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Barriera invisibile

Titolo originale: Gentleman's Agreement
  • 1947
  • T
  • 1h 58min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,2/10
18.692
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Gregory Peck, John Garfield, and Dorothy McGuire in Barriera invisibile (1947)
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DrammaRomanticismo

Un giornalista finge di essere ebreo per raccontare una storia sull'antisemitismo e scopre personalmente le vere profondità del bigottismo e dell'odio.Un giornalista finge di essere ebreo per raccontare una storia sull'antisemitismo e scopre personalmente le vere profondità del bigottismo e dell'odio.Un giornalista finge di essere ebreo per raccontare una storia sull'antisemitismo e scopre personalmente le vere profondità del bigottismo e dell'odio.

  • Regia
    • Elia Kazan
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Laura Z. Hobson
    • Moss Hart
    • Elia Kazan
  • Star
    • Gregory Peck
    • Dorothy McGuire
    • John Garfield
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,2/10
    18.692
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Elia Kazan
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Laura Z. Hobson
      • Moss Hart
      • Elia Kazan
    • Star
      • Gregory Peck
      • Dorothy McGuire
      • John Garfield
    • 176Recensioni degli utenti
    • 78Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Vincitore di 3 Oscar
      • 17 vittorie e 9 candidature totali

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    Interpreti principali82

    Modifica
    Gregory Peck
    Gregory Peck
    • Philip Schuyler Green
    Dorothy McGuire
    Dorothy McGuire
    • Kathy Lacy
    John Garfield
    John Garfield
    • Dave Goldman
    Celeste Holm
    Celeste Holm
    • Anne Dettrey
    Anne Revere
    Anne Revere
    • Mrs. Green
    June Havoc
    June Havoc
    • Elaine Wales
    Albert Dekker
    Albert Dekker
    • John Minify
    Jane Wyatt
    Jane Wyatt
    • Jane
    Dean Stockwell
    Dean Stockwell
    • Tommy Green
    Nicholas Joy
    Nicholas Joy
    • Dr. Craigie
    Sam Jaffe
    Sam Jaffe
    • Prof. Fred Lieberman
    Harold Vermilyea
    Harold Vermilyea
    • Lou Jordan
    Ransom Sherman
    • Bill Payson
    • (as Ransom M. Sherman)
    Ed Agresti
    • Waiter
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Monya Andre
      Edward Biby
      Edward Biby
      • Nightclub Patron
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Louise Buckley
      • Mother
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Patricia Cameron
        • Regia
          • Elia Kazan
        • Sceneggiatura
          • Laura Z. Hobson
          • Moss Hart
          • Elia Kazan
        • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
        • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

        Recensioni degli utenti176

        7,218.6K
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        Recensioni in evidenza

        7ma-cortes

        An intelligent and thoughtful film concerning thorny issues competently directed by Elia Kazan

        A thought-provoking and brooding film with good performances , dealing with brooding and thoughtful events . It deals with a magazine writer Phil Green (Gregory Peck) looks for a new angle on his writings when he agrees to research by writing a series of articles on anti semitism for a powerful publisher (Alfred Dekker) . Along the way he personally discovers the true depths of bigotry and hatred . And his new identity pervades his life affecting his relationship to new girlfriend (Dorothy McGuire) and son (Dean Stockwell) resulting in unexpected consequences and troublesome ways .

        An interesting and rabid attractive drama in which a reporter pretends to be a Jewish in order to cover a story on anti-Semitism , only to find the masquerade entailing a backlash of grief and pressure for himself and his own family . Archetypical Hollywood social comment and the 20th Century Fox studio's fondness for realism looks remarkable dated in places . However , relying heavily for complicated loving relationships , tension and on a handful of attractive dramatic pieces and offering an important analysis of the problem . This sentimental and muddled film was Hollywood's first major attack on anti-Semitism. A successful movie that received 8 Oscar nominations and three wins, including Kazan's first for Best Director. Gregory Peck gives a terrific acting in an upright role similar to Atticus Finch , he is a journalist who has to deal with both overt and covert prejudice . John Garfield has a small but essential role as Phil's Jewish friend Dave . Starring Gregory Peck and Dorothy McGuire are accompanied by a very good support cast , such as : Celeste Holm , Anne Revere , June Havoc , Albert Dekker , Jane Wyatt , Dean Stockwell and Sam Jaffe.

