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Sommersby

  • 1993
  • T
  • 1h 54min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,3/10
24.065
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Jodie Foster and Richard Gere in Sommersby (1993)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Riproduci trailer1: 56
1 video
85 foto
Period DramaSuspense MysteryDramaMysteryRomance

Un contadino torna a casa dalla guerra civile, ma sua moglie inizia a sospettare che l'uomo sia un impostore.Un contadino torna a casa dalla guerra civile, ma sua moglie inizia a sospettare che l'uomo sia un impostore.Un contadino torna a casa dalla guerra civile, ma sua moglie inizia a sospettare che l'uomo sia un impostore.

  • Regia
    • Jon Amiel
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Daniel Vigne
    • Jean-Claude Carrière
    • Nicholas Meyer
  • Star
    • Richard Gere
    • Jodie Foster
    • Lanny Flaherty
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,3/10
    24.065
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Jon Amiel
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Daniel Vigne
      • Jean-Claude Carrière
      • Nicholas Meyer
    • Star
      • Richard Gere
      • Jodie Foster
      • Lanny Flaherty
    • 73Recensioni degli utenti
    • 31Recensioni della critica
    • 66Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 2 vittorie totali

    Video1

    Sommersby
    Trailer 1:56
    Sommersby

    Foto85

    Visualizza poster
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    + 78
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    Interpreti principali37

    Modifica
    Richard Gere
    Richard Gere
    • Jack
    Jodie Foster
    Jodie Foster
    • Laurel
    Lanny Flaherty
    Lanny Flaherty
    • Buck
    Wendell Wellman
    Wendell Wellman
    • Travis
    Bill Pullman
    Bill Pullman
    • Orin
    Brett Kelley
    • Little Rob
    William Windom
    William Windom
    • Reverend Powell
    Clarice Taylor
    Clarice Taylor
    • Esther
    Frankie Faison
    Frankie Faison
    • Joseph
    R. Lee Ermey
    R. Lee Ermey
    • Dick Mead
    • (as Ronald Lee Ermey)
    Richard Hamilton
    Richard Hamilton
    • Doc Evans
    Karen Kirschenbauer
    Karen Kirschenbauer
    • Mrs. Evans
    Carter McNeese
    • Storekeeper Wilson
    Dean Whitworth
    • Tom Clemmons
    Stan Kelly
    • John Green
    Stephanie Weaver
    • Mrs. Bundy
    Khaz Benyahmeen
    • Eli
    • (as Khaz B.)
    Joshua David McLerran
    • Boy #1
    • (as Josh McClerren)
    • Regia
      • Jon Amiel
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Daniel Vigne
      • Jean-Claude Carrière
      • Nicholas Meyer
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti73

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    Recensioni in evidenza

    stryker-5

    "I'm Thinkin', Who Is This Man Sittin' In My Kitchen?"

    A soldier comes home from the Civil War to his village, and his wife and son. The South during the Reconstruction period is an austere, impoverished place. The returning man, Jack Sommersby, quickly establishes himself as the leader of the community and sets about rebuilding the people's prosperity. But is he who he claims to be?

    Hollywood's version of the Martin Guerre legend, "Sommersby" boasts a good performance by Richard Gere and a wonderful one by Jodie Foster (as Laurel, Sommersby's wife). Until it allows itself to be deflected by an unconvincing and unnecessary murder trial, the film is a likeable and sensitive study of love and identity.

    The story moves through the seasons, from the harshness of winter in the aftermath of war to the solemnity of autumn as Jack Summersby is led away to Nashville. As the opening credits roll, Summersby is literally in the 'dead' of winter, surrounded by images of mortality. He buries a body (the real Jack?) under a pile of rocks, then walks through a cemetery. Children prod the swinging corpse of a hanged man. Hope returns in the spring, as Jack distributes land to the villagers and launches the tobacco-growing project. High summer brings the successful maturing of the crop and with it the pinnacle of Summersby's fortunes.

    The murder trial weakens the film irretrievably. It does not sit comfortably with what has preceded it, and just does not work as a courtroom drama. The ground has not been prepared for it, and so the film is obliged to lurch in an unexpected direction. Laurel is called as a surprise witness for the Defence, and Jack is startled as she approaches the stand. Is it really conceivable that Jack's attorney would adopt this strategy without having discussed it with his client?

