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Il ponte sul fiume Kwai

Titolo originale: The Bridge on the River Kwai
  • 1957
  • T
  • 2h 41min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
8,1/10
243.779
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
POPOLARITÀ
2319
117
William Holden in Il ponte sul fiume Kwai (1957)
After settling his differences with a Japanese PoW camp commander, a British colonel co-operates to oversee his men's construction of a railway bridge for their captors - while oblivious to a plan by the Allies to destroy it.
Riproduci trailer3: 07
4 video
83 foto
AvventuraAvventura nella giunglaDrammaEpica di guerraGuerra

I prigionieri di guerra britannici costruiscono un ponte ferroviario sul fiume Kwai per i loro rapitori giapponesi, ignari dei piani degli Alleati per distruggerlo.I prigionieri di guerra britannici costruiscono un ponte ferroviario sul fiume Kwai per i loro rapitori giapponesi, ignari dei piani degli Alleati per distruggerlo.I prigionieri di guerra britannici costruiscono un ponte ferroviario sul fiume Kwai per i loro rapitori giapponesi, ignari dei piani degli Alleati per distruggerlo.

  • Regia
    • David Lean
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Pierre Boulle
    • Carl Foreman
    • Michael Wilson
  • Star
    • William Holden
    • Alec Guinness
    • Jack Hawkins
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    8,1/10
    243.779
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    POPOLARITÀ
    2319
    117
    • Regia
      • David Lean
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Pierre Boulle
      • Carl Foreman
      • Michael Wilson
    • Star
      • William Holden
      • Alec Guinness
      • Jack Hawkins
    • 412Recensioni degli utenti
    • 117Recensioni della critica
    • 88Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Film più votato #174
    • Vincitore di 7 Oscar
      • 30 vittorie e 7 candidature totali

    Video4

    The Bridge on the River Kwai -- Trailer
    Trailer 3:07
    The Bridge on the River Kwai -- Trailer
    Unsung Asian American Pacific Islander Heroes of Film History
    Clip 5:25
    Unsung Asian American Pacific Islander Heroes of Film History
    Unsung Asian American Pacific Islander Heroes of Film History
    Clip 5:25
    Unsung Asian American Pacific Islander Heroes of Film History
    The Bridge On The River Kwai
    Clip 1:17
    The Bridge On The River Kwai
    The Bridge On The River Kwai
    Clip 1:55
    The Bridge On The River Kwai

    Foto83

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    Interpreti principali22

    Modifica
    William Holden
    William Holden
    • Shears
    Alec Guinness
    Alec Guinness
    • Colonel Nicholson
    Jack Hawkins
    Jack Hawkins
    • Major Warden
    Sessue Hayakawa
    Sessue Hayakawa
    • Colonel Saito
    James Donald
    James Donald
    • Major Clipton
    Geoffrey Horne
    Geoffrey Horne
    • Lieutenant Joyce
    André Morell
    André Morell
    • Colonel Green
    • (as Andre Morell)
    Peter Williams
    • Captain Reeves
    John Boxer
    • Major Hughes
    Percy Herbert
    Percy Herbert
    • Grogan
    Harold Goodwin
    Harold Goodwin
    • Baker
    Ann Sears
    Ann Sears
    • Nurse
    Heihachirô Ôkawa
    • Captain Kanematsu
    • (as Henry Okawa)
    Keiichirô Katsumoto
    • Lieutenant Miura
    • (as Keiichiro Katsumoto, K. Katsumoto)
    M.R.B. Chakrabandhu
    • Yai
    Vilaiwan Seeboonreaung
    • Siamese Girl
    Ngamta Suphaphongs
    • Siamese Girl
    Javanart Punynchoti
    • Siamese Girl
    • Regia
      • David Lean
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Pierre Boulle
      • Carl Foreman
      • Michael Wilson
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti412

    8,1243.7K
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    Riepilogo

    Reviewers say 'The Bridge on the River Kwai' is acclaimed for its performances, especially Alec Guinness, and its epic cinematography by David Lean. The film explores themes of pride, morality, and cultural clashes during wartime. However, it is criticized for historical inaccuracies and romanticizing a Japanese POW camp, which some argue dishonors real POW experiences. Opinions on its length and narrative vary, though many still consider it a classic for its artistic and emotional impact.
    Generato dall’IA a partire dal testo delle recensioni degli utenti

    Recensioni in evidenza

    9melindaparkes

    Tension-building

    At first, the stretched out first half of THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI. felt like a flaw, but the movie's second half made me reconsider this. The plot shifts focus, and concentrates on an escaped Prisoner Of War, who fled from the camp and becomes part of a team sent back in to go and blow up the bridge. Suddenly, during the part of his recovery at a military hospital, the screenplay injects quite a bit of humor (the conversation between Warden and his superior officers about him not receiving parachute-training was a wonderful highlight) and from then on, when their mission starts, the film gets much more exciting. It made me appreciate the first hour more for the establishing reasons it was used for, and also because - to my surprise - the shifting in tone and pace worked wonders.