        The film was compellingly made by Elia Kazan who did not get along with actor Gregory Peck ; as usual Kazan dealing with thoughful and provoking issues . In fact , his films were concerned with personal or social issues of special concern to him. Kazan writes, "I don't move unless I have some empathy with the basic theme." And this first such "issue" film was Gentleman's agreement (1947). It was followed by Pinky (1949), one of the first films in mainstream Hollywood to address racial prejudice against black people. A streetcar named Desire (1951), an adaptation of the stage play which he had also directed, received 12 Oscar nominations, winning four, and was Marlon Brando's breakthrough role. In 1954, he directed On the waterfront (1954), a film about union corruption on the New York harbor waterfront. In 1955, he directed John Steinbeck's East of Eden (1955), which introduced James Dean to movie audiences. Rating : 6.5/10 .Notable . Controversial in its day , yet still timely .
        8WilliamFallsJr

        Short and to the Point

        I'll make this review short and to the point. I'm 55 and I've watched this movie for the first time. All I can say is it really opened my eyes. I'm not Jewish, but this quote from the movie really makes a lot of sense and can be used today for any race, religion, or sexual orientation. Professor Fred Lieberman: "Millions of people nowadays are religious only in the vaguest sense. I've often wondered why the Jews among them still go on calling themselves Jews...Because the world still makes it an advantage not to be one. Thus it becomes a matter of pride to go on calling ourselves Jews." I would highly recommend this movie.
        Mankin

        Much better than its reputation

        In his commentary for the DVD of `Gentlemen's Agreement,' critic Richard Schickel spends some of it criticizing the flaws in the movie (something I wish more commentaries would do). Mostly I disagreed with him, especially about Dorothy McGuire's fine performance. She has by far the toughest role in the picture as Gregory Peck's conflicted fiancée, whose complacent belief that she doesn't have an anti-semitic bone in her body is severely tested when he decides to pretend to be Jewish for a newspaper article. I often think of prejudice as the act of automatically assuming something is fact about someone we don't know, based on stereotypical preconceived notions. Anti-semitism is the reference point for the movie, but what it really does is examine the subject of prejudice from many different angles, from its most virulent to its most subtle forms. It even explores the role played by Jewish self-hatred in exacerbating the problem. The only time the film begins to resemble an `After School Special' is in Ann Revere's preachy speech towards the end. On balance, however, `Agreement' is much more complex than it's been given credit for. (I may be too late, but in answer to the User Commenter who wanted to know the name of the main title theme: it's an Alfred Newman original that is only heard that one time in the film. He developed it more extensively a couple of years later in Kazan's "Pinky.")
        lord_shatner

        A 50+ year old contemporary movie

        I've seen a lot people describe this movie as "a period piece" and a great movie but irrelevant in our time.

        However, this movie has lessons that every new generation should learn.

        The lessons taught in this movie can be applied to other forms of prejudices such as sexism, racism, and homophobia among others.

        Our society today is still full of "nice" people who detest bigotry and intolerance, but stand idly by while it happens right in from of them. Watching this movie could change all that.
        9bkoganbing

        With The Holocaust Fresh In Everyone's Mind......................................

        It's hard for today's audience to appreciate the impact of Gentlemen's Agreement in 1947. The Holocaust was not in textbooks then, it was in newsreels showed in American theaters. The state of Israel was coming into being and there was debate about that with Harry Truman shortly overruling a lot of his own trusted advisers including his own Secretary of State George C. Marshall, in giving recognition to the nascent Jewish state.

        During the course of the film names like Gerald L.K. Smith, Theodore G. Bilbo, and John E. Rankin are mentioned. The first was a Protestant evangelical minister who started out with Huey Long, but then developed a line of anti-Semitism in his sermons. He had a considerably large following back in the day though the Holocaust did a lot in killing his recruiting. Theodore G. Bilbo and John E. Rankin were a couple of Mississippi politicians who for their redneck constituency successfully linked anti-Semitism and racism. They didn't like foreign born either and used a whole lot of ethnic slurs.

        But the anti-Semitism that Gregory Peck takes on is not that of Bilbo, Smith, and Rankin. It's the genteel country club anti-Semitism that manifests itself in restricted resorts, quotas as to how many Jews will some white shoe law firm accept if any, discrimination in hiring practices, unspoken covenants {gentlemen's agreements} not to sell to Jews in certain areas; all these we see in Gentlemen's Agreement.

