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IMDbPro

La ratoncita valiente

Título original: The Secret of NIMH
  • 1982
  • AA
  • 1h 22min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.5/10
48 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
4,410
427
Wil Wheaton, Dom DeLuise, Shannen Doherty, Hermione Baddeley, Elizabeth Hartman, Jodi Hicks, and Arthur Malet in La ratoncita valiente (1982)
Ver Official Trailer
Reproducir trailer2:21
2 videos
99+ fotos
Animal AdventureDark FantasyAdventureAnimationDramaFamilyFantasyMysterySci-Fi

Para salvar a su hijo enfermo, un ratón de campo debe buscar la ayuda de una colonia de ratas.Para salvar a su hijo enfermo, un ratón de campo debe buscar la ayuda de una colonia de ratas.Para salvar a su hijo enfermo, un ratón de campo debe buscar la ayuda de una colonia de ratas.

  • Dirección
    • Don Bluth
  • Guionistas
    • Robert C. O'Brien
    • Don Bluth
    • John Pomeroy
  • Elenco
    • Elizabeth Hartman
    • Derek Jacobi
    • Dom DeLuise
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.5/10
    48 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    4,410
    427
    • Dirección
      • Don Bluth
    • Guionistas
      • Robert C. O'Brien
      • Don Bluth
      • John Pomeroy
    • Elenco
      • Elizabeth Hartman
      • Derek Jacobi
      • Dom DeLuise
    • 199Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 60Opiniones de los críticos
    • 76Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 premios ganados y 2 nominaciones en total

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:21
    Official Trailer
    The Secret of Nimh: Mrs. Brisby Meets Nicodemus
    Clip 3:42
    The Secret of Nimh: Mrs. Brisby Meets Nicodemus
    The Secret of Nimh: Mrs. Brisby Meets Nicodemus
    Clip 3:42
    The Secret of Nimh: Mrs. Brisby Meets Nicodemus

    Fotos408

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    Elenco principal23

    Editar
    Elizabeth Hartman
    Elizabeth Hartman
    • Mrs. Brisby
    • (voz)
    Derek Jacobi
    Derek Jacobi
    • Nicodemus
    • (voz)
    Dom DeLuise
    Dom DeLuise
    • Jeremy
    • (voz)
    Arthur Malet
    Arthur Malet
    • Mr. Ages
    • (voz)
    Hermione Baddeley
    Hermione Baddeley
    • Auntie Shrew
    • (voz)
    Shannen Doherty
    Shannen Doherty
    • Teresa
    • (voz)
    Wil Wheaton
    Wil Wheaton
    • Martin
    • (voz)
    Jodi Hicks
    • Cynthia
    • (voz)
    Ian Fried
    • Timothy
    • (voz)
    John Carradine
    John Carradine
    • The Great Owl
    • (voz)
    Peter Strauss
    Peter Strauss
    • Justin
    • (voz)
    Paul Shenar
    Paul Shenar
    • Jenner
    • (voz)
    Tom Hatten
    Tom Hatten
    • Farmer Fitzgibbons
    • (voz)
    Lucille Bliss
    Lucille Bliss
    • Mrs. Fitzgibbons
    • (voz)
    Aldo Ray
    Aldo Ray
    • Sullivan
    • (voz)
    Norbert Auerbach
    • Councilman 1
    • (voz)
    Dick Kleiner
    • Councilman 2
    • (voz)
    Charles Champlin
    Charles Champlin
    • Councilman 3
    • (voz)
    • Dirección
      • Don Bluth
    • Guionistas
      • Robert C. O'Brien
      • Don Bluth
      • John Pomeroy
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios199

    7.547.8K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    8drqshadow-reviews

    A Powerful Dose of Nostalgia and Timelessness

    Gorgeously animated, smartly written and surprisingly mature for a film that's clearly geared to young audiences, this one is a real gem. Don Bluth and company really peered over new horizons with their painstaking efforts on this picture, and ultimately gave their old bosses and coworkers at Disney the kind of direct competition they needed to wake up from their late '70s slump. Bluth's unmistakable style positively seeps out of every panel of NIMH, with an expressive, gestural quality that manages to be both creatively streamlined and rich with detail. The story, so dark that Disney actually opted out of making the film themselves, remains a breath of fresh air even today, thirty years after its premiere. Its broad landscapes and diverse characters tackle some very challenging themes with succinct honesty, respecting their viewers without scaring them off. Too many kids' movies resign themselves to the opinion that children need their hands held on a stroll through happy town from start to finish, with a reassuring character always nearby whenever something remotely spooky happens. NIMH rejects that theory, cautiously, and ends up a better picture for all audiences as a result. It's a revelation.
    9Tera-Jones

    A Forgotten Childhood Favorite

    This is one of those films I "lost" in my memory banks until I accidentally ran across it again. As soon as I saw the name of the film (The Secret of NIMH) something clicked within and I said "oh yes I remember this film and how much I loved it"! This movie is a great story - a hidden gem of animated film classics! I was 10 years old when this film came out, I do remember seeing this one in the theaters. I've recently acquired the DVD - a cherished childhood film.

