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IMDbPro

Un ángel en mi mesa

Título original: An Angel at My Table
  • 1990
  • R
  • 2h 38min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.4/10
9.2 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un ángel en mi mesa (1990)
Janet Frame was a brilliant child who, as a teen, was misdiagnosed with schizophrenia. Explore Janet's discovery of the world and her life in Europe as her books are published to acclaim.
Reproducir trailer1:44
1 video
70 fotos
Coming-of-AgeBiographyDrama

Janet Frame era una niña brillante que, de adolescente, fue diagnosticada por error con esquizofrenia. Explora cómo Janet descubre el mundo y su vida en Europa a medida que sus libros se pub... Leer todoJanet Frame era una niña brillante que, de adolescente, fue diagnosticada por error con esquizofrenia. Explora cómo Janet descubre el mundo y su vida en Europa a medida que sus libros se publican con gran éxito.Janet Frame era una niña brillante que, de adolescente, fue diagnosticada por error con esquizofrenia. Explora cómo Janet descubre el mundo y su vida en Europa a medida que sus libros se publican con gran éxito.

  • Dirección
    • Jane Campion
  • Guionistas
    • Janet Frame
    • Laura Jones
  • Elenco
    • Kerry Fox
    • Alexia Keogh
    • Karen Fergusson
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.4/10
    9.2 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Jane Campion
    • Guionistas
      • Janet Frame
      • Laura Jones
    • Elenco
      • Kerry Fox
      • Alexia Keogh
      • Karen Fergusson
    • 33Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 42Opiniones de los críticos
    • 79Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 19 premios ganados y 5 nominaciones en total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:44
    Official Trailer

    Fotos70

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    Elenco principal99+

    Editar
    Kerry Fox
    Kerry Fox
    • Janet
    Alexia Keogh
    Alexia Keogh
    • Young Janet
    Karen Fergusson
    • Teenage Janet
    Iris Churn
    • Mother
    Jessie Mune
    • Baby Janet
    Kevin J. Wilson
    Kevin J. Wilson
    • Father
    • (as K.J. Wilson)
    Francesca Collins
    • Baby Jane
    Melina Bernecker
    • Myrtle
    Mark Morrison
    • Young Bruddie
    Katherine Murray-Cowper
    • Young Isabel Frame
    Mark Thomson
    • Billy Delaware
    Brenda Kendall
    • Miss Botting
    Paul Moffat
    • Dis McIvor
    Blair Hutchison
    • Bully Boy
    David McAuslan
    • Bully Boy
    Ailene Herring
    • Teacher
    Faye Flegg
    • Doctor
    Carla Hedgeman
    • Young Poppy
    • Dirección
      • Jane Campion
    • Guionistas
      • Janet Frame
      • Laura Jones
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios33

    7.49.1K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7SnoopyStyle

    humanistic life

    It's a biography of New Zealand author Janet Frame played by three different actresses over her life. She was born in 1924. Her large family is relatively poor. She's a chubby sensitive kid with big wild red hair. As a young teacher (Kerry Fox), she has an emotional breakdown and spends time in a mental hospital. She is diagnosed a schizophrenic. With her mother's approval, she is admitted to a mental hospital for over 8 years where she is subjected to 200 shock treatments barely escaping brain surgery.

    This is an interesting portrait of a life. It isn't that dramatic except for the hospital section. It's more a series of events where a nervous Janet is belittled and overlooked. It doesn't fit the traditional three act play structure. It's a simple straight time line of events. Jane Campion uses her style of directing. It's natural and confident. A more standard biopic would concentrate on the 8 year hospital stay making a drama out of it. Instead, this way is a more humanistic way of showing a life. Kerry Fox is terrific and the little girl has an unforgettable look.
    8kidO-2

    Another fine example of extraordinary talent from NZ!

