Durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial, un infante de marina estadounidense y una monja irlandesa forman una amistad después de quedar varados en una isla del Pacífico. Encuentran consuelo el uno... Leer todoDurante la Segunda Guerra Mundial, un infante de marina estadounidense y una monja irlandesa forman una amistad después de quedar varados en una isla del Pacífico. Encuentran consuelo el uno en el otro mientras los dos esperan un rescate.Durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial, un infante de marina estadounidense y una monja irlandesa forman una amistad después de quedar varados en una isla del Pacífico. Encuentran consuelo el uno en el otro mientras los dos esperan un rescate.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Nominado a 2 premios Óscar
- 1 premio ganado y 7 nominaciones en total
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
"Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison" is not a masterpiece, but it is one of my favorite movies ever. The beautiful story is a kind of Robison Crusoe in times of World War II, without Friday, cannibals or pirates, but a hardened marine, a gorgeous nun and Japanese. The story has war, adventure, romance and drama, and is supported by the awesome direction of John Huston and the stunning performances of Robert Mitchum and Deborah Kerr in the roles of endearing characters. Deborah Kerr deserved her nomination to the Oscar, but Robert Mitchum was forgotten by the Academy in spite of having a top-notch performance. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "O Céu Por Testemunha" ("The Heaven as Witness")
Terrific double studio character on two interesting roles finds a tough soldier , and a sensitive nun , along the way he falls hard while she resists his advances . An enjoyable and good movie with plenty of action , entertainment , high pathos, excitement and tenderness . Perfectly cast Deborah Kerr as kind nun and Robert Mitchum as Marine Sergeant Allison , both of whom providing top-notch interpretations . Based on the novel by Charles Shaw and cleverly written script from John Lee Mahin and John Huston himself . It follows in the wake of The African Queen , instead of a riverboat skipper : Bogart and a missionary : Hepburn here there is a soldier and a nun , delivering virtually duologue between the two .
It packs colorful cinematography by Oswald Morris , providing the exquisite , humid and lush atmosphere of a small tropical island. As well as rousing and stirring musical score by George Auric. This decently made picture results to be one of John Huston's best . Being skillfully made by conveying a moving drama , adventure and battles to hold the interest enough . Huston made films of all kinds of genres , directing some masterpieces , outstanding the following ones : The Maltese Falcon , Key Largo, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre , Moulin Rouge , Beat the Devil, Moby Dick , The Unforgiven, The Misfits , Freud, The Night of the Iguana , Fat City , Roy Bean , Victory , Wise Blood , Under the Volcano , and his last feature film : The Dead . Rating : 7.5/10 . Better than average . The movie will appeal to Robert Mitchum and Deborah Kerr fans .
Mitchum and and Kerr (she was nominated for an Oscar) are both excellent and have chemistry, as the film gradually turns into a love story/comedy. Mitchum's encounter with a turtle and Kerr's introduction to sushi are especially memorable. On paper, you would think this teaming would never work - Kerr playing one of her various governess/nun personalities, Mitchum being one of his various hard guy types with a soul, but they play off of each other marvelously and are paired in three more films after this, the last one being in the 1980s.
Oswald Morris did the fine cinematography. John Huston wrote the Oscar nominated screenplay, and four different composers were responsible for the musical score, which verges on being cute. Very worthwhile.
Deborah Kerr had already played a nun in Powell-Pressburger's excellent "Black narcissus",and the part was tailor-made for her.The same goes for Robert Mitchum as a crude,simple,but with a golden heart marine.People cannot help but be struck with the analogies between "heaven" and "African queen" :both feature an odd couple,in jeopardy;that's why the former is overlooked today which is totally unfair.
The two characters are extremely endearing and,when the movie is over,it seems we've always known Sister Angela and Corporal Allison.I dig the line:"it's a gourmet's dish" when the nun is eating turtle soup.I love the way the scenarists show the analogies between a nun's and a marine's lives.The Garden of Eden metaphor is obvious,but the story subtly progresses,and the Snake's temptation happens late in the movie.
The cinematography is splendid,with a superb use of cinemascope,and Georges Delerue's score deserves admiration.Yes "heaven knows..." is certainly one of Huston's sleepers.But I wonder what Luis Bunuel would have done with such a screenplay.
In Mitchum's case I think that some of his irreverent comments offended a few people. Sometimes Bob was a bit too candid about what he thought of the film industry and his chosen profession. Otherwise he might well have gotten nominations for this, Night of the Hunter, Cape Fear, Ryan's Daughter, The Sundowners, The Friends of Eddie Coyle and a few others.
This film is always and rightly compared to The African Queen with a female in the religious missionary profession and a hell-raising outsider thrown together in war time. The African Queen was in World War I and this film is set on a backwater Pacific island in World War II.
Corporal Allison, USMC arrives on a rubber raft after the Japanese opened fire on a submarine he was on. The only other person on the island is a nun who has seen all the others die or flee the island. It's a small island, but apparently strategically located.
The film is about these two mismatched people thrown together and what they have to do to survive. Deborah Kerr is a nun who hasn't yet taken her final vows and being alone on the island with Mitchum is a temptation no doubt.
Mitchum though has his own code. He's a foundling kid who took the name of Allison because that was the street in Milwaukee he was dropped off on. He was a juvenile delinquent until he joined the Marines and they gave his life a meaning. The Marine Corps manual is his Bible as much as the Scripture is Kerr's.
I can identify with that because in fact I had a cousin who was in the Marines who did in fact straighten him out. He was a hell raising kid in his youth and he became if not a solid citizen after his service, at least a respectable one.
John Huston got unforgettable performances out of his credited cast of two. Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison has not dated one single bit since its release.
We all need something to believe in to get us through in this world.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaWhen filming began, Robert Mitchum worried that Deborah Kerr would be like the prim characters she frequently played. However, after she swore at director John Huston during one take, Mitchum, who was in the water, almost drowned laughing. The two stars went on to have an enduring friendship which lasted until Mitchum's death in 1997.
- ErroresAs the barefoot Mr. Allison is walking through the first shack on the island, his shoes are tied together and hanging around his neck, but the sound is of shod feet walking on the floor boards of the shack.
- Citas
Cpl. Allison, USMC: You don't have to be afraid of me, ma'am. That was just drunk talk. I'd never hurt you! I'd rather *die* first!
- Créditos curiososOpening credits prologue: 1944 SOMEWHERE IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC
- ConexionesFeatured in Los Soprano: For All Debts Public and Private (2002)
- Bandas sonorasRappa Kimigayo
(uncredited)
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 3,000,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 47min(107 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1