    Timothy Mouse is sick with Pneumonia. His mother, Mrs. Brisby, will go on a dangerous journey to some medicine for her son. It's early spring and the (human) farmers are tilling up the fields and wanting to get rid of their rat & mouse problem. The mice will do what they can to save their homes. Mrs. Brisby's problems are increasing - she must see the Great Owl but owls eat mice but she must go - so her dark and scary journey begins!

    A very dark, scary film at times - the colors are vivid and beautiful. The story is heartwarming and adventurous. The animation is superb!

    This is a film well worth watching - I'm so happy to have it on DVD.

    One major flaw keeps this from being a 10/10: Only two intelligent MALE mice survived NIMH: Mr. Johnathan Brisby and Mr. Ages. --- How did Mrs. Brisby become intelligent? Is Mr. Ages her father or grandfather?

    9/10
    9ZeroByte

    Don Bluth's Best work!

    Anybody who doesn't like this movie just doesn't love animation. How can a proclaimed fan of feature animation not be dazzled by the extravagance of Don Bluth's work seen in NIMH? Here is a perfect example of what happens when artists are given free reign to just create whatever their vivid imaginations may produce. To me, the greatest triumph of this movie is the art itself. Its greatest flaw is that it was cheapened by a sequel! Why in the name of HUMANITY was a sequel made? A masterpiece of this magnitude should not be so insulted as to be milked for every dollar that the bean counters say it can!

    But I digress...

    Bluth's use of highly stylized art to influence your emotions is rarely seen in others' work. The whole point of animation is that you are not limited by the bounds of reality, so thorns and cobwebs can be just that much more twisty and foreboding. Owls' eyes can glow- not because they do, but because it just plain looks cooler. The bright and sunny entrance to the rats' lair can suddenly fade to a background of blood red as Mrs. Brisby runs in terror from Brutus' electrified blade. What plot holes does using a lit electric lamp as a diving bell produce? Who cares? The concept just looks awesome on screen! The effects animation is spectacular in this movie as well. The glow of Nicodemus' eyes, the sparkling of the fairy dust ink and the flaming letters of the movie title screen are great, and the radiance emitting from Mrs. Brisby as the sheer strength of her character lifts her home from the mud is fantastic.

    If the story were no more than a shabby framework to lace all of this cool art together, it would be good enough, but there's a lot going for it as well. It's not a complicated story, but its message of love, devotion, and courage shown in the meekest of people (mice?) is enough to inspire anyone! Mrs. Brisby's simple wish for the safety of her family drives her to the greatest of courage, despite her apparant simplicity and weakness. She stands as a model for all of us to aspire to.

    Animation should never be considered something just for kids. It should not require the characters to burst into song at regular intervals, or the story to be sappy and condescending. NIMH does none of this. It is truly a movie for movie-lovers of all ages. Disney, take a hint!!! Don Bluth, keep making movies like this, and your field will reach an entirely new level of acceptance among older viewers in America.
    barnabyrudge

    Decent animated film, with a heavy-going plot but good features along the way.

    In the early '80s a group of Disney animators, headed by Don Bluth, decided to break away from the Disney studio. The Secret of NIMH was the first film they made. Based on a semi-classic children's book entitled "Mrs. Frisby And The Rats Of NIMH" by Robert C. O'Brien, the film emerges as a decent little animated feature. The story is a bit on the sombre side - probably a bit too serious and complex for really young viewers - but the animation is of a superb quality and the characters are very nicely voiced.

    Field mouse Mrs Brisby needs to move her family from their home in a farmer's field, as it is almost time for the farmer to gather his crop with the combine harvester. Inevitably the Brisby home would be destroyed and anyone in it killed during the gathering of the crop. Unfortunately, one of her children, Timmy, is suffering from pneumonia and couldn't possible survive the move. Mrs Brisby is advised to contact the rats of NIMH, a group of hyper-intelligent rodents, to ask for their help. Apparently, her late husband Jonathan was a close friend of the rats and they held him in such high regard that they will do anything to help a member of the Brisby clan.

    The story is told mainly through talk, with occasional bursts of action. As already pointed out, this means the film doesn't really lend itself to a very young audience. But older kids, especially those who are willing to listen with the appropriate degree of attention, will find the story interesting. There are other plus points - Jerry Goldsmith's rousing score; Dom DeLuise's amusing vocals as an accident-prone bird; and some very well-conceived "baddies" in the shape of rat conspirator Jenner and savage farm-cat Dragon. The Secret of NIMH is a moderately successful film - no masterpiece, true enough, and not really a serious challenger to the Disney dominance over the genre, but definitely a film that every child should see at least once.
    10Lupercali

    Perhaps the greatest postwar animated film

    The short version: 'The Secret of NIMH' isn't just a masterpiece: it's the best classically animated film since the early 40's. It's up there with 'Bambi', which is to say, this is about as good as it gets.