    "Is this a court of law?" asks the prosecutor, and the viewer is inclined to wonder the same thing. No attorney would say, "I believe the prosecution has proved beyond a doubt ..." The lawyer's personal belief has no relevance at all, and it is for the jury to decide if the case has been proved, not the prosecutor. Taking a straw poll of opinions in the public gallery is utter nonsense, as is the presence of a black judge in a Southern court in the 1860's. And judges do not pronounce on guilt or innocence. Juries do that. The word 'sassy' is hardly likely to have been in currency with its modern meaning in Tennessee 130 years ago. That a defendant in a murder trial should fire his attorney then immediately cross-examine his own wife, who is HIS witness, is incredible.

    The early part of the film lays emphasis on the human cost of war. Many of the menfolk of Tennessee are maimed or mentally scarred. Sommersby explains the changes that have come over him by hinting that he has undergone some psychological trauma and personality shift.

    Laurel works in the field, trying to hoe the dirt while encumbered by her long skirts. This is a metaphor of her life as a Southern woman of the period. She married a man who neither loved nor respected her, then 'lost' him in the war. Now she has the burden of learning to love this man all over again. Just as her skirts hamper her, as a woman she is restricted socially and emotionally.

    Tiny Jodie Foster turns in a mighty performance. Her character is by turns grave, coquettish, withdrawn and affectionate - and at all times bestowed with intelligence and dignity. This is a woman who yearns to be loved, but whose painful experiences have taught her to be wary.

    Bill Pullman is good as Orin, the capable, trustworthy local man who was courting the 'widow' Laurel and had expectations of marriage until Jack showed up. His feud with Jack is thoughtfully handled. Orin helps cure the tobacco bug problem when a lesser man would have enjoyed Jack's discomfiture.

    Ultimately, the story just does not ring true. Would a whole village take a stranger for the man who grew up in its midst? And Jack's final choice (which cannot be revealed here) negates everything for which he has striven. It defies logic.
    gberke

    Sweet and noble tear jerker

    This is a sweet film with noble causes and a grand love story. I've seen it umm, 4 times? now... An improbable story, but moral, epic, just after the civil war, of an imposter southern gentleman returning to his run down plantation, wife, child, and joining all together, black and white, to bring a tobacco farm to being, against great odds, and prosperity to the town.

    But the man he is posing as must be prosecuted as a criminal... the imposter can continue the ruse and die for the crime, or confess his true identity, and undo his love, his work, his community. He must prove to the court that he is indeed Jack Sommersby, and must extract Fosters (his wife's) testimony, against her will, that he is Jack Sommersby, because as Jack, he will die. A few grand lines... when Foster must say that he is indeed her husband, that she never loved "Jack the way I loved you" and Gere, in his cell, asks her to be there at his hanging "I can do this thing if you are there."

    I've enjoyed it each time I've seen it, and it brings grand tears each time.
    7Wuchakk

    Underrated Civil War drama with Richard Gere and Jodie Foster

    Released in 1993 and directed by Jon Amiel, "Sommersby" stars Richard Gere as a Confederate soldier returning to his rundown estate in Tennessee and his wife, Laurel (Jodie Foster), after a long six years absence. Curiously, Laurel discovers that the war has changed Jack for the better. Bill Pullman plays his rival for Laurel's affections while James Earl Jones appears as a judge in the final act.

    This is such a well-done Civil War drama, taking place just after the war in 1866-1867. The story is contrived, but executed believably with convincing performances. Contrived or not, something like this COULD happen, if you reflect on it. I can't say more because it's best that you go into the movie without knowing the revelations of the final act. The first half is low-key, but it's just a foundation for the realistic thrills of the mid-point and the suspenseful drama of the closing act.

    The film runs 114 minutes and was shot in Virginia with the opening winter scene filmed at Snowshoe Mountain Ski Resort, West Virginia.

    GRADE: B+

    ADDITIONAL COMMENTARY ***SPOILER ALERT***

    A clueless reviewer criticized the film on the grounds that "this story fell a bit flat for me when Jack, for some reason, doesn't tell the same (true) story (that clarifies the identity confusion) to the court, that he does to his wife in the final jail scene."

    This is incredible because the movie plainly reveals several reasons why Jack didn't want to tell the truth that he wasn't really Jack Sommersby: (1.) The freed blacks and others who bought & farmed parts of his land would lose it; (2.) his wife & daughter would be condemned as an adulteress and a bastard child respectively; (3.) he "buried" Horace Townsend forever when he buried the real Jack Sommersby; he wasn't willing to "resurrect" that wicked loser, even at the cost of his life.

    And (4.) If jack was proved to be Horace, and was released, another court would have arrested him on the grounds that he was a liar, an impostor and a thief. That court would NOT have released him on the grounds that he had found love and done charitable things while impersonating a dead man. He would have gone to prison and possibly even died for his actual crimes.

