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IMDbPro

La mia vita comincia in Malesia

Titolo originale: A Town Like Alice
  • 1956
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 57min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,2/10
2041
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Virginia McKenna in La mia vita comincia in Malesia (1956)
A newly wealthy English woman returns to Malaya to build a well for the villagers who helped her during war. Thinking back, she recalls the Australian man who made a great sacrifice to aid her and her fellow prisoners of war.
Riproduci trailer2: 39
1 video
53 foto
DramaRomanceWar

Una ricca donna inglese ritorna a Malaya per costruire un pozzo per gli abitanti del villaggio che l'hanno aiutata durante la guerra.Una ricca donna inglese ritorna a Malaya per costruire un pozzo per gli abitanti del villaggio che l'hanno aiutata durante la guerra.Una ricca donna inglese ritorna a Malaya per costruire un pozzo per gli abitanti del villaggio che l'hanno aiutata durante la guerra.

  • Regia
    • Jack Lee
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Nevil Shute
    • W.P. Lipscomb
    • Richard Mason
  • Star
    • Virginia McKenna
    • Peter Finch
    • Kenji Takaki
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,2/10
    2041
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Jack Lee
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Nevil Shute
      • W.P. Lipscomb
      • Richard Mason
    • Star
      • Virginia McKenna
      • Peter Finch
      • Kenji Takaki
    • 40Recensioni degli utenti
    • 15Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Ha vinto 2 BAFTA Award
      • 2 vittorie e 5 candidature totali

    Video1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:39
    Trailer

    Foto53

    Visualizza poster
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    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
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    + 47
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    Interpreti principali51

    Modifica
    Virginia McKenna
    Virginia McKenna
    • Jean Paget
    Peter Finch
    Peter Finch
    • Joe Harman
    Kenji Takaki
    • Japanese Sergeant
    • (as Takagi)
    Tran Van Khe
    • Captain Sugaya
    Jean Anderson
    Jean Anderson
    • Miss Horsefall
    Marie Lohr
    Marie Lohr
    • Mrs. Dudley Frost
    Maureen Swanson
    Maureen Swanson
    • Ellen
    Renee Houston
    Renee Houston
    • Ebbey
    Nora Nicholson
    Nora Nicholson
    • Mrs. Frith
    Eileen Moore
    Eileen Moore
    • Mrs. Holland
    John Fabian
    • Mr. Holland
    Vincent Ball
    Vincent Ball
    • Ben
    Tim Turner
    Tim Turner
    • British Sergeant
    Vu Ngoc Tuan
    • Captain Yanata
    Munesato Yamada
    • Captain Takata
    • (as Yamada)
    Nakanishi
    • Captain Nishi
    Otokichi Ikeda
    • Kempetei Sergeant
    • (as Ikeda)
    Geoffrey Keen
    Geoffrey Keen
    • Solicitor
    • Regia
      • Jack Lee
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Nevil Shute
      • W.P. Lipscomb
      • Richard Mason
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti40

    7,22K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    filmsfan38

    A great movie

    I have the video of this movie which I got a few years back. I wish they would bring this movie out on DVD. Its wonderfully acted. Hard to believe this was based on a true story. I can't believe these women marched hundreds of miles, having nothing to eat much of the time and some of their companions dying along the way. They must have been a hardy bunch. Its too bad more people couldn't see this movie. Virginia McKenna and Peter Finch were excellent as the main characters and the rest of the supporting cast were very good too. I'm glad to have the video, but would very much like to see a DVD come out on it. The movie is in black and white but this in no way detracts from the story or the acting.
    10clanciai

    The female side of the war of "Bridge on the River Kwai"

    This is in black and white which underlines the great pathos of the story and its lost women in the war, having to wander hundreds of miles across Malaya as there is no place for them in the war of the Japanese in Asia. Yet there are a few interesting Japanese persons as well that must raise anyone's deep sympathy. The story is by Nevil Shute and as excellent as any of his outstanding novels, usually taken directly from his own experience or reality. However, the true story behind this formidable drama was about Dutch exiled ladies in Indonesia, which could be important to remember. Virginia MacKenna is always a joy to behold and here in a sarong more lovely and beautiful than ever - she and Peter Finch make the film an unforgettable experience. There was another screening of "A Town Like Alice" some 25 years later for television in many epoisodes, but it was bleak and bloodless in comparison. Here you feel the intensity of the drama and the terrible presence of the war and its implications in every scene, and it's all perfectly realistic, concentrating on the main thing. The TV series was much more extensive getting lost in unnecessary details and with less impressive actors, while this film will be a lasting monument forever.
    7dj_kennett

    A strong story makes for a good film

    A Town Like Alice is now an old film. However it has a certain directness and freshness which makes it quite watchable.

    A Town like Alice is the story of an English nurse, who is trapped in Malaya with a group of Englihs women during the Japanese invasion. As the group can't be categorised by the Japanese army into a useful pigeonhole, they are forced to walk from city to city looking for a place to be prisoners-of-war.

    The story is a strong one and the movie doesn't let the book down. Shot in excellent locations in Malaysia, the only problems are fitting the breadth of the story into a limited time.
    9tomsview

    A film like no other

    This is a moving film with a stunning performance by Virginia McKenna. It also has Peter Finch in a portrayal of what must be the quintessential Australian character of the period.

