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IMDbPro

Daria

  • Serie de TV
  • 1997–2002
  • TV-PG
  • 30min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.1/10
29 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
2,886
320
Daria (1997)
A smart and cynical girl goes through teenage life as a proud outsider in a world of mainly idiotic adolescents and condescending adults.
Reproducir trailer0:47
1 video
99+ fotos
AnimaciónAnimación dibujada a manoComediaComedia oscuraDramaRomance

Una chica inteligente y cínica atraviesa la vida adolescente como una extraña en un mundo de adolescentes tontos.Una chica inteligente y cínica atraviesa la vida adolescente como una extraña en un mundo de adolescentes tontos.Una chica inteligente y cínica atraviesa la vida adolescente como una extraña en un mundo de adolescentes tontos.

  • Creación
    • Glenn Eichler
    • Susie Lewis
  • Elenco
    • Tracy Grandstaff
    • Wendy Hoopes
    • Julian Rebolledo
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    8.1/10
    29 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    2,886
    320
    • Creación
      • Glenn Eichler
      • Susie Lewis
    • Elenco
      • Tracy Grandstaff
      • Wendy Hoopes
      • Julian Rebolledo
    • 106Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 13Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 premio ganado y 3 nominaciones en total

    Episodios67

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    DestacadoLos mejor calificados

    Videos1

    DVD Trailer
    Trailer 0:47
    DVD Trailer

    Fotos155

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    Elenco principal75

    Editar
    Tracy Grandstaff
    Tracy Grandstaff
    • Daria Morgendorffer
    • 1997–2001
    Wendy Hoopes
    Wendy Hoopes
    • Jane Lane…
    • 1997–2001
    Julian Rebolledo
    • Jake Morgendorffer
    • 1997–2001
    John Worth Lynn Jr.
    • Sick, Sad World Announcer…
    • 1997–2001
    Lisa Collins
    • Brittany Taylor…
    • 1997–2001
    Marc Thompson
    Marc Thompson
    • Kevin Thompson…
    • 1997–2001
    Ashley Paige Albert
    • Tiffany Blum-Deckler…
    • 1997–2001
    Jessica Cydnee Jackson
    • Jodie Abigail Landon…
    • 1997–2001
    Alvaro J. Gonzalez
    • Trent Lane…
    • 1997–2001
    Sarah Drew
    Sarah Drew
    • Stacy Rowe…
    • 1997–2001
    Nora Laudani
    • Ms. Angela Li
    • 1997–2001
    Steven Huppert
    • Joey…
    • 1997–2001
    Geoffrey Arend
    Geoffrey Arend
    • Charles 'Upchuck' Ruttheimer III…
    • 1997–2001
    Russell Hankin
    • Tom Sloane
    • 1999–2001
    Tim Novikoff
    • Jeffy…
    • 1997–2001
    Paul Williams
    • Michael Jordan 'Mack' Mackenzie
    • 1997–1998
    Amy Bennett
    • Mrs. Diane Bennett…
    • 1997–2001
    Bart Fasbender
    • Andrew Landon…
    • 1998–2001
    • Creación
      • Glenn Eichler
      • Susie Lewis
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios106

    8.128.5K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    pacmanfan4evr

    Perhaps the best written American cartoon ever

    Considering multiple aspects, this is a wonderful show. Every character has a very specific personality, and most all of them actually develop as the show goes on. The humor can be dry, but is incredible if you actually get it. If you were expecting Beavis and Butthead, sorry, you will be disappointed. I've noticed that most of the negative comments talk about how Beavis and Butthead was so much better. I think it can be best said that you have to be able to appreciate intelligent humor to laugh at this. If you think, say, that Jackass is the greatest show ever, then you will most likely hate this.

    However, if you like a humorous show that's incredibly well developed for a cartoon (the character development, themes, etc.), then you will enjoy this.
    Ddey65

    Funny, Smart, and dare I say it,...CUTE(for a cartoon character)!

    I'm 34 years old as of this writing, so why do I like this spin-off of Beavis and Butt-head? The sarcasm of Tracy Grandstaff will sting you with laughter, not to mention Miss Morgendorffer's refusal to go along with the "conform-or-die" mentality that's forced upon teenagers, whether it's from her elders, the popular creeps, or the various counter-cultures. Imagine a girl like her in previous decades of teen-dom. Her attitude toward peer pressure is close to the one I had when I was in high school (..and now feel even stronger about), as is her Dad's seething resentment toward the people who robbed him of the "joy of youth."