    I think this film is another fine example of Kiwi talent! Some incredibly original literature, film, television, and acting talent originates from the island nation of New Zealand. "An Angel At My Table" is one of the great examples. The first time I saw this film (or tele-film) I was left emotionally affected by Janet Frame's life. I could not believe how easy it was for someone to be treated the way she was just because she was shy, socially awkward and had curly, red hair. How times have changed! Nowadays if you are not a freak ... you are a freak! It is scary to think how easy it was, apparently at that time, for a person to be thrown into a madhouse. Not to mention the deplorable conditions of those types of institutions.

    Initially, I felt sorry for Ms. Frame but then I realized she probably has had a fuller life than I have had (or probably ever will). She has accomplished so much and given pleasure to the many who have read her stories and poetry. Watching this film has prompted me to begin looking for her writings since I have been so intrigued by her story. I was glad to see that by the end of the movie she had begun to become comfortable with herself and open her shell. Biographical information on Ms. Frame seems sketchy. I have not found much information about her life after the period where the film ended.

    Thank you Jane Campion for another wonderful character driven film (albeit a real-life character this time)! The only real criticism I have of the film is the portrayal of Frame's time in the institution. While the film did not make it pretty nor gloss over the situation in general, sources I have read indicate Janet was dangerously close to receiving an operation that seems similar to a lobotomy. The operation, if performed, would have left Janet an emotionless, child-like creature and was not adequately depicted. But for the grace of her publication, she was saved.
    tedg

    Untethered Butterfly

    Superficially, this is a sort of "My Brilliant Career," meets "A Beautiful Mind."

    It features one of the most extraordinary actresses, new to me. I saw her in "Intmacy" and had to find more. It is made by a talented and sometimes engaging filmmaker who explores how women are haunted. It is about a writer whose books don't grab me, but whose story does. She believed herself haunted.

    The problem is that these three songs from different souls don't overlap that much.

    Frame created written images that were teased out of a struggle with life, one that infused her. Her sanity came from the writing. She didn't write about insanity and marginalization, she wrote from them to counter and co-opt them somewhat. This engages the reader because most of us are afraid to go as deeply into the darkness as these visions indicate.

    That's a different thing entirely than the story Campion has chosen to give us, which is about all the external agency that surrounded her. I cannot think of an instance where the literary kite and the cinematic string are in such different dimensions. Sure, its an interesting story that someone's light survived, I suppose. But we never see that light, or the ledges that were climbed, or the images that were carried out for us.

    What's left for Fox to do is emote visually. She does an extraordinary job, quite apart from the fact that it is ineffective in this container. I really do think she's something — another of those Australian/New Zealand crowd that just seem to have something that is rare elsewhere.

    She and the girls who play her younger selves are redheads. That's not at all a cinematic device, though it is used cleverly to mend the three actresses. Frame actually had that Clarabelle hair.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
    9seababy

    a kindred spirit in janet frame...

    I discovered this incredible film by accident, if there are such things as accidents like this...I saw the title in a movie review book (and a very brief summary) and it intrigued me. Because I knew it was a New Zealand import from years ago, I never even bothered trying to locate a copy. So when it called out to me months later from the shelves in the video shop, I felt eerily compelled to rent it. I watched it by myself in the wee hours of the morning--and it could not have been more ideal.