    The film is told in flashback as Virginia McKenna's character, Jean Paget, goes back to Malaya after WW2 to help the villagers who saved her life. We learn that Jean was captured there by the Japanese along with a group of other British women and children.

    They are sent from town to town on foot. However, no Japanese will take responsibility for them - they walk hundreds of miles and many die. They encounter an Australian, Joe Harman, played by Peter Finch, who finds them food and medicine. Finally, the survivors see out the rest of the war in a Malay village. After the war, Jean travels back to Malaya and then to Australia to learn of Joe's fate.

    I saw this film in a packed cinema in Sydney when it was first released in 1956. I was quite young, but there would no doubt have been many in the audience who had first-hand experience of war with the Japanese, including my father. The film resonated with Australians who did not feel great love for the Japanese at the time, mainly due to their treatment of prisoners of war.

    Also at that time, Australians were rarely depicted on the screen, but Aussie, Joe Harman, has a key role, which accorded with the idealised national character of the day, unfortunately including his use of derogatory terms for native peoples, common at the time.

    Although much of the film was shot in the studio, there was enough location shooting in Malaya and Australia to give it a feeling of authenticity.

    It is a harrowing story with many heartbreaking scenes. It vividly captures the fall of empire as the Japanese supplant the British in Malaya, and humiliate them in front of their former colonial subjects. The scenes of the women and children trudging along holding their meagre possessions or the little girl looking back as she leaves a beloved rocking horse show their comfortable lifestyles torn asunder.

    Jean Paget emerges as one of the strong characters of the group. This is such a truthful performance by Virginia McKenna who looks beautiful even though she is covered in sweat and dirt for much of the film.

    The story is fictional. It is based on Neville Shute's novel, which he based on the plight of a group of Dutch women in similar circumstances in Sumatra. However, it is possible they didn't actually have to walk everywhere. In that case does the film slander the Japanese?

    Fresh in people's minds when the film came out, was the knowledge that the Japanese had carried out a number of death marches in the Philippines and Borneo as well as atrocities on the Thailand-Burma Railroad. Japanese troops had also been involved in the massacre of prisoners of war, nurses and tens of thousands of Chinese civilians in Singapore and elsewhere.

    The events in "A Town Like Alice" may be fictionalised but they fit the modus operandi. The militaristic Japanese regime of the time looked with contempt on people who surrendered in war, and this often manifested itself in cruel treatment.

    Although the Australian-made mini-series with the charismatic Bryan Brown and luminous Helen Morse brought more of the book to the screen, I don't think it diminishes this version at all - it is still unforgettable.
    7GrandeMarguerite

    An often overlooked subject in WWII films

    I have just posted a comment on "Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence" directed by Nagisa Oshima in the early 1980s. The main originality of MCML does not lie in its subject, as other films have dealt with Prisoner-of-War camps under the Japanese rule, the most famous of them remaining "The Bridge on the River Kwai" by David Lean (1957). As MCML is a much more recent film, it might be considered as a more realistic approach to the daily life in a camp under such circumstances; yet realistic films on this subject appeared as early as in the 1950s with works like "A Town like Alice" directed by Jack Lee, which was rejected in its time by the Cannes Film Festival for its shocking content and violence — a sharp contrast with often romanticized productions where war has a glamorous aspect. "A Town like Alice" is also original for it tells war from the point of view of women, and women in conflicts are often ignored by war movies.

    It has been years now since I watched "A Town like Alice". I remember it as a good and honest film about the conflict with the Japanese in the Far East. Virginia McKenna as a British nurse and Peter Finch were both convincing. It may be not the best film on WWII, yet it has an authenticity and favors a psychological and realistic approach to the characters than can attract many viewers, not just war movies freaks.

    By the way, the title is a reference to the town of Alice Springs, where the story ends.

    Altri elementi simili

    A Town Like Alice
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    6,5
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    Tomorrow
    7,4
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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      According to the book 'The Golden Gong---Fifty years of the Rank Organisation, its films and its stars' by Quentin Falk, "While at premiere of a Disney film, 'Robin Hood' [See: Robin Hood e i compagni della foresta (1952)], he [Earl St. John] was particularly impressed by the young man who played the Sheriff of Nottingham. The name on the programme was that of Peter Finch. St. John bumped into Finch on the stairs of the theatre and invited him to come and talk business at Pinewood. Next day he gave Finch what would be a pivotal role in his burgeoning career: the Australian soldier, Joe, in La mia vita comincia in Malesia (1956).
    • Blooper
      Harry Corbett bought his Sooty puppet from a regular store---he didn't design or create it as such. It's possible therefore that Freddie might have had the same puppet before Harry Corbett gave it national fame.
    • Citazioni

      [repeated line]

      Japanese Sergeant: Japanese women walk!

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      OPENING CREDITS PROLOGUE: "The characters in this story are fictitious. The story itself however is based upon true fact."
    • Connessioni
      Featured in A Profile of 'A Town Like Alice' (2001)
    • Colonne sonore
      Joget
      (uncredited)

      Traditional Malay dance

      Arranged by Matyas Seiber

    I più visti

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    Domande frequenti17

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 1 giugno 1956 (Irlanda)
    • Paese di origine
      • Regno Unito
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Giapponese
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Rape of Malaya
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia(second unit)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Vic Films Productions
      • Rank Organisation Film Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 57 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.66 : 1

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