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Wonderland

  • Serie TV
  • 2000
  • 50min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,4/10
178
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Michelle Forbes, Billy Burke, Joelle Carter, Martin Donovan, Ted Levine, and Michael Jai White in Wonderland (2000)
Dramma

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaDepicting life in a mental institution from the points of view of both doctors and patients.Depicting life in a mental institution from the points of view of both doctors and patients.Depicting life in a mental institution from the points of view of both doctors and patients.

  • Star
    • Ted Levine
    • Michelle Forbes
    • Martin Donovan
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,4/10
    178
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Star
      • Ted Levine
      • Michelle Forbes
      • Martin Donovan
    • 21Recensioni degli utenti
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Episodi8

    Sfoglia gli episodi
    InizioI più votati1 stagione2000

    Foto

    Interpreti principali74

    Modifica
    Ted Levine
    Ted Levine
    • Dr. Robert Banger
    • 2000
    Michelle Forbes
    Michelle Forbes
    • Dr. Lyla Garrity
    • 2000
    Martin Donovan
    Martin Donovan
    • Dr. Neil Harrison
    • 2000
    Sharon Wilkins
    Sharon Wilkins
    • Mrs. Brown
    • 2000
    David Brown
    David Brown
    • Prison Guard
    • 2000
    Michael Jai White
    Michael Jai White
    • Dr. Derrick Hatcher
    • 2000
    Billy Burke
    Billy Burke
    • Dr. Abe Matthews
    • 2000
    Linda Emond
    Linda Emond
    • A.D.A. Strictler
    • 2000
    Michelle Barker
    • Julie McCray
    • 2000
    Joelle Carter
    Joelle Carter
    • Heather Miles
    • 2000
    Patricia Clarkson
    Patricia Clarkson
    • Tammy Banger
    • 2000
    Leland Orser
    Leland Orser
    • Wendall Rickle
    • 2000
    Rony Clanton
    • Bernard
    • 2000
    Matthew Sussman
    • Emanuel Treyhill
    • 2000
    Rafael Báez
    • 2000
    Erik Per Sullivan
    Erik Per Sullivan
    • Tucker Banger
    • 2000
    Noah Emmerich
    Noah Emmerich
    • Johnny
    • 2000
    Ken Leung
    Ken Leung
    • 2000
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti21

    7,4178
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    x310

    Welcome to Hell. Please take a number.

    Flawless writing, wonderful acting, realistic dialogue, and lots of danger - real, imagined, implied. The patients on this locked psychiatric unit are extremely ill, clearly likely to harm themselves or others because of their mental sickness. They have the psychological equivalent of cancer, and they're not gonna get better by the end of the show, folks. Many of them will die unless they get a lot of care.

    Speaking of which, the caregivers are human as well, meaning they suffer from the same maladies, albeit in smaller, more manageable (most of the time) doses. However, the writing is so good that the story never relies upon cliche: no "whacky but lovable" patients, and no "crazy shrinks". Everyone is portrayed as real humans with the same problems that you and I have to cope with. And just like in real life, sometimes you do your best but things get worse, not better.

    The first episode was as good as anything I've ever seen on TV, and better than most commercial films. Watch it and be awed...
    codella

    Wonderland: Too Good? ABC pulled the plug on a fine show.

    Imagine my disappointment earlier: I sat down to watch Wonderland via the VCR, and rather than Wonderland, I had taped some slickly-produced canned news program.

    Yes my fellow reviewers worries about Wonderland have, unfortunately come true. E! online reports that ABC has pulled the show, faced with a drop in the ratings, and an apparent campaign against the show by a group who felt that Wonderland unfairly stigmatized people afflicted with mental disorder.

    Was this show too gory? There were some scenes depicting violence and its aftermath, e.g., The shooting of bystanders in Time's Square by an actively-psychotic man; later, a struggle that ends when a pregnant psychiatrist is stabbed with a hypodermic needle which may have impacted the unborn's cognitive functioning.

    Any gore was incidental to the storyline which was intense and compelling throughout. Writing and directing were superb. The viewer is horrified by the atrocity of a killer, yet cannot help but identify with Dr. Banger's (Ted Levine of The Silence of the Lambs) guarded empathy for this man who is likely to be committed for many years to a secure psychiatric hospital.

    The staff and the patients were subject to the same stressors in life, to varying degrees. Anger, impotence, fear, self-loathing --all are possible responses to stress. When slapped by the news that his unborn child would most probably be grossly impaired, Dr. Neil Harrison (Martin Donovan), the consummate professional, nearly strangled the perpetrator. He later thought he saw his wife exposing her abdomen to this same man.

    This was the show at its most powerful. Dr. Bangor refers to this as the "dark side" of the human psyche. We all walk a line of "normalcy." At stressful times that path is narrow and razor-sharp. At such times it is our ability to adapt and to transcend that keeps us from falling off.

    Sure the shooting in Time's Square was disturbing, but slasher flicks on TNT or TBS toss gore by the bucket load, rendering this violent act all but tasteful. Viewers are made to identify with the travails of "normal," even trained people who are nonetheless subject to the same experience as their patients. This casts "sanity" in a particularly fragile light.

    This very exploration of fragility is what crystallizes Wonderland's greatness. It also may be alienating to a demographic that wants to be entertained rather than made anxious.

