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La generazione rubata

Titolo originale: Rabbit-Proof Fence
  • 2002
  • T
  • 1h 34min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,4/10
31.143
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Laura Monaghan, Everlyn Sampi, and Tianna Sansbury in La generazione rubata (2002)
Trailer
Riproduci trailer1: 25
3 video
26 foto
Coming-of-AgeDesert AdventureDocudramaPeriod DramaSurvivalAdventureBiographyDrama

Nel 1931, tre ragazze aborigene dopo essere state allontanate con la forza dalle loro case per essere addestrate come domestiche, scappano e si mettono in viaggio attraverso l'Outback.Nel 1931, tre ragazze aborigene dopo essere state allontanate con la forza dalle loro case per essere addestrate come domestiche, scappano e si mettono in viaggio attraverso l'Outback.Nel 1931, tre ragazze aborigene dopo essere state allontanate con la forza dalle loro case per essere addestrate come domestiche, scappano e si mettono in viaggio attraverso l'Outback.

  • Regia
    • Phillip Noyce
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Doris Pilkington
    • Christine Olsen
  • Star
    • Everlyn Sampi
    • Tianna Sansbury
    • Kenneth Branagh
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,4/10
    31.143
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Phillip Noyce
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Doris Pilkington
      • Christine Olsen
    • Star
      • Everlyn Sampi
      • Tianna Sansbury
      • Kenneth Branagh
    • 269Recensioni degli utenti
    • 47Recensioni della critica
    • 80Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 23 vittorie e 25 candidature totali

    Video3

    Rabbit-Proof Fence
    Trailer 1:25
    Rabbit-Proof Fence
    Rabbit-Proof Fence
    Trailer 1:25
    Rabbit-Proof Fence
    Rabbit-Proof Fence
    Trailer 1:25
    Rabbit-Proof Fence
    Rabbit-Proof Fence
    Trailer 1:09
    Rabbit-Proof Fence

    Foto26

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    + 20
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    Interpreti principali43

    Modifica
    Everlyn Sampi
    Everlyn Sampi
    • Molly Craig
    Tianna Sansbury
    Tianna Sansbury
    • Daisy Craig Kadibill
    Kenneth Branagh
    Kenneth Branagh
    • A.O. Neville
    Laura Monaghan
    • Gracie Fields
    David Gulpilil
    David Gulpilil
    • Moodoo
    Ningali Lawford
    Ningali Lawford
    • Maud - Molly's Mother
    Myarn Lawford
    • Molly's Grandmother
    Deborah Mailman
    Deborah Mailman
    • Mavis
    Jason Clarke
    Jason Clarke
    • Constable Riggs
    Natasha Wanganeen
    • Nina, Dormitory Boss
    Garry McDonald
    Garry McDonald
    • Mr. Neal at Moore River
    Roy Billing
    Roy Billing
    • Police Inspector
    Lorna Lesley
    • Miss Thomas
    • (as Lorna Leslie)
    Celine O'Leary
    • Miss Jessop
    Kate Roberts
    • Matron at Moore River
    Tracy Monaghan
    • Moodoo's Daughter
    Tamara Flanagan
    • Olive, Escaped Girl
    David Ngoombujarra
    • Kangaroo Hunter
    • Regia
      • Phillip Noyce
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Doris Pilkington
      • Christine Olsen
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti269

    7,431.1K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7raymond-15

    Top marks to the director

    This film has quite a few remarkable features. First of all is its title which is rather unusual and immediately grabs one's interest. Next there is the fence itself which runs for thousands of miles to protect what few green plants there are in these desert regions from the voracious appetites of millions of wild rabbits. This fence plays an important role in this true story. Then there is the diector who not only scoured the continent to find three suitable aboriginal girls to play theleads but moulded these inexperienced beginners into the believable characters of Molly, Daisy and Gracie. The director Phillip Noyce has achieved remarkable success in creating three good little performers and should be given full credit for his difficult task.

    For those who do not know the desert regions of Australia, it must be said that the "outback" country is harsh and cruel and can only be crossed by those with experience...those with a knowledge of the land. I think the camera makes it clear that the hostile environment is very much like a fence in itself...almost impossible to cross. All the more remarkable therefore that these girls accomplished what they set out to do. May be it was a reckless decision they made but thanks to the fence they found their way back to family and friends.