    So dying for a cause he believed in, for people who respected him, made more sense than dying without any honor or legacy whatsoever.
    9Nat-21

    Engaging and well acted, with an intriguing plot twist

    "Sommersby" is an intriguing film that keeps the audience barely outside the scenes but close enough to be touched by them. The story, of Jack Sommersby (or so it appears) a changed man after returning to his wife and hometown years after being held captive in the Civil War, was borrowed from the French film "The Return of Martin Guerre." But apparently this one has some new twists.

    As we watch this movie, we're not quite sure what to think. The townspeople, his friends, his dog and even his own wife aren't certain this is the man who left for the war. That, and the trial toward the end of the movie, stretches credulity a bit, my minor complaints. But after all, this is the movies, and there is a pretty good story here. A real tear-jerker, for certain.

    Jodie Foster and Richard Gere carry this plot well, both putting in what I believe is some of their best work. The direction and cinematography also shine.

    In the end, this movie is all about pure love of a man for a woman, in which he literally loves her more than life itself. That may seem a bit hokey, but it's a refreshing and enduring message in an movie age in which a one-night stand passes for a long-term relationship.
    8hitchcockthelegend

    You and this child are in danger of spending eternity in everlasting damnation!

    Directed by Jon Amiel, Sommersby is adapted from the historical account of 16th Century French peasant Martin Guerre. It was previously filmed as The Return of Martin Guerre in 1982. It stars Richard Gere, Jodie Foster and Bill Pullman. Music is by Danny Elfman and cinematography by Philippe Rousselot.

    In simple terms the film is about a man (Jack Sommersby) who went off to war and was presumed dead by his wife (Laurel) and the village folk of the village where he lived. Some 9 years later he returns a changed man, back in the marital bed and a hero to the village. But then questions start to crop up and it becomes a possibility that this man may not after all be who he claims to be. Sounds bizarre for sure, yet it's a true story, and a fascinating one at that.

    For this American version we get top line production values across the board, with the film propelled with grace and skill by Gere and Foster in the lead roles of Jack and Laurel Sommersby. Director Amiel rightly uses the slow burn approach, a consideration to the art of story telling. This draws the viewer firmly into the post Civil War period and lets us get to know the principal players and their surroundings.

    The core narrative thrust is a moving romance, one consistently under pressure of a mystery to be proved or disproved. But there's also economic issues to hand, very much so, and the vile stench of racism still hangs in the air. There's a lot going on in Sommersby and it never sags because of it. Also refreshing that in spite of some critical grumblings in some quarters, the ending is potent and not very Hollywood at all.

    It's not flawless and although it's based on a true story, some suspension of disbelief is needed as regards physical appearance of Jack and his means and motives. Yet this is a lovely film, simple in story telling structure, beautifully photographed and performed, it very much feels and plays like a classic era period piece. 8/10

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      This movie is one of several fictional adaptations of a true, famous legal case of imposture from sixteenth century France. The case involved a man named Martin Guerre who, having disappeared from his Basque village in 1548, suddenly reappeared eight years later. Despite his slightly changed appearance, he convinced his family, wife, and fellow villagers that he was indeed Martin Guerre; he and his wife had two more children and he sued a paternal uncle for the claim to his father's estate. That uncle became suspicious that this returned Martin Guerre was actually an impostor named Arnaud du Tilh, and he contrived a way to have him tried for imposture. This suspicion was ultimately confirmed when the actual Martin Guerre arrived in court during du Tilh's trial. Arnaud du Tilh was convicted and hanged in September 1560.
    • Blooper
      African American men held important positions, such as the judge portrayed by James Earl Jones, during the Reconstruction period after the Civil War.
    • Citazioni

      Laurel Sommersby: You are not Jack Sommersby, so why do you keep going on pretending that you are?

      John Robert 'Jack' Sommersby: How do you know I'm not?

      Laurel Sommersby: I know because...

      John Robert 'Jack' Sommersby: How do you know?

      Laurel Sommersby: I know because...

      John Robert 'Jack' Sommersby: How do you know?

      Laurel Sommersby: I know because I never loved him the way that I love you.

      John Robert 'Jack' Sommersby: Now Laurel tell me, from the bottom of your heart. Am I your husband?

      Laurel Sommersby: Yes, you are.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon 1/The Cemetery Club/Sommersby/The Vanishing/Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey (1993)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 12 marzo 1993 (Italia)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Francia
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • A Stranger Within
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Lexington, Virginia, Stati Uniti(street scenes)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Canal+
      • New Regency Productions
      • Alcor Films
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 50.081.992 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 8.104.624 USD
      • 7 feb 1993
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 140.081.992 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 54 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby Stereo
      • Dolby SR
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.39 : 1

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