    Then again maybe Wonderland's ratings would have been better had some numb programming executive (speaking of cognitive impairment) not have placed a program of this magnitude in a time slot opposite ER.
    wry

    I've been there, never done that!

    I am a sufferer of major depression. I am on a medication that is very effective and am fine now with a full time job a loving relationship and a very satisfying life. However six years ago, after a suicide attempt I was admitted to the CPEP unit at Bellevue, the place that Wonderland depicts. After one day people with mental illness are diagnosed and treated with medication and a day or two later they are no longer suffering from the delusions that are so common in such a chemically imbalanced illness and are no longer violent as the patients in Wonderland were potrayed. I spent three months at Bellevue before my release and I NEVER saw anyone acting out like the patients of Wonderland. This show only continued to further the stigma that haunts all of us suffering from some form of mental illness and keeps us from finding fulfilling gainful employment. I am lucky since i work in the field of treating those with mental illness and i can understand what many are going through.

    i must add that i did enjoy some of the best acting TV has ever allowed us to see. Especially Ted Levine (Jame Gumm in Silence of the Lambs) who is one of my favorite character actors but as a first hand observer the storylines were not an accurate portrayal of the reality in the CPEP Unit at Bellevue.
    9AltonMann

    Shock Corridor meets Homicide in this superbly written, finely acted series.

    With the departure of the superb Homicide series last year, I did not expect to see another show that would be as dense with detail and as intelligently written again, never mind anytime soon. Well, it has aired only one episode so far, but Wonderland is a remarkable piece of work. The pace is faster than Homicide and the storylines are perhaps even edgier (given the setting is an urban psychiatric hospital, this was, I suppose, inevitable). It is great to see the remarkably talented Michelle Forbes working again. Ted Levine and Martin Donovan (remember Hal Hartly's Trust?) are two of the other fine actors who make up this talented ensemble cast. Like Homicide, the characters are multi-faceted, vulnerable and living on the edge in very stressful lives. The opening episode shows a central character who is pushed to an emotional breaking point by events that result in a reaction not unlike one of his patients. It is as if someone had seen Samuel Fuller's Shock Corridor and decided to make a Homicide style series out of it. If the first episode is an accurate indication, this series will be a keeper.
    Mystyglass

    I suffer from bipolar disorder...

    and severe depression and an innumerable amount of anxieties and I was not offended by this series. Sorry. And you know what I attribute this to? The mere fact that I can differentiate between the functioning mentally ill and the non-functioning mentally ill. Yes, there are both, no matter what NAMI or any other extremist group wants us to think. There are places like Bellevue. They're called state hospitals. While I can't say whether Wonderland depicted them to a -t-, I will say that I did have family in one such state hospital for a brief time and yes, there are people who act in very extreme manners. You must remember that these are the extreme cases and more often than not they cannot simply be cured by a few days of hospitilization and therapy and a prescription or two. Sometimes it takes a lot more time to find the appropriate treatments, and sometimes they simply don't have the funding to take on a single patient's case that long. And that's why it's a vicious circle, why the same people may go in and out again and again. These such people in particular were the sum of who was portrayed on "Wonderland". They were not me. They were not the kind of people that NAMI claimed to be defending. They were chronic and "non-functional". Apparently NAMI doesn't want their stories told...

    Some people complained that a man was having a silly hallucination of a tiny rhino walking across the floor. They said that it was a silly stereotype, the mentally ill having hallucinations. Has anyone seen "A Beautiful Mind"? Why didn't anyone bitch about that? Probably because Ron Howard was given enough time to tell the whole story, to explain what fueled it. Unlike the ill-fated "Wonderland", which wasn't given enough time to tell that character's story. It was wildly misjudged and done a great disservice by getting stopped in its tracks. And for that, I think that NAMI shot itself in the foot. I don't think that isolating a whole segment of the mentally ill population, (no matter how big or small), is going to make their stories go away...or help us get any closer to understanding them.

    If they really wanted a sympathetic portrayal of the functioning mentally ill in the media, they should've just shut their mouths about this show and waited for it. Because you know it's only a matter of time since it's becoming more and more apparent how very many of us are walking around.

    This show was quality. I only saw 2 episodes and I feel cheated. I *loved* the Ted Levine character and wanted to know what happened with his kids. I wanted to know what happened to that woman's baby, how she dealt with her trauma and if she got back to work. While not a pleasant show to watch, it sure felt dirt real and rough. As it should have...

    I hope they release all the episodes on DVD someday.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Lee Orser as Wendall Rickle is asked if he had seen anyone read their Miranda rights, and he responds "Like NYPD Blue". He portrayed 3 different characters of 3 different episodes of NYPD Blue.
    • Citazioni

      Dr. Robert Banger: When the pressures of modern society become too great for a person, when one's chemical dynamic becomes such that they are unbalanced, that they cease painting within the lines, they come to us. These are the people that society would prefer just go away -- the shadow people. The shadow people that project upon us their shadow and remind us just how tenuous mental health is. Our worst fears. They remind us how easy it can be to slip.

    • Connessioni
      Followed by Wonderland: Pilot (2000)

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    Domande frequenti17

    • How many seasons does Wonderland have?Powered by Alexa

    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 30 marzo 2000 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Bellevue
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • New York, New York, Stati Uniti
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Touchstone Television
      • Imagine Television
      • Hostage Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 50min
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Stereo
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.33 : 1

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