Helen è una bambina cieca e sordomuta che, all'età di 10 anni, viene affidata dai genitori alle cure di Anna, un'insegnante che adotta metodi inconsueti per aiutare la piccola a comunicare c... Leggi tuttoHelen è una bambina cieca e sordomuta che, all'età di 10 anni, viene affidata dai genitori alle cure di Anna, un'insegnante che adotta metodi inconsueti per aiutare la piccola a comunicare con l'esterno.Helen è una bambina cieca e sordomuta che, all'età di 10 anni, viene affidata dai genitori alle cure di Anna, un'insegnante che adotta metodi inconsueti per aiutare la piccola a comunicare con l'esterno.
- Vincitore di 2 Oscar
- 13 vittorie e 13 candidature totali
- Undetermined Role
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- Martha at Age 10
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- Admissions Officer
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- Doctor
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- Percy at Age 10
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- Annie at Age 10
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- 2nd Crone
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- Mr. Anagnos of Perkins School in Boston
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- Jimmie at Age 8
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- 1st Crone
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- 3rd Crone
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- Viney - Keller Maid
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Recensioni in evidenza
As Annie Sullivan and Helen Keller, Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke could not have been better. The battle of wills and wits between the two is engrossing, becoming quite involved and very interesting. The lengthy dining room struggle alone would make any movie worth watching - it is worthwhile even beyond the interesting action itself, as it brings out aspects of human nature and human learning that go beyond even Helen's own trials.
There is a great deal of substance to the movie that goes beyond the immediate issues and confrontations, and a significant reason for the greatness of the film is the way that Bancroft and Duke tap into the imagination of the viewer. The concept of seeing an unseen world (and the challenge of helping someone to see it) is brought out in ways that are profound yet accessible.
The two leads carry almost the whole picture, as the other characters are there primarily for Annie and Helen to play off of. Accordingly, the supporting cast keep their characters more simple, and their performances stylized and almost exaggerated, which allows Bancroft and Duke to have most of the moments of significance. The production also enhances the picture through simple but well-conceived settings, use of lighting, and other features that nicely complement the main action.
It's always rather unfortunate that movies like this one, which take a little effort to appreciate fully, are not given more attention. If you stop to consider what Helen Keller had to face in life, it is a situation far more terrifying than facing any of the cartoonish, artificial movie villains that gain so much notoriety. And if you consider the job that Annie Sullivan had to do, her accomplishment is far more impressive and worthwhile than almost any scientific discovery, feat of athletics, or military exploit.
That this movie is able to convey such themes makes it a memorable classic that is much more worthwhile than many movies that have received far more acclaim.
Until this point, Helen had no understanding of the meaning of words. This changed when Anne led her to the water pump and spelled out the word water as she pumped the water over Helen's hand. She is said to have learned thirty words the same day and eventually learned to read. In 1904 Helen graduated from Radcliffe College, becoming the first deaf-blind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree. The film could have easily descended into melodrama, but Penn keeps his focus and the result is enormously moving without being maudlin. The Miracle Worker is a miracle.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizMark Twain was the first person to refer to Anne Sullivan as "the miracle worker". Twain was a friend of Helen Keller.
- BlooperAnnie Sullivan has to look up the word discipline in a dictionary later in the film even though she's used it in a letter near the beginning; however, she remarks that she must know how to spell it before teaching it to Helen, and may have simply used her best guess in the letter since nothing was at stake.
- Citazioni
Annie Sullivan: Pity? For this tyrant? The whole house turns on her whims! Is there anything she wants she doesn't get? I'll tell you what I pity: that the sun won't rise and set for her all her life, and every day you're telling her it will! What good will your pity do when you're under the strawberries, Captain Keller?
- ConnessioniEdited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Le contrôle de l'univers (1999)
- Colonne sonoreHush, Little Baby
(uncredited)
Traditional Southern lullaby
Music adapted by Don Costa
Lyrics by Arthur Siegel
Sung by Anne Bancroft
Also played in the score
I più visti
Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 500.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 4139 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 46min(106 min)
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1