    Long live Daria. If the show doesn't last, may it's legacy do so.
    bloodredroses

    A Wonderful Show!

    I started watching Daria when I was in college and absolutely fell in love with the show. Daria and Jane's friendship is probably the best aspect of the show, and anyone who has had a close friendship like that will probably agree with me. As a matter of fact, I still hang out with my Daria (I'm definitely more the Jane) to this day. And I totally have the memories of High School and my Brittany and Kevin - like schoolmates as well. Most people didn't like the whole Jane/Tom/Daria love triangle, but I think it was one of the things that made Daria's character more vulnerable and more human. And I really loved how the series ended with Daria realizing that shutting everyone out in her life was not the answer. I only wish I had made such a realization at that age! All in all, I say that Daria is a wonderful coming-of-age show that should be enjoyed for generations to come.
    Idolprincess

    One of the best cartoons of the 90's

    I've read the user comments for "Daria" and I noticed one thing. All the bad reviews are written by elitist goth kids who disliked that an "alternative" show like it was aired on a "mainstream" TV channel like MTV. Don't let yourself fooled by these comments.

    Sure, this show aired on MTV. Doesn't it seem a bit weird that it bashes everything MTV is all about? Sure, it is trendy to be different and artsy to some extent. Didn't MTV just want to take advantage of this? Personally, I think that Daria is one of the best and funniest shows that I've ever seen.

    This show might seem like it's about teen angst. It might seem like Daria is your typical high school outcast with her artistic friend who are proud of being "different" yet aren't that much different after all. But this is not at all what it's like.

    First, this show isn't particularly aired at teenagers. It's aired at any young people, I'd say anyone from 12 to 35 but people in their late teens and 20's can enjoy it more since they've gone through high school or are still in high school. Daria criticizes high school life. Aside from the "be yourself and screw what others think" moral, the goal of the show is to make it's watchers laugh. Daria lives in an exagerated version of reality where teenagers and adults are completely brainwashed by society and often act in ridiculous ways. This is what is so funny. Even though the show is so realistic, the fact that it's exagerated reminds us that it doesn't take itself too seriously and that the goal isn't to be preachy but to be humorous.

    As I said earlier, Daria is not your typical rebellious teenager. Daria and her friend Jane are spectators in the show and their only roles are to let us see the world through their eyes. However, Jane and Daria are two completely different characters. Jane is a lot less negative than Daria about a lot of things, by example. This only makes the show more interesting because they aren't just two goth teenagers whining about the world around them. Daria is a realistic character while not being a stereotype. Many people view her as a person who's unconfident but I think she's more confident than most characters in the show. She just views things as they are, with a tint of bitterness, without falling into the "gothic" category, yet she still treats her surroundings with respect.

    If you disliked the superficial world that is high school, I suggest this show for a lot of laughs.
    10morphion2

    "Daria" epitomizes ironic ingenuity

    The self-defeating world of MTV began as a spark in the mind of one perceptive demographics adviser or another, but soon it grew to epidemic proportions, numbing and sugarcoating all things rebellious in a depressingly successful attempt to convince the masses that nonconformity is all about styles and fads. Any sensible teenager will tell you that it is an unwitting mockery of the things it believes it is making available to an already converted audience, but amongst the throngs of bright colors and loud-but-not-too-loud noises that essentially is MTV, you will occasionally find a gem; an intelligent, insightful, informed show of independent thought, sincerity and sardonic subtlety. "Daria" is one such example.

    Anybody who used to watch "Beavis and Butthead" (no comment) will recognize Daria already, as the plain girl with glasses and the monotone voice that would often foil the titular duo's moronic and half-baked plans. When the show began to think about packing it in, MTV approached the creators with the offer of giving Daria her own show. And thank heavens for that. Not only is "Daria" up there with "Frasier" as one of the greatest spin-offs of all time, but it threatens to take a place as one of the greatest stand-alone shows of all time.

    Daria Morgendorffer, our bland anti-heroine, is not your average teenage girl. Smart, sarcastic, opinionated but highly unmotivated, her life revolves around observing the actions of others with her best friend Jane Lane, a misfit artist from a family of unconventional thinkers. Together Daria and Jane see fit to mock the sea of stereotypes that is their suburban hometown of Lawndale, mainly the student body of their high school. Daria's deep loathing of all things superficial is regularly tested by the presence of her shallow and materialistic sister Quinn, while her workaholic lawyer mother Helen and her perpetually stressed out and slightly unbalanced father Jake struggle to do the right thing by their daughters in the interactive jumble that is life in Lawndale.

