1969. La Dra. Audrey Evans se une a un hospital infantil y lucha contra el sexismo, las convenciones médicas y los subterfugios de sus compañeros para desarrollar tratamientos revolucionario... Leer todo1969. La Dra. Audrey Evans se une a un hospital infantil y lucha contra el sexismo, las convenciones médicas y los subterfugios de sus compañeros para desarrollar tratamientos revolucionarios y comprar la primera Casa Ronald McDonald.1969. La Dra. Audrey Evans se une a un hospital infantil y lucha contra el sexismo, las convenciones médicas y los subterfugios de sus compañeros para desarrollar tratamientos revolucionarios y comprar la primera Casa Ronald McDonald.
- Premios
- 4 premios ganados y 6 nominaciones en total
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
The storyline is powerful. This biopic picks a monumental part of Audrey Evan's life and shows how one person CAN make a difference in the trajectory of pediatric cancer for decades to come. The writer did an incredible job sharing Audrey's story. It left me inspired and wanting to do more, give more and stand up for what I am passionate about. The entire cast and crew did an incredible job. Natalie Dormer's portrayal of Audrey is outstanding. I left the movie wanting to do a deep dive into this time period and Audrey. I was equally impressed how they could turn such a sad topic, pediatric cancer, into something so inspirational and promising. It is also great to see how they closed down the city of Philadelphia, time traveled back to the 1960s with the direction, color, set & costume design, and made the viewers visualize that time period. Definitely recommend this!
Film brilliantly depicted the practice, determination, and creative genius of Dr Audrey - using deliberate moments to make the point that truly one person can create a ripple effect for the world.
Using pediatric neuroblastoma as the basis of her oncology practice and research, this film tells the story of the Dr Audrey's perseverance to research, and treat kids in the 1970s. Singularly, she took a stand to not accept NO as an answer. She creatively found ways to make the impossible (for the times) possible. In so doing, we learn about treating pediatric cancer but more importantly we see the impact that one person can make and the positive ripple effects in medical science and treatments resulting from her actions.
Extremely well done, time period appropriate and just enough to send me to learn more.
Using pediatric neuroblastoma as the basis of her oncology practice and research, this film tells the story of the Dr Audrey's perseverance to research, and treat kids in the 1970s. Singularly, she took a stand to not accept NO as an answer. She creatively found ways to make the impossible (for the times) possible. In so doing, we learn about treating pediatric cancer but more importantly we see the impact that one person can make and the positive ripple effects in medical science and treatments resulting from her actions.
Extremely well done, time period appropriate and just enough to send me to learn more.
Cinematically honoring an individual for determined, heroic accomplishments is certainly an inspiring and noble reason for making a movie. But, to do justice to the story, the elements need to be engaging, entertaining and compellingly told, which is where this fact-based offering from director Ami Canaan Mann comes up short. The film presents the little-known, fact-based story of Dr. Audrey Evans (Natalie Dormer), a transplanted English pediatric oncologist who took over this practice area at the prestigious Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) in 1969. At the time, she proposed the implementation of new treatment strategies for youngsters afflicted by childhood cancer, a radical departure from the standard care in use at the time, which was quite ineffectual as evidenced by its 10% survival rate. She also spearheaded efforts to caring for the considerable financial and daily living needs of the families of these young patients, many of whom were saddled with significant logistical burdens on top of attending to the welfare of their children. Evans often faced an uphill battle from skeptics and naysayers in her quest to put these initiatives into practice, given the departures they represented from established procedures. However, her relentlessly aggressive and persuasive capacity for getting the attention of benefactors and peers, like Drs. Dan D'Angio (Jimmi Simpson), C. Everett Koop (Clancy Brown) and Brian Faust (Brandon Michael Hall), as well as her boundlessly kind compassion for those under her care, ultimately transformed the hospital's cancer treatment program, a model since adopted elsewhere that has raised the successful cure rate to approximately 80%. In addition, her efforts to address the needs of patient families led to the establishment of the first Ronald McDonald House, a program that has subsequently spread globally. To be sure, these are indeed praiseworthy achievements. However, the picture's account of Audrey's efforts is somewhat pedestrian, shallow and meandering, following a rote narrative formula that's predictably on cue and comes across like a virtual replay of events previously depicted much more effectively in director Penny Marshall's endearing, often-underrated release "Awakenings" (1990). There's also precious little attention paid to capturing the mood of the era in this period piece biography, a quality that feels noticeably underdeveloped. To its credit, the film features a fine performance from Dormer and the ensemble of supporting players, but this is far from enough to save the picture from its innate mediocrity and keeping it from being a fitting tribute to the remarkably dedicated work of its protagonist. Dr. Evans courageously demonstrated that her children deserved better than what they were getting, but, unfortunately, the same can't be said here in the telling of Audrey's truly laudable story.
Absolute incredible production. This story is so heartwarming!! Finally a movie hits theaters that makes you feel, inspires you, makes you want to do good for the world and never give up. The cast absolutely crushed, Natalie was fantastic. Audrey is a hero and the perfect sort of leader. She is funny, kind, smart, brave, strategic and caring. A female that I will always look up to and admire to be like. This film is a must see. This should make waves through the medical industry and re-inspire and reinvigorate doctors around the world. I hope this movie makes an International push as everyone in the world should be privy to this inspiring story. Well done to everyone that touched this project.
I felt that the film was very well balanced. It showed the complexity's of being a woman in a male dominated environment. Her compassion for the children and their parents was self evident. I also liked how easily she could subvert or coerce people to her side. The opening scene of the movie tell you everything you really need to know about her personality. Her tenacity is a blessing and a curse. At times, she doesn't know when to take her foot off the gas pedal and apply the brakes. My only complaint is that I would love to have seen a little bit more of her personal life during this Period. As a Philadelphian I'm a Lil was ashamed that I didn't know anythingabout her.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaFilmed in 23 days.
- ErroresSeveral scenes take place on the roof of the hospital with Philadelphia City Hall nearly next door. The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia from 1916 to 1974 was at 18th & Bambridge which is many blocks away with City Hall not even being visible from the hospital roof.
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- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 50 minutos
- Color
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