Em 1862, uma enfermeira inglesa assombrada por seu passado vai até um remoto vilarejo irlandês para investigar o jejum supostamente milagroso de uma jovem.Em 1862, uma enfermeira inglesa assombrada por seu passado vai até um remoto vilarejo irlandês para investigar o jejum supostamente milagroso de uma jovem.Em 1862, uma enfermeira inglesa assombrada por seu passado vai até um remoto vilarejo irlandês para investigar o jejum supostamente milagroso de uma jovem.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Indicado para 1 prêmio BAFTA
- 6 vitórias e 33 indicações no total
Juliette Hurley O'Dwyer
- Ryan's Daughter
- (as Julliette Hurley O'Dwyer)
Caolan Byrne
- Malachy O'Donnell
- (as Caolán Byrne)
Avaliações em destaque
Religion versus science, superstitiousness versus good sense, this brilliantly photographed and atmospheric movie opens a field even into our own times: rational thinking versus conspiracy nonsense, intelligent sensitivity versus ignorant hypocrisy, truth versus lies. Which of these values is going to conquer?
The plot develops intentionally slow, due to rural 19th century irish country-side, and it asks for some patience to dive into the psychological subtle-ness of the screenplay. Your patience will be rewarded by great camera-work, unconventional soundtrack, and last but not least by Florence Pugh in another convincing and strong performance.
I wouldn't have needed the breaking of the fourth wall in the beginning and the end, but that's just a matter of personal taste.
Strongly recommended for an adult open-minded viewer.
The plot develops intentionally slow, due to rural 19th century irish country-side, and it asks for some patience to dive into the psychological subtle-ness of the screenplay. Your patience will be rewarded by great camera-work, unconventional soundtrack, and last but not least by Florence Pugh in another convincing and strong performance.
I wouldn't have needed the breaking of the fourth wall in the beginning and the end, but that's just a matter of personal taste.
Strongly recommended for an adult open-minded viewer.
2022 Netflix film directed by Sebastián Lelio, based on the 2016 novel of the same name by Emma Donoghue.
The production of the film, which received 12 nominations at the British Independent Film Awards on December 4, 2022, began on April 28, 2021.
Sebastián Lelio, a director who has proven himself with many works including Gloria Bell, is one of the directors who best tell women's stories.
It is still a reality today that a disgusting incident that happened to a young girl is legitimized/masked by the villager using religion and even the victim considers himself guilty because of religion.
Even if you don't read about historical events such as the Irish Potato Famine / Black 47, the film, which is more impressive with its texture, reflects the troubles of my period in the background.
The soundtrack of the film, which has a cinematographer like Ari Wegner who created his own fan base, was actually composed by an independent electronic musician, Matthew Herbert.
The production of the film, which received 12 nominations at the British Independent Film Awards on December 4, 2022, began on April 28, 2021.
Sebastián Lelio, a director who has proven himself with many works including Gloria Bell, is one of the directors who best tell women's stories.
It is still a reality today that a disgusting incident that happened to a young girl is legitimized/masked by the villager using religion and even the victim considers himself guilty because of religion.
Even if you don't read about historical events such as the Irish Potato Famine / Black 47, the film, which is more impressive with its texture, reflects the troubles of my period in the background.
The soundtrack of the film, which has a cinematographer like Ari Wegner who created his own fan base, was actually composed by an independent electronic musician, Matthew Herbert.
Firstly, the opening title credits were bold (not the font) but as soon as you hit play you will know what I mean... and I really liked the idea too...!
This, as you may have heard, is a slow-burn, but also a very interesting piece. It's great to see new and inventive stories and plot points. You never really quite know what to think or where it will end up, and that was the best part of the writing, directing and editing... Nurse Wright arrives in small town Ireland hired to 'watch' an 11 year old girl for medical reasons... Together with a nun, they take 8 hour shifts, but as it is the year 1860, science and religious beliefs are quite seperate, but also closely linked.
The acting and slow development of the story keep you engaged and your brain ticking over the possible act III outcomes and payoffs... If you enjoy the period piece, drama, thriller type event then go into this one not knowing too much, if that's possible.
Could end up on the best of the year lists for some I think... Especially on the originality scale.
This, as you may have heard, is a slow-burn, but also a very interesting piece. It's great to see new and inventive stories and plot points. You never really quite know what to think or where it will end up, and that was the best part of the writing, directing and editing... Nurse Wright arrives in small town Ireland hired to 'watch' an 11 year old girl for medical reasons... Together with a nun, they take 8 hour shifts, but as it is the year 1860, science and religious beliefs are quite seperate, but also closely linked.