        Peck is given an assignment to write about it and he hits on a novel approach. Just being hired by publisher Albert Dekker, he gets Dekker's backing when he says he will pretend he's Jewish and see how he's being treated. He gets quite an experience in the bargain.

        Running parallel to Peck's masquerade is his courtship of Dorothy McGuire. She's a divorcée, he's a widower with a young son. The whole thing puts a strain on their relationship, especially in dealing with her sister, Jane Wyatt who lives in one of those restricted by Gentlemen's Agreement communities.

        Gentlemen's Agreement came up with several nominations and three Oscars for Best Picture, Best Director to Elia Kazan, and Best Supporting Actress to Celeste Holm as a tart tongued fashion writer at Peck's magazine who proves to be a friend. Peck himself was nominated for Best Actor, but lost to Ronald Colman for A Double Life. Holm also beat out Anne Revere nominated for the same film, probably helped by the fact that Revere had won a few years earlier for National Velvet.

        John Garfield who was Jewish took a small supporting role in the film as Peck's long time childhood friend who educates Peck into how a Jew deals with the rebuffs he's finding out about. Had he not been up also for Body and Soul as Best Actor, he might well have earned a Supporting Actor nomination here.

        Also note Sam Jaffe as the fictional professor Lieberman which is a thinly veiled caricature of Albert Einstein probably the most noted figure in the world of Jewish background. Like Lieberman, Einstein's a cultural Jew, not religious in any sense of the word. Nevertheless he was a leading figure at the time in the Zionist movement, having endured all that Peck endured in Germany and seeing what was coming with Hitler, fled his native Germany for safe harbor in the USA.

        My favorite character in the film however has always been June Havoc as Peck's secretary. She changed her name to something ethnically neutral to get her job in the very magazine that will now crusade against anti-Semitism. She's also become a self hater, a phenomenon that other discriminated people also experience. GLBT activists are fully aware of what self hate has done, not hardly unknown among other groups as Ms. Havoc demonstrates.

        Of course Gentlemen's Agreement is dated with its topical references to post World War II trends and events. Yet it still has a powerful message to deliver. It made Gregory Peck one of the great liberal icons of Hollywood and still should be seen by all as a great lesson in the pitfalls of unreasoning hate.

        Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

        Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

        See the complete list of Oscars Best Picture winners, ranked by IMDb ratings.
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        Trama

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        Lo sapevi?

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        • Quiz
          In 1984 Gregory Peck claimed to have been misquoted in a 1967 interview in which he said Elia Kazan was the wrong director for the film. The actor said, "That's a misunderstanding. I don't think there could have been a better director for the film. What I meant was that he and I didn't have a rapport; emotionally, we were not on the same wave length. I don't think that I did my best work for him. If I worked with him now--as a mature man--I think I would give him everything he would want."
        • Blooper
          Early on, when Phil reminisces about his Jewish friend, Dave, he looks into the mirror and assesses his own features as being consistent with those of the Jews. This reveals his own experiences of having been influenced by the false stereotype of there being a "Jewish look". This is antithetical to his attacking anti-Semitic thoughts and actions in others, throughout the film. This, however, should not be considered a "GOOF" as many people are guilty of hypocrisy.
        • Citazioni

          Kathy Lacey: You think I'm an anti-Semite.

          Phil Green: No, I don't. But I've come to see lots of nice people who hate it and deplore it and protest their own innocence, then help it along and wonder why it grows. People who would never beat up a Jew. People who think anti-Semitism is far away in some dark place with low-class morons. That's the biggest discovery I've made. The good people. The nice people.

        • Curiosità sui crediti
          The main title theme begins with the Fox logo, replacing the usual Alfred Newman fanfare.
        • Connessioni
          Featured in Precious Images (1986)
        • Colonne sonore
          Street Scene
          Composed by Alfred Newman

          Played during opening scene

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        Dettagli

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        • Data di uscita
          • 8 dicembre 1948 (Italia)
        • Paese di origine
          • Stati Uniti
        • Lingua
          • Inglese
        • Celebre anche come
          • La luz es para todos
        • Luoghi delle riprese
          • Darien, Connecticut, Stati Uniti
        • Azienda produttrice
          • Twentieth Century Fox
        • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

        Botteghino

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        • Budget
          • 1.985.000 USD (previsto)
        Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

        Specifiche tecniche

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        • Tempo di esecuzione
          • 1h 58min(118 min)
        • Colore
          • Black and White
        • Proporzioni
          • 1.37 : 1

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