    An Angel at My Table is the story of New Zealand's famous writer, Janet Frame. Fairly long, but never boring, it is told in three 50 minute interludes, taking us through her impoverished childhood, awkward adolescence, and the terrifying and eventually triumphant years that follow: Janet was a plump little girl, with an unruly mop of bright red hair. She was fascinated with books and stories at an early age ~ a friend had lent her a copy of Grimm's which she treasured. A certificate of merit in grade school allowed her the use of the public library where she became even more immersed in literature. Despite financial hardships, her father managed to buy her a journal "for her writings." By her late teens she was no longer plump, but a rather crippling shyness had set in. At social functions she played the wallflower. She preferred to be by herself, where she could nurture her passion for creating stories. She went on to become a teacher (though the idea no longer appealed to her), and suffered a panic attack when a supervisor "sat in" on one of her classes. It was advised that Janet have a psychiatric evaluation--a misdiagnosis of schizophrenia (later changed to nothing more than shyness and depression) landed her in a mental institution for eight years of electric shock therapy, each session she narrated to be: "equal in fear to that of an execution." She was scheduled for a partial lobotomy when news reached her doctors that she had won a national literary award--during her hospitalization her sister had published a book of Janet's short stories. She was almost immediately released under the premise that a talented author couldn't possibly need the treatment she had been receiving....At this point Janet was in her late twenties, but her lengthy "exile" had given the impression that she was considerably younger than that. A friend of the family's, another writer who admired her work, offered her a cottage on his property so that she could write seriously in a distraction-free environment. She accepted the offer and her first completed work there was accepted soon after. European travels were arranged for her, more successful books were born, and fame attained...

    I've heard it claimed that Janet had also attained happiness, but I am not sure that I agree. Janet had found numerous freedoms, emotional and financial and of course physical, but happiness? I believe that she had become comfortable with herself, and perhaps that in itself is a happiness. She never did fit into the surrounding world--but lived peacefully alone on the vaporous outskirts. A very supportive therapist in London had told her, "If people tell you that you should go out there and mix, and you don't feel like it,...don't." She took his words to heart.

    I was surprised with the overall beauty of this film~I guess I should not have been~the director was Jane Campion (The Piano, Portrait of a Lady). The New Zealand landscapes and backstreets of Spain were gorgeously rendered, the accompanying score at times both capricious and melancholy. But above all, what struck me most, was how I identified with Janet. The plump and impoverished childhood, the obsession with writing, the painful shyness and reclusiveness. The life of the outsider~luckily minus the stay in the psychiatric ward. On some level I was Janet (or am Janet). And there is something oddly redemptive in finding a twin on screen or in a book, however juvenile the notion...
    9Galina_movie_fan

    A Portrait of an Artist

    "An Angel at My Table" (1990) made by Jane Campion is a true life-story of Janet Frame (1924-2004), New Zealand's most famous author. The film starts with young Jane, a funny -looking red haired girl, shy and quiet who knew too well that she was "poor, smelly, and unpopular". Then it follows her to misdiagnosis of schizophrenia and more than 200 electroshock treatments in a mental hospital where she had spent eight years and a severe, lifelong shyness that was her only problem. Even in the hospital she was writing and was able to have her book published - writing did save her from losing her mind. The film is based on three of her memoirs, "To the Is-land", "An Angel at My Table" and "The Envoy from Mirror City".

    Jane Campion made a very affecting and quietly powerful portrait of a writer who also was a gentle and genuinely humble woman. The film is never a sentimental manipulating story of a talented but misunderstood artist. It does not idealize Frame but it is a very honest and sympathetic portrait of an artist.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      Kerry Fox gained two stones (12.7kg) for her role as Janet Frame. She managed this by drinking liters of Coca-Cola, eating packets of chocolate biscuits and going on the pill.
    • Errores
      The streets of Ibiza have some features that surely were not present on the 50s, i.e., a "no parking" signal on one of the streets. Cars were very rare on the island those days.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: City Slickers/Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead/Jungle Fever/An Angel at My Table (1991)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Somebody Stole My Gal
      Written by Leo Wood

      Performed by Pat McMinn with Crombie Murdoch and the Nickelodeons

      Used by permission of D.F. Peach

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    Preguntas Frecuentes18

    • How long is An Angel at My Table?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 20 de septiembre de 1990 (Australia)
    • Países de origen
      • Reino Unido
      • Australia
      • Nueva Zelanda
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Español
    • También se conoce como
      • An Angel at My Table
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • La Selva de Mar, Girona, Catalonia, España
    • Productoras
      • Hibiscus Films
      • New Zealand Film Commission
      • TVNZ
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 1,054,638
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 12,905
      • 27 may 1991
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 1,055,995
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      2 horas 38 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.66 : 1

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