    There's so much you could go into if you're looking to praise this film. Needless to mention what a fine performance Alec Guinness and other cast members gave, so I'll just point out how impressed I was when I saw the movie's climax. They way the script builds up to it, is one thing. Taking the time to lay out a strategy and incorporating the notion that this whole mission might even go terribly wrong at one point, successfully increases tension during those final scenes. But the fact that the filmmakers completely destroyed a real bridge and a real train...? No use of miniatures or other special effects. Now which movies made today would actually have the courage to show us something like that? Simply none. Those days are over.

    The only thing I would have preferred, is having seen the first half of the film injected with a slightly more grim mood, because frankly, that cheerful (and very famous) whistle-tune of the prisoners and some of the fanfare-esquire parts of the musical score got on my nerves a bit. I'll just blame that on the fact that this foremost still is a Hollywood movie. And that's just the way anyone will have to take this film, regardless it was based on (and altered) real facts of war.
    10Wormtongue1

    A powerful film experience

    I heard a film critic once say that there really aren't "war movies"; there are only "anti-war" movies. I'm still not sure what I think of that claim, but having seen - The Bridge on the River Kwai- enough times in the past several years, I think I'm persuaded that it's at least half right. -Kwai-, I believe, is both a "war" and "anti-war" movie, and, in my view, it succeeds admirably at both.

    There is almost no element of -Kwai- that is not praise-worthy. David Lean's direction is tight and evocative. The cinematography is great (even though the color seems increasingly drained in film versions that I have seen). The acting is top-notch. I honestly believe that this is Alec Guiness's best performance, and Sessue Hayakawa is also highly sympathetic and believable. William Holden and Jack Hawkins round out the cast nicely.

    The musical score is also right on. Simply put, -Kwai- is an excellently constructed film made by people who obviously cared a great deal about it. As a result, the viewer comes to care a great deal about it as well.

    Clearly -Kwai- is an anti-war film. There is no glorification here. War is brutal, period. It's brutality is not captured here in terms of gory carnage or senseless battles. Instead, the psychological dimension of brutality comes across clearly. Yet, -Kwai- also shows the resilience of the human spirit as well as its complexity. One is left wondering if participation in World War II not only psychologically brutalized the characters played by Guiness, Hayakawa, and Holden but also if it simultaneously uplifted them. The paradox is striking to me each time I view this film. War can act both as a positive and negative catalyst, and it can do both of these things at the same instant.

    So, is -The Bridge on the River Kwai- a war movie or an anti-war movie? I think Lean clearly preferred the latter, but the subject matter and his approach to it may have landed somewhere in between.

    Regardless, -Kwai- is a fantastic film experience and is not to be missed. It is, simply put, my very favorite film--bar none.
    8calspers

    "It's a matter of principle" - timeless direction by David Lean

    "The Bridge on the River Kwai" is a prinoner-of-war drama at its best, masterfully directed by David Lean.

    Amazing direction, and the whole approach to making this film is timeless - a study in being ahead of its time. Stunning set pieces and production design - such and effort was put into this. Fantastic cinematography, filled to the brim with pitch-perfect pans, wide-shots, and tracking-shots. Intense and dramatic score, deservedly receiving one of the total of seven Academy Awards. Brilliant cast and in particular Alec Guinness, who perfectly portrays a man of honour.

    What is a big shame is the way Colonel Philip Toosey - the original colonel, portrayed through Nicholson - was misrepresented, in that he actually acted very differently and much more courageously than in the film.

    Nonetheless, as a look into the historic event that took place in 1943 Burma, it is absolutely brilliant, and although the film does not carry loads of emotional moments, it is technically excellent, and greatly entertaining.

    Highly recommended.
    Local Hero

    A true classic, despite one disturbing aspect

    In my opinion, David Lean is one of the cinema's greatest directors, in the highest pantheon along with the likes of Kurosawa, Welles, De Sica, and Bergman. Lean's "Lawrence of Arabia" and his vastly underrated "A Passage to India" are unmitigated masterpieces, and some of his 'smaller' films, such as "Summertime," "Great Expectations," and "Brief Encounter" are true gems.

    "The Bridge on the River Kwai" should justly be grouped with "Lawrence" and "India," as all three are sweeping in scope, and all three are some of the most thematically ambitious films ever made, reflecting a mature filmmaker at the peak of his craft. Like "Lawrence," "Kwai" does not flinch for a moment while it forces the viewer to gaze deep into the chasm of the human condition, and it is not an easy film to take in, as it presents us with profoundly symbolic (archetypal, you might say) character types, most of whom elicit both admiration and repulsion, sympathy and frustration. And while the film explores these character themes at length, it is ultimately content to leave the conflicts unresolved, happy simply to present us with the Hamlet-like paradoxes that are the human condition in all its glory and stupidity.

