Una ragazza viene mandata a vivere con lo zio nella sua tenuta quando i genitori muoiono. Laggiù scopre molti intrighi, storie e segreti di famiglia e bagaglio personale. In particolare, un ... Leggi tuttoUna ragazza viene mandata a vivere con lo zio nella sua tenuta quando i genitori muoiono. Laggiù scopre molti intrighi, storie e segreti di famiglia e bagaglio personale. In particolare, un bambino urlante e... un giardino segreto.Una ragazza viene mandata a vivere con lo zio nella sua tenuta quando i genitori muoiono. Laggiù scopre molti intrighi, storie e segreti di famiglia e bagaglio personale. In particolare, un bambino urlante e... un giardino segreto.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 2 vittorie totali
- Mr. Bromley
- (as Mathew Boulton)
- Muriel
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Charles, the Butler
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Raven
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Also, I have to quarrel with the other post, where someone asserts that the movie is badly dated. Quite the contrary, the story zips along at a refreshingly swift pace and never lags. The movie should hardly be faulted (and in fact should be commended) for not having flashy MTV style edits every five seconds or a bombastic score. It's a very rewarding experience for both children and adults alike.
It's a wonderful allegorical tale about how one has to give in life in order to receive. It also is about the maturing of a couple of really bratty kids.
Margaret O'Brien is a child of the British Raj in India, quite used to having things her own way as her parents are a big-shot and his lady. But when both are taken away by an epidemic, she has to go back to Great Britain to live with an uncle, Herbert Marshall for whom the mildest thing that can be said is eccentric.
She's given rather restrictive use of the vast house, though the grounds are her's to roam with the exception of a garden that is locked up. Many years ago Marshall's wife has died there and it's her death and the circumstances thereof that have driven him to the brink of dissolution and insanity.
O'Brien also finds she has a cousin roughly her age who is bedridden with paralysis in Dean Stockwell. Stockwell has not born his affliction well and in fact is a bigger brat than she is. Dealing with him has forced her to confront her own misbehavior.
A large part of Stockwell's problems are his doctor and caregiver in the persons of doctor Aubrey Mather and housekeeper Gladys Cooper. They like having him dependent on them, it increases their position in the house, as for Mather, he's making a whole living off Marshall treating his child.
The younger brother of maid Elsa Lanchester, Brian Roper, also becomes a friend to both as they discover the locked up and neglected garden and use it as a playground. With the special love that children bring to something, interesting things start happening there.
Most of the cast are familiar names to the American cinema, all the adults are card carrying members of the British colony in Hollywood. But Brian Roper was imported from across the pond because of the fact that he spoke with a Yorkshire brogue, he was native to that part of England. It does lend an air of authenticity to the film. Roper had a fair career for about a decade, mostly in his native country. I believe this is his one and only American film appearance.
The Secret Garden is a fine adaption of the children's novel, maybe the best one ever done. The adults are hard pressed in this one to even get their innings in as the kids totally steal this film.
Along the way she finds love in friendship, a love that was never shown to her by her parents.
The book on which this film is based by Frances Hodgson Burnett, was my favourite book as a child and I've given many copies to children over the years. This movie is quite a perfect replica of the book, apart from the injection of a totally unnecessary "crime" element. The characters are multi-dimensional, a wounded father flailing against the world and projecting illness on to his son. The son, Colin, played by a very young and handsome Dean Stockwell, in turn reacting with tantrums and hate to the world around him.
Mary has her own issues, feeling ugly and unloved due to her past in India.
Unhappiness reigns in the Manor House headed up by Herbert Marshall playing Colin's father - a brilliant performance.
There is a teeming cast of well known names to add to the flavour of the film: Dame Gladys Cooper as the housekeeper; Elsa Lanchester as the maid; Reginald Owen as the mysterious gardener.
The black and white filming adds a morbid darkness with the colour sequences in the garden contrasting beautifully.
The only flaw was the settish nature of the scenes, even the gardens are "back lot".
But these quibbles aside, some movies one can get immersed in afresh with each viewing. This is one that takes you in and doesn't let up till the final very satisfying frame.
9 out of 10.
The book (which I understood was a "girls" book when growing up) and the film have escaped me all these years, until today when I watched it via television off of the Turner Classic Movies screen.
It is fable, metaphor and dark tale all wrapped up into a story that promises tears and heart thumping wonderment that truth can be told. This film fulfills a contract with the viewer that while life may seem to be all falsehood, lies and deceit, that is not so. It is verity that courses through the veins and sometimes it is only a secret undone, or a truth revealed that can redeem life and restore happiness.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThere are several moments when Mary (Margaret O'Brien) refers to her servant in India. When watching the film, one hears the word "servant", but Mary's mouth is clearly forming the word "Aya" as in other versions of The Secret Garden.
- BlooperWhen Mary comes down to breakfast the first morning (after having dressed herself, possibly for the first time), her shoes are laced incorrectly, and her dress is buttoned wrong. When the camera changes angles an instant later, her dress and shoes are fastened correctly.
- Citazioni
Martha: My brother Dickon will be coming up to see thee.
Mary Lennox: Your brother?
Martha: Aye, thou'll like Dickon. What a one he is for growing things and the animals. Half lives on it, he does, almost like an animal himself.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Some of the Best: Twenty-Five Years of Motion Picture Leadership (1949)
- Colonne sonoreHindu Song of Love
(uncredited)
Written by Lal Chand Mehra
Performed by Margaret O'Brien with singing voice provided by Marni Nixon.
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 32 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1