    The film is largely a record of the long trek and the manner in which the children are able to survive. There are not many dramatic moments on their journey south. The children are mainly concerned with avoiding the blacktracker who is following them. The most unforgettable scene comes early in the film when the children are forcibly torn from their mothers. This is truly heart-wrenching stuff.

    This thoughtful presentation is worth watching. It is part of Australian history.
    klook32

    Wonderful story about the transcendence of the human spirit

    I've seen several movies recently ("Adaptation," "The Hours," "Bowling for Columbine," "City of God," etc.), and "Rabbit-Proof Fence" is the best of the bunch. It's a simple story, but a very moving one. In particular, the performances by the young leads, the beautiful cinematography, and the wise, uncluttered script made this a strong cinematic experience for me. Kenneth Branagh was convincing as the racial purity zealot who manages the whole forced removal scheme. I also really enjoyed the subtle changes we see in the mysterious character of The Tracker (played with wonderfully restrained power by David Gulpilil), as his dogged pursuit of the girls eventually gives way to a dawning admiration. And to cap it all off, the closing real-life footage and text postscript leaves the audience feeling simultaneously devastated and triumphant. Wow.
    9DukeEman

    What a pleasure it was to see Philip Noyce use his visual storytelling skills on a humane story.

    This powerful film follows the journey of three young aboriginal girls who are taken from their family and forced to assimilate into an empty culture by the white settlers of Australia. This is known as the "STOLEN GENERATION", a dark period in Australian history which the current prime minister of Australia refuses to say sorry for the past atrocities. But this is not to say that this film preaches or manipulates emotions for political gain. No! It just tells the story with powerful images that allows the viewer to enter the torment of the stolen generation. Dialogue is minimal as our heroes are taken from their family and driven to the other side of Australia. But their will and instinct to be with their strong culture has the girls escape the camp prison and follow the rabbit-proof fence back home. The rabbit proof fence was built down the centre of Australia to contain the plague of rabbits from entering farm land. It was this white-man built fence that lead the girls back home.

    As for all journeys, they are filled with internal conflict and confrontations with strangers. These confrontations with certain people show the diverse group of settlers in Australia. Not all were ignorant but most were repressed and abided to the harsh cultured laws. For instance, the girls arrive at a farmstead and are given clothing and food by a white woman. The motherly instinct of this woman understood that the girls had to be with their mothers. But at the same token the farm woman could not jeopardise her own family by looking after the girls or else it would have brought trouble. It was wonderful scenes like these that was played out visually without having to dumb it down with words. As human beings we understand these actions and need no explaining.

    The most interesting relationship was the one between the aboriginal tracker in search of the girls. He could sense the persistence of these girls to get home by making it difficult for him to track them down. This he respected and slightly dropped his guard. Once again, a string of images tell of this distant relationship between tracker and girls.

    The images also became so strong during the scene when the girls were taken from their mothers in a horrific manner. I doubt there will be a dry eye during that scene. This hooks you in as you then become the spirit of their journey back home.

    Only by the performances of the girls do these scenes work because they are so natural and heartfelt. Children who overplay their role just become cute but those who underplay and rely on emotions of the situation deliver a powerhouse performance that a trained actor may sometimes find difficult to achieve. At first the name of a high calibre actor - such as Kenneth Branagh - in an Australian film warns you where the limelight will shine. But Kenneth just took a step back and become another important confrontational figure in the journey.

    A bonus is the music by Peter Gabriel. It is a mixture of his famous trademark of world music infused with that of the Aboriginal. It soars and plays with the emotions, maybe a little too much but when you are dealing with a thousand year old culture that has music as its central universe, then you may be able to understand that the overpowerful music is just an extension of that.

    Congratulations to all who were brave enough to bring a project of this strength to the screen. And for those who may wonder how I saw the film prior to its release, lets just say I was lucky enough to be at the right place at the right time. And No! I'm not tied to the project in any way because I don't sell out that easily.
    Philby-3

    Phil Noyce gives us film poetry, not propaganda

    MILD SPOILER AHEAD: This is the 200th film I have reviewed for IMDb and one of the most satisfying. Phil Noyce has produced here a piece of cinematic poetry when it could have easily been tendentious agit-prop. The story from the 1930s of three half-cast aboriginal girls walking 2000 km of Western Australia to escape the clutches of white assimilationists is seen through their frame of reference. We see the harsh beauty of the countryside as they do, not an alien landscape but as their back yard. They have all been brought up in the desert and together know how to survive, a point eventually realised by their pursuers, who then lie in wait at their destination.