    I remember walking down the street when I was about 19, and seeing the poster for 'The Secret of NIMH' up in a theatre, and immediately thinking "This film is going to blow my mind." A week later, I was sitting in an empty theatre, watching the last credits rolling down the screen after everybody else had left, and the house lights were up, thinking "yep."

    A bit of history is probably in order for a film of this importance. Flashback to about 1980. Disney animator Don Bluth walks out, halfway through production on 'The Fox and the Hound', taking several other key animators with him, and declaring that he was going to recapture the spirit of classical animation, which Disney had forgotten about.

    Nearly three years later, NIMH debuts. Critically it is well received, but lack of distribution and advertising means it's swamped by such an historical non-entity as Disney's 'Tron'. Accepting an animation award for best film, Bluth remarked "Thanks. We didn't think anyone had noticed."

    NIMH is a glorious achievement. It puts to shame anything which Disney had done for a quarter century, and singlehandedly did exactly what Bluth set out to do. It revived the spirit of classical animation, and at the same time it proved that there was room on the block for another player than Disney - not an unimportant fact when you consider that at the time there was no Dreamworks or Pixar, and no feature animation section in Universal or MGM.

    As to the film itself: from the first moment you are treated to a gloriously rich, sumptuous, seamless animation and background art, the likes of which hadn't been seen since Disney's war years. Particularly stunning is the movie's use of colour to enhance moods. The dark blues and blacks of the stunning 'lantern elevator' descent into the rats' city, and the tractor scene - the background starts out in subdued tones and ends up flaming red as the action peaks. One reviewer at the time wrote "I felt as if I was watching the invention of color, as if I was being drawn into the depths of the screen."

    The characters are beautifully conceived and drawn, and the voice characterisations are spot-on (including the animation debut of Dom de Luise as Jeremy). And, significantly, there is only one song, and it's not sung by a character (significantly, 'Balto', one of the few animated films since which can hold a candle to NIMH, followed the same principal). Jerry Goldsmith's score supplies the emotional power for the rest of the soundtrack.

    Even more importantly though, the film is incredibly emotionally potent, and not in a sentimental, kiddy way. It has genuine choke-you-up power which will appeal to adults.

    Bluth ditched the double storyline of the book, relegating Jonathan Brisby's more substantial role in the novel to a short piece of background information revealed in an explanatory flashback. Personally I think this was the right decision. To do otherwise would have been to take the spotlight off Mrs Brisby, and probably diminish the film's coherence and power.

    So, Don Bluth achieved his goal: his debut feature film was the greatest animated achievement in 40 years. Sadly, it was also his only masterpiece. He peaked on his first outing, and afterwards declined into mediocrity, while Disney picked itself up and overtook him. In fact, ironically, there were signs of this in 'The Fox and the Hound', which despite being plagued by Bluth's departure amongst other catastrophes, turned out to be Disney's best movie since the 60's, even if it would still be the better part of another decade before they started hitting their marks consistently.

    Today NIMH enjoys the sort of cult following it deserves. It's just a damn shame that its greatness isn't more widely acknowledged, and an almost equally great shame that a generation later it was cursed with one of the most insulting, wretched sequels in cinematic history.

    It's an important film, and it's a great film. In the two decades since it was released, only a small handful of animated films have approached its stature.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      Don Bluth, John Pomeroy and Gary Goldman all left Disney to pursue this project, which had originally been rejected by their former employer as "too dark" to be a commercial success. They were followed soon after by twenty other Walt Disney Productions animators, dubbed "The Disney Defectors" by the trade press.
    • Errores
      Dragon's bad eye switches from his right to his left throughout.
    • Citas

      Jenner: I learned this much, take what you can when you can.

      Justin: Then you've learned nothing.

    • Créditos curiosos
      The production storyboards are used for background in the end credits.
    • Versiones alternativas
      In the late 1990s VHS and DVD prints in addition to the 2003 reissue of the DVD release, the United Artists logo is plastered with the 1994 variant.
    • Conexiones
      Edited into Un cuento americano (1986)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Flying Dreams
      Composed by Jerry Goldsmith

      Lyrics Written and Performed by Paul Williams

      Orchestrations: Arthur Morton

      Arranged by Ian Fraser

      Lullaby Performed by Sally Stevens

    Selecciones populares

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    Preguntas Frecuentes22

    • How long is The Secret of NIMH?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Why does Mr Brisby's family live in the cinderblock where it's obviously dangerous with the threat of the tractor and the plowing that takes place each year? Why don't they just move to the nearby woods or permanently to their summer home?
    • Is this film based on a book?
    • What does NIMH stand for?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 16 de julio de 1982 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitio oficial
      • MGM
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • The Secret of NIMH
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos
    • Productoras
      • Aurora
      • Don Bluth Productions
      • Mrs. Brisby Ltd.
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • USD 7,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 14,665,733
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 386,530
      • 5 jul 1982
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 14,665,733
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 22 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Stereo

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