VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,3/10
4486
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaMona Gray is a 20-year-old loner who turned to math for salvation as a child after her father became ill. As an adult she now teaches the subject and helps her students through their own cri... Leggi tuttoMona Gray is a 20-year-old loner who turned to math for salvation as a child after her father became ill. As an adult she now teaches the subject and helps her students through their own crises.Mona Gray is a 20-year-old loner who turned to math for salvation as a child after her father became ill. As an adult she now teaches the subject and helps her students through their own crises.
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Yeah, main character was called many times weirdo - by young children, which teacher she was. That self was weird too - don't think that it is something happening often in some elementary school, in any country.
And here is main problem with this movie - overdone, to make some dramatic effect, but just in wrong, unrealistic way. Worst was that bringing of axe in classroom - and yes, those who expected that there will be something there with that axe were right - sadly - that was just way too stoopid. And clearly it is on writers. Little less on direction and I can not blame actors, except that took roles in this .
Well, I guess that Jessica Alba wanted some more serious role, without being sexy and like. But whole thing works not as comedy - really little funny moments. As drama it is overdone, unrealistic. Math is not only numbers and adding, subtract - but there are probably people which really try to explain everything with numbers.
Well, message is clear, despite all flaws. I will not write about it here.
With little more effort by writers, maybe with some feedback to them this could be much better.
And here is main problem with this movie - overdone, to make some dramatic effect, but just in wrong, unrealistic way. Worst was that bringing of axe in classroom - and yes, those who expected that there will be something there with that axe were right - sadly - that was just way too stoopid. And clearly it is on writers. Little less on direction and I can not blame actors, except that took roles in this .
Well, I guess that Jessica Alba wanted some more serious role, without being sexy and like. But whole thing works not as comedy - really little funny moments. As drama it is overdone, unrealistic. Math is not only numbers and adding, subtract - but there are probably people which really try to explain everything with numbers.
Well, message is clear, despite all flaws. I will not write about it here.
With little more effort by writers, maybe with some feedback to them this could be much better.
sure, it is far to be the right word. but it is the most comfortable. for a beautiful story, for a great job from Jessica Alba, for the touching atmosphere, for the performances of Marylouise Burke and J.K. Simmons. maybe because I am teacher, Mona Gray seems to me one of the most seductive characters from the last decade of cinema. because this job remains a refuge, has deep roots in the experiences of childhood, impose a form of train of exercises to escape from yourself. if a sin of film must be defined, it is , maybe, the desire of director to be a complete work - from traumas to the love story. but it is a small, almost insignificant sin. so, a lovely/touching film.
I so wanted to love this; how many films are there about math teachers connecting with their students. It's such a great idea. However, in the execution, the indie vibe goes from off-kilter to off-track and the film is weirdly pompous in its false modesty and humbleness.
Quite frankly after some initial interest it's biggest problem is boredom - neither the script, nor the events, nor the characterization hold the attention - and so what we end up is a lot of loose ends and ideas.
Jessica Alban does a fine job at the slightly emo OCD vibe but we never really connect with the cuteness, and all in all, it was a little too off-kilter for this viewer.
If you like indie films you may enjoy this - we just couldn't connect with it - and found it all trying too hard to be different, instead of using the film to show math as a tool for wider issues.
Quite frankly after some initial interest it's biggest problem is boredom - neither the script, nor the events, nor the characterization hold the attention - and so what we end up is a lot of loose ends and ideas.
Jessica Alban does a fine job at the slightly emo OCD vibe but we never really connect with the cuteness, and all in all, it was a little too off-kilter for this viewer.
If you like indie films you may enjoy this - we just couldn't connect with it - and found it all trying too hard to be different, instead of using the film to show math as a tool for wider issues.
An Invisible Sign is one of those films you kind of wish you had never seen. There are plenty of movies worse than this one; but this one tries so very hard to be both loved and cherished that it leaves one feeling used.
First-time feature-film director, Marilyn Agrelo (she had earlier directed the documentary Mad Hot Ballroom), uses so much saccharine in trying to sweeten Sign's audience into loving and liking and feeling for and/or sorry for this odd assortment of characters that one begins to wish strychnine had been used instead. In real-life, NONE of these eccentric characters would come across as likable and so one has to force himself/herself into finishing this film.
