson, who saw what a reservoir of talent there was in the then segregated Negro League and attempted to tap in on it. It was Jackie Robinson who was not only a star in collage football basketball baseball and track and field but was educated and well spoken, unlike most Negro players at that time, who was chosen by Rickey's top scout William Spaulding to be the man to do it: Brake Baseball's color barrier.

    Jackie not at first believing that he's to play in the major leagues is surprised when Spaulding knocked at his hotel room while he was playing with the Black Panthers Negro Baseball team and convinced Jackie that he was the real thing, a scout or the Brooklyn Dodgers, not someone trying to play a joke on him! Like Jackie and his fellow Black Panthers at first thought.

    In knowing that it was far more important for him to succeed for his race not just for himself Jackie not only had to be able to hit run and field on the baseball diamond but put up with the insults and threats to him and his family. Not just by the racist fans but his fellow baseball players, some on his own team, to make his and Branch Rickey, who put his reputation on the line in giving Jackie a chance, dream come true.

    It was in the Triple A Brooklyn farm team the Montreal Royals that Jackie got his first taste of what he was to run into being the only black not on the team but in the entire league. The taunts and insults that Jackie suffered from both the fans and players just toughened his resolve to succeed to the point that he not only ended up leading the league in batting with a .349 average but was named the league's "MVP" Most Valuable Player. There was a very touching and bittersweet scene in the film where Jackie being taunted by the fans about him being black is shown a cute little black cat and told to come over and say hello to a relative of his. Jackie instead of whacking the guys in the mouth like he should have got up out of the dugout and took the cat, with those who were holding it running for safety, back into the dugout with him petting the cute litter kitzel as if he somehow knew that it was suffering the same kind of abuse that he was going through at the time.

    Finally making it to the big leagues in 1947 with the Brooklyn Dodgers who lost the 1946 National League Pennant on the very last day of the season in a two out of three game playoff, with the Dodgers losing the first two games, to the World Champion St.Louis Cardinals he in fact was the extra ingredient that was able to get the Dodgers to become the 1947 National League Champs. Jackie did all that not just with his hitting fielding and dazzling running on the bases running but with his courage as well both on and off the field which earned Jackie the 1947 Rookie of the Year Award.

    Made in 1950 while Jackie Robinson was still an active player "The Jackie Robinson Story" is about as autobiographical a movie as a movie could be. It showed that by turning the other cheek and concentrating on his game and not letting his temper get the best of him Jackie achieved the impossible in being a both fiery combatant as well as gentleman at the same time. Which in the end even had his biggest detractors,fan and ballplayers alike, end up standing up and cheering wildly for for him whenever he hit the ball either out of the park or the infield. It was that, Jackie's ability to stand tall and not give into his pent up emotions, far more then his baseball playing ability that made Jackie Robinson the Baseball legend that he is today.

    P.S Jackie Robinson #42 uniform was retired not only from the Dodger team but from all of Major League Baseball in 1997 making him the first and only Major League Baseball player to have that honor. What most people don't know is that there was a Dodger player George Jeffcoat who had the famed #42 before Jackie did while he was a pitcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers back in 1939.
    7planktonrules

    Reasonably close to the facts AND it actually stars Jackie himself in the title role!

    Yikes--the print for this public domain flick is a mess! Yes, it's scratchy, a bit blurry and the sound isn't great, but it's also a great chance to see Jackie Robinson himself play in this bio-pic.

    This biography of Jackie Robinson has sanitized his life just a bit by the filmmakers. However, despite a few omissions here and there, the film is a decent biography--a billion times better and more truthful than the awful bio-pic on Babe Ruth completed just two years earlier. When I say sanitized, I mean some parts of Jackie's life are omitted because they didn't portray the image some folks wanted to give in the film. So, Jackie's military history is pretty much ignored--even though he dealt with A LOT of racism and a court-martial that was motivated by the color of his skin and Jackie's unwillingness to be treated like dirt. I think including it would have made for a better film, as he showed a lot of character but it just didn't fit into the 'turn the other cheek' portrayal in the film. Plus, perhaps it was too big a topic to include in this relatively short film. Overall, a decent film and it was nice to see that Robinson wasn't at all bad as an actor! Well worth seeing and a nice bit of Americana.

    Some things of note in the film:

    Jimmie Dodd plays a minor role as a scout for UCLA. Dodd later went on to be the host of the popular kids show, "The Mickey Mouse Show".

    Robinson was a star in college in basketball, baseball, track AND football. The film talked about all but his track prowess.

    The films shows such troubles encountered by black ballplayers as not being able to eat in restaurants, being booed just for being black and outright hostility.

    The use of 'boy' and the almighty N-word might offend many today but it DID add realism to the movie. I'd hate to see political correctness sanitize race films too much.
    7lastliberal

    Historic baseball film

    Sure, many can criticize this film for what it didn't show, but it's a movie, not a mini-series. So, they had to gloss over the fact that his brother Mack (Joel Fluellen), with a college education and an Olympic medal was a milkman; didn't touch on the Army at all; and left out Satchel Paige.

    What was worth watching was Robinson'e play for UCLA and branch Rickey's (Minor Watson) valiant efforts to get him into major league baseball. It is no secret that I love watching baseball movies From Fever Pitch to The Natural to "A League of their own;" I'll watch baseball movies over baseball games. This was a good one. Robinson did a very good acting job playing himself. Of course, as Ringo Starr said, "All I have to do is smile and act naturally." Well, he did much more that that.

    So, head on over to the Internet Archive and check it our: http://www.archive.org/details/Jackie_Robinson_Story_The

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      When Jackie Robinson gets a draft notice in the mail, he doesn't explicitly say what it is. He only says it begins with the word "Greetings". In 1950 audiences would have remembered that World War II draft notices began that way. It was a popular source of dark humor at the time.
    • Errores
      Late-1940s cars can -be seen in the 1928 scenes.
    • Citas

      Branch Rickey: A box score - you know a box score is really democratic, Jackie. It doesn't say how big you are or how your father voted in the last election or what church you attend. It just tells you what kind of a ballplayer you were that day.

      Jackie Robinson: Well, isn't that what counts?

      Branch Rickey: It's all that ought to count, and maybe someday it's all that will count.

    • Versiones alternativas
      Also available in a computer-colorized version.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Cavalcade of Stars: Jackie Robinson, Kyle MacDonnell, Johnny Johnston, Gali-Gali (1950)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes18

    • How long is The Jackie Robinson Story?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 21 de diciembre de 1950 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • La historia de Jackie Robinson
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • La Palma Park - 1151 N Anaheim Blvd., Anaheim, California, Estados Unidos
    • Productora
      • Jewel Pictures
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 17 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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