    At a mere glance, one might perceive "Daria" as a children's show, due to its animation. However, even the slightest exertion of further examination would reveal that it is no more a children's show than "The Angry Beavers" is a sophisticated portrayal of American Wildlife. Where a lot of shows sell their credibility for cheap laughs and mold their characters on popularity polls, "Daria" is firm in its subtlety, never wavering in its belief that, given time, its audience will get the joke. Some may take longer than others, but all that do never turn back.

    The genius of the show lies in its ironic reflection of a culture that would never allow a show like this to get off the ground. Surrounded on all sides by the trivial and materialistic values she lives to hate, Daria takes refuge in the companionship of Jane, the isolated safety of her own room and the glow of the television (which will probably be tuned in to dissocial ironathon news program 'Sick Sad World'), emerging now and again for a futile attempt to significantly impact the alienating world around her. And perhaps the experience might be alienating to us, the audience, if it weren't for the shows strategic and successful ploy to get us to see the world through Daria's eyes. Once there, we're completely hooked, and all the rest of the show's intrinsic jokes fall into place.

    Arguably the most enviable quality of animation is its freedom to let characters be exaggerated without being unrealistic. The most brilliant thing about this is that eventually, characters that are truly only meant to serve as tired clichés perversely become beloved, unique personalities. Trent, Jane's lazy soft spoken musician brother with delusions of future stardom with his garage band Mystik Spiral, Kevin and Brittany, quarterback of the football team and head of the cheerleaders respectively, two blissfully ignorant airhead lovers with no aspirations beyond their current high school status, Mr. O'Neal, the hypersensitive English teacher, balanced in the extreme by the borderline psychopathic Mr. DeMartino, an irate History teacher who has lost the will to educate. Even the unbearably shallow and conceited Fashion Club, four fashion-victimized teenage girls who believe their undeservedly elitist circle is doing the world around them a world of good, gradually grow on you until, like it or not, you couldn't imagine Lawndale without them.

    It is because of this paradoxical attachment to the characters that serious plot developments towards the end of the series are able to engage the audience on a level that is more than just honesty for the sake of mockery. Once we've grown accustomed to Daria's detached and cynical attitude, the show begins to admit that perhaps it has been having us on a little bit, at least concerning the rigid personalities of our beloved caricature personas. Therefore, once Daria has opened up a smidgeon , so does her/our view of her world, in an event suspiciously symptomatic of personal growth. And from there it's a small step to actually caring about the students, teachers and residents of Lawndale as we farewell them in the "Daria" movie finale "Is It College Yet?", in which we see our little high-schoolers graduate and move on. It says a lot about the show that it is able to gradually soften its bite enough to let us feel for the characters without ever feeling inconsistent.

    If one were to only catch a few episodes of "Daria", then they might like what they see, and they'd be well justified. But they'd ultimately be missing out. Because as entertaining as the self-contained half-hour segments of the show can be, the world of Daria is not about separate jokes, separate characters, separate stories or separate anything. Everything within the show works to build to a greater understanding about teenage life, indeed about life in general, and everything it entails; a simple masterpiece that's value only increases when put into social context.

    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      Jane, Quinn, and Helen are all voiced by the same actress, Wendy Hoopes.
    • Errores
      Throughout the series there are shots of Miss Li talking to the students in the auditorium and Trent (Jane's brother) is clearly visibly in many of the shots although he's much older and had already graduated high school 5 years earlier.
    • Citas

      Trent Lane: [his breathy greeting to everyone] H-hey.

    • Créditos curiosos
      During the closing credits, the show's characters appear in various costumes.
    • Versiones alternativas
      'Daria' episodes released on home video/DVD have their original MTV broadcast version music clips removed and are replaced by more generic stock music.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in America's Teenagers Growing Up on Television (1998)
    • Bandas sonoras
      You're Standing On My Neck
      Written by Janet Wygal

      Performed by Splendora

    Selecciones populares

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    Preguntas Frecuentes20

    • How many seasons does Daria have?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Why do the fashion Club accept Daria as Quinn's cousin,etc, even after her revelation as her sister in episode 1?
    • Why aren't Beavis and Butt-Head on the show?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 3 de marzo de 1997 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official Flixtor Streaming Site(United States)
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Дарія
    • Productoras
      • MTV Animation
      • MTV Networks
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 30min
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Stereo
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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