The acting and slow development of the story keep you engaged and your brain ticking over the possible act III outcomes and payoffs... If you enjoy the period piece, drama, thriller type event then go into this one not knowing too much, if that's possible.
Could end up on the best of the year lists for some I think... Especially on the originality scale.
It's a well-rehearsed truism to say that the act of observing a thing changes the object of the object being observed. That's just one of the weighty questions at the heart of this meditative historical drama, one that's also concerned with the interaction of science and faith, free will, when or if to stage an intervention with people bent on self-destructive paths, and the sometimes overwhelming power of guilt - both false guilt and that which has more reason.
To call it patient - despite its under 2-hour running time - is an understatement, but it's never dull thanks in large part to the haunting score and soundscape, and Florence Pugh's truly remarkable central performance (she seems to be packing a few of those into her still young career). A strange and potentially alienating device opens the film, drawing attention to its artificiality, but in doing so it highlights that question of observation changing the observed and encouraging us to do what we're told the characters are doing - believing their own stories as we experience them.
There's a thesis to be written here on the film's theological allusions, one I won't attempt to start here. But it has caused me to reflect on my own experience of over twenty years as an ordained Anglican (i.e. Episcopal) priest. I've seen many people do a wide variety of things in that time, things done in the name of their faith, for reasons of guilt or redemption, that are destructive to themselves or those around them. I've even, sadly, met and listened to people who have been forced to experience precisely the horrific thing, the hidden secret of the past on which the plot turns. If it seems too awful to be true, I can assure you it isn't - for all this film's deliberate artifice, it's a deeply truthful one.
Dealing with almost as many fundamental questions as you might care to bring to it, this is a weighty, serious, but still moving film that's carried by Pugh's brilliance and the production's patient tone. You will likely think on it for days.
To call it patient - despite its under 2-hour running time - is an understatement, but it's never dull thanks in large part to the haunting score and soundscape, and Florence Pugh's truly remarkable central performance (she seems to be packing a few of those into her still young career). A strange and potentially alienating device opens the film, drawing attention to its artificiality, but in doing so it highlights that question of observation changing the observed and encouraging us to do what we're told the characters are doing - believing their own stories as we experience them.
There's a thesis to be written here on the film's theological allusions, one I won't attempt to start here. But it has caused me to reflect on my own experience of over twenty years as an ordained Anglican (i.e. Episcopal) priest. I've seen many people do a wide variety of things in that time, things done in the name of their faith, for reasons of guilt or redemption, that are destructive to themselves or those around them. I've even, sadly, met and listened to people who have been forced to experience precisely the horrific thing, the hidden secret of the past on which the plot turns. If it seems too awful to be true, I can assure you it isn't - for all this film's deliberate artifice, it's a deeply truthful one.
Dealing with almost as many fundamental questions as you might care to bring to it, this is a weighty, serious, but still moving film that's carried by Pugh's brilliance and the production's patient tone. You will likely think on it for days.
A committed, immersive performance by young newcomer Kíla Lord Cassidy spearheads this period mystery set in rural Ireland in the 19th century, where an 11-year-old girl in a highly religious family has been fasting for four months - seemingly without any physical repercussions. Florence Pugh is the young nurse sent to observe the girl - and solve the puzzle for us, of course. Although Pugh's performance comes off as anachronistic at times and the film drags in an uneventful middle section which seems to have little other purpose than to fill out the running time, the mystery itself is clever and incorporates enough historical, religious and sociocultural aspects to make this weighty and effective. And whenever you start doubting the story's potential for veracity, Cassidy's authentic performance sucks you back into this bygone world of repressed guilt, shame and emotions.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesElaine Cassidy (Rosaleen O'Donnell) and Kíla Lord Cassidy (Anna O'Donnell) are mother and daughter in real life.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen Anna spits her tooth out in Lib's hand, the camera shows it is a back molar, but in the next shot it appears Anna is missing a front tooth.
- Citações
Lib Wright: That's a story, Kitty. I'm looking for facts.
- ConexõesFeatured in 2023 EE BAFTA Film Awards (2023)
- Trilhas sonorasCéad míle fáilte romhat
Performed by Niamh Algar , Caolan Byrne , Elaine Cassidy , Kíla Lord Cassidy
Traditional Irish Arrangement
Principais escolhas
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- How long is The Wonder?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- El prodigio
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora 48 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.39 : 1
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