    If there is any clear, unequivocal message that can be gleaned from "Kwai," it is an ode in praise of stoic virtue and the struggle for dignity and meaning in the face of a hostile universe-- in this case, in the face of an inhuman and absurd war. However, ironically, it is in this very aspect that the film, in my opinion, has its greatest failing. In retrospect, it would seem that in order to distill the film's philosophical elements down to universal themes, and perhaps in order to make the story palatable to 1950s audiences (and more Oscar-worthy?), the film greatly tones down the very inhumanity of the historical situation it portrays. In reality, the Japanese were perfectly capable of engineering their own bridges and, far more importantly, the building of the Burma-Thailand Railroad was an atrocity so vast and inhuman that it can only be rightly compared with the Nazi Holocaust and the Khmer Rouge Genocide. The true "stiff upper lip" displayed by the surviving prisoners-of-war from that hell in the jungle was not an insistence that a bridge be built right if it is to be built at all, etc.; the true "stiff upper lip" was mere survival itself, as thousands upon thousands were dying of starvation, overwork, constant beatings, summary executions, disease and exposure. While it is true that not every film about war needs to be "Shoah," "Schindler's List," or "The Killing Fields," and "Kwai" should be viewed on its own terms, as a film solely about the themes and characters it has chosen to depict; nevertheless, by so greatly downplaying the horrors of the actual historical situation it portrays, the film ultimately does a great disservice to the hundreds of thousands of people of several nationalities who suffered and died in the building of this monstrosity of a railroad. While it seems to me that the intentions of the filmmakers were noble, that Lean sought to explore the struggle of the human spirit under the greatest adversity, the film's light treatment of the still-seldom-discussed topic of Japanese war crimes inadvertently trivializes that very struggle.

    Nonetheless, I still feel that "Kwai" is an amazing cinematic achievement in its own right. And while it would only be with heavy reservation that I place it on a list of "greatest films," it does manage to squeak onto my hypothetical Top 100.
    9Sickfrog

    Far Ahead of Its Time

    First off, what is so amazing about this film is that, for the time that it was made, how modern it looks. David Lean certainly had the eye of any modern director and managed to direct a visual masterpiece at a time when many films were still being shot in black and white.

    William Holden gives one of his finest performances as a cynic of warfare , citing for us the insanity and absurdity that the combatants often convey. And he hates the war, but he cannot avoid been thrown back into it again and again. We wish he could stay on the beach with his nurse lover, but he is a man destined for a tragic doom for his country, whether he wants to or not.

    Alec Guiness also delivers a fine performance as a bold general whose own pride is, at the same time, his most noble quality as well as his greatest fault. He is uncompromising, yet when the Japanese submit to his demands, he begins overseeing the construction of the bridge with great esteem. Eventually, for him, the bridge becomes a manifestation of his belief of the superiority of the British Army, which he follows like a religion. And in putting all his pride into this bridge, he loses sight of even the British's own true agenda. Truly, his sense of overwhelming honor is, at the same time, his downfall in a descent to a loss of morality, and a sense of good and evil.

    And yes, by the end of this film, we learn a great lesson of the horrors of war. Not only does it take the lives of many good men, but the utter failure and despair that accompany it make it an unbearable existence. And this message has only recently been re-evaluated with the also-brilliant masterpiece "Saving Private Ryan." But, keep in mind that it took forty years to regain the power that this film inspired so long ago.

    Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

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    • Quiz
      Colonel Saito was inspired by Major Risaburo Saito, who, unlike the character portrayed in this movie, was said by some to be one of the most reasonable and humane of all of the Japanese prison camp commandants, usually willing to negotiate with the P.O.W.s in return for their labor. Such was the respect between Saito and Lieutenant Colonel Toosey (upon whom Colonel Nicholson was based), that Toosey spoke up on Saito's behalf at the war crimes tribunal after the war, saving him from the gallows. Ten years after Toosey's 1975 death, Saito made a pilgrimage to England to visit his grave.
    • Blooper
      Japan was not a signatory of the Geneva Conventions until 1953, therefore there was no expectation by Allied prisoners of being treated in accordance with them. In fact, the Japanese mistreatment of prisoners of war led to the review and update of the conventions in 1949.
    • Citazioni

      Colonel Nicholson: What have I done?

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      And introducing Geoffrey Horne
    • Versioni alternative
      Outside of what was previously mentioned in the 1992 stereo remix, the Atmos track on the 4K release adds even more new sound effects on top of what was already added in the older remix.
    • Connessioni
      Edited into Il ponticello sul fiume dei guai (1958)
    • Colonne sonore
      Colonel Bogey March
      (1914) (uncredited)

      Music by Kenneth Alford

      Arranged by Malcolm Arnold

      Whistlers trained by John Scott

      Whistled by Alec Guinness with British Prisoners of War

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 28 marzo 1958 (Italia)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Regno Unito
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Giapponese
      • Tailandese
    • Celebre anche come
      • El puente sobre el río Kwai
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Ambepussa, Sri Lanka
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Horizon Pictures (II)
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 3.000.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 27.200.000 USD
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 27.201.366 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      2 ore 41 minuti
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby Atmos
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.55 : 1

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