    The three young girls, Mollie, Grace and Daisy, are stunningly portrayed by Everlyn Sampi, Tianna Sainsbury and Laura Monaghan. Molly, at 14 the oldest, has the largest part but the three of them function together as if they really were sisters. Their mother and grandmother , played by Ningali Lawson and Myana Lawson (daughter and mother in real life) are equally convincing, as is David Gulpilil as the relentless black tracker.

    The most difficult role in the film is that of A O Neville (Mr Devil, as the aborigines called him), Chief Protector of Aborigines, a sincere and energetic advocate of the monstrous policy which resulted in a generation or more of half-cast children being removed from their families. It would be easy to pillory Neville as a monster, but Kenneth Branagh manages to give us a rounded picture of a man who was not inhumane, who tried to advance what he saw as the welfare of his charges despite lack of money and enormous logistical problems (not to mention an unco-operative police force). Had it not been for these obstacles the aboriginality of Australia would probably have been reduced to a few scattered reserves in the deserts run as freak shows for tourists.

    Some critics of the armchair lefty variety have criticised the movie as not being political enough, and its true there's plenty of room for righteous (or leftist) indignation on the topic of the stolen generation, but I think a more overt political message would have diminished it. Imagine say, if John Pilger had made this film. Instead we have a near-classic. Never I have I seen the visual power of the Australian landscape better depicted, and seldom have I seen a better celebration of the human spirit. And this is a true story. The real Molly and Daisy take their bows at the end. Things didn't quite work out for them the way they might have, but they survived and stayed with their people.
    7Chris_Docker

    Statement movie about a bad chapter in Australian history

    Official policy between 1910 and 1970 in Australia allowed half-caste Aborigine children to be forcibly removed from their families and incarcerated ‘for their own' good in training schools where their were educated to become fitting servants for white families. This institutionalised eugenics, still recent enough to be remembered by its victims, is still a controversial issue in Australia where the PM John Howard refuses to give an official apology. The film has been doing very well in Australia. The story follows three such girls who are forcibly re-located but escape, and follow the ‘rabbit-proof fence' on a 1500 mile journey back home. The title itself seems to echo not only the yellow brick road of the Wizard of Oz (another journey to reclaim one's wholeness) but the fence that was erected to contain animals – which is just how the Aborigine children are treated, albeit with the best intentions. The story was adapted from a book by the daughter of the youngest surviving half-cast Aborigine portrayed in the film – the actual child actors had mostly never seen a motion picture before let alone acted in one.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Everlyn Sampi (Molly Craig) ran away twice during filming. In one instance, she was found in a phone booth, trying to buy tickets back to Broome.
    • Blooper
      The three girls Molly, Gracie and Daisy were not taken by surprise and removed by force from Jigalong. The violent removal scene in the film is entirely fictional. The girls' mothers were informed beforehand they were to travel with Constable Riggs and, without any protest, they acquiesced in the decision. The girls left Jigalong on horseback, not locked in a motor car.
    • Citazioni

      Daisy Kadibill: [after Molly lifts Daisy up to a bird's nest to gather some eggs to eat] Three of them!

      Molly Craig: Perfect. One for you, one for me, and one for both of us!

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      The painting songs sung by the Walpiri, Amatjere and Wangajunka women were not sacred songs, but were songs able to be performed in public.
    • Connessioni
      Edited from A Steam Train Passes (1974)
    • Colonne sonore
      Ngankarrparni
      (Sky Blue Reprise) (2002)

      Written by Peter Gabriel

      Featured by The Blind Boys of Alabama, Myarn Lawford (as Myarn) and Ningali Lawford

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 22 novembre 2002 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Australia
    • Sito ufficiale
      • Hanway Films
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Aborigeno
    • Celebre anche come
      • Rabbit-Proof Fence
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Adelaide, Australia Meridionale, Australia
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Rumbalara Films
      • The Australian Film Commission
      • Australian Film Finance Corporation (AFFC)
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 6.000.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 6.199.600 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 88.352 USD
      • 1 dic 2002
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 16.220.968 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 34 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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