Jessica Alba (Fantastic Four, Sin City, Never Been Kissed) plays Mona Gray, an odd-duck of a character who is kicked-out of her house by her parents years after her genius mathematician father has suffered a nervous breakdown (she is kicked-out for no real reason other than she is 20 and her mom isn't likable). Lucky Mona, though (!), as her mother has helped get her daughter a job as the math teacher at the local elementary school ... Mona having no degree isn't a problem (Mom lied saying she had one) as the school never looks into her past (I'm not kidding).
It is at school/work surrounded by kids with greater problems than her own that Mona begins to wake-up to life and find purpose and meaning beyond a search for numbers. Mona also meets a fellow teacher played by Chris Messina (Julie & Julia, Monogamy, Vicky Cristina Barcelona) who becomes interested in her odd manners and seeks out her friendship. Just as these last few sentences suggest, An Invisible Sign IS oddly disjointed and filled with scenarios and situations that don't really go together. It is as if the film were pieced together because of "cute, little moments" ... instead of giving us a cohesive and plausible story.
There is little-to-no charm here and the entire thing feels tried and odd to me. I believe Messina's character was written/created for the sole purpose of having a sane individual in the film (yes ... groan). Alba has tried drama in the past and has come across marginally successful at times; but An Invisible Sign doesn't help her resume. It is almost too bad this one wasn't invisible.
First-time feature-film director, Marilyn Agrelo (she had earlier directed the documentary Mad Hot Ballroom), uses so much saccharine in trying to sweeten Sign's audience into loving and liking and feeling for and/or sorry for this odd assortment of characters that one begins to wish strychnine had been used instead. In real-life, NONE of these eccentric characters would come across as likable and so one has to force himself/herself into finishing this film.
Jessica Alba (Fantastic Four, Sin City, Never Been Kissed) plays Mona Gray, an odd-duck of a character who is kicked-out of her house by her parents years after her genius mathematician father has suffered a nervous breakdown (she is kicked-out for no real reason other than she is 20 and her mom isn't likable). Lucky Mona, though (!), as her mother has helped get her daughter a job as the math teacher at the local elementary school ... Mona having no degree isn't a problem (Mom lied saying she had one) as the school never looks into her past (I'm not kidding).
It is at school/work surrounded by kids with greater problems than her own that Mona begins to wake-up to life and find purpose and meaning beyond a search for numbers. Mona also meets a fellow teacher played by Chris Messina (Julie & Julia, Monogamy, Vicky Cristina Barcelona) who becomes interested in her odd manners and seeks out her friendship. Just as these last few sentences suggest, An Invisible Sign IS oddly disjointed and filled with scenarios and situations that don't really go together. It is as if the film were pieced together because of "cute, little moments" ... instead of giving us a cohesive and plausible story.
There is little-to-no charm here and the entire thing feels tried and odd to me. I believe Messina's character was written/created for the sole purpose of having a sane individual in the film (yes ... groan). Alba has tried drama in the past and has come across marginally successful at times; but An Invisible Sign doesn't help her resume. It is almost too bad this one wasn't invisible.
I was very disappointed after watching this movie. There are amazing actors, but I thought the movie was too slow. It had no excitement throughout the movie. And the ending had no surprise. I thought it was going to be a romantic , and inspiring movie. But it didn't have any point to it. Although they make an interesting trailer, the movie wasn't. I think the movie would've been better, if it had a little "twist" to it. Instead of showing the same things over and over again. For those who like inspiring movies, with a bit of drama, I wouldn't recommend this one. It did have excellent actors, and actresses, they did a good job doing what they were told.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizAmerica Ferrera was originally cast as Mona Gray, but dropped out and Jessica Alba replaced her.
- BlooperWhen Mona is in class and puts a child in a corner by the door, she wrote two large numbers on the chalkboard and wanted the children to tell her what sign (greater or less than) to put between them. When the child made a sound to get her attention, the less-than sign is visible already written on the board, but it wasn't there when the child from the corner gave the correct answer and Mona wrote it on the board.
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 1279 USD
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 51.138 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 36min(96 min)
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1
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