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IMDbPro

Apenas um Coração Solitário

Título original: None But the Lonely Heart
  • 1944
  • Approved
  • 1 h 53 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,4/10
3 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Cary Grant in Apenas um Coração Solitário (1944)
When an itinerant reluctantly returns home to help his sickly mother run her shop, they are both tempted to turn to crime to help make ends meet.
Reproduzir trailer2:01
1 vídeo
44 fotos
DramaRomance

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaWhen an itinerant reluctantly returns home to help his sickly mother run her shop, they are both tempted to turn to crime to help make ends meet.When an itinerant reluctantly returns home to help his sickly mother run her shop, they are both tempted to turn to crime to help make ends meet.When an itinerant reluctantly returns home to help his sickly mother run her shop, they are both tempted to turn to crime to help make ends meet.

  • Direção
    • Clifford Odets
  • Roteiristas
    • Clifford Odets
    • Richard Llewellyn
  • Artistas
    • Cary Grant
    • Ethel Barrymore
    • Barry Fitzgerald
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,4/10
    3 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Clifford Odets
    • Roteiristas
      • Clifford Odets
      • Richard Llewellyn
    • Artistas
      • Cary Grant
      • Ethel Barrymore
      • Barry Fitzgerald
    • 44Avaliações de usuários
    • 16Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Ganhou 1 Oscar
      • 7 vitórias e 3 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:01
    Trailer

    Fotos44

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    Elenco principal71

    Editar
    Cary Grant
    Cary Grant
    • Ernie Mott
    Ethel Barrymore
    Ethel Barrymore
    • Ma Mott
    • (as Miss Ethel Barrymore)
    Barry Fitzgerald
    Barry Fitzgerald
    • Henry Twite
    June Duprez
    June Duprez
    • Ada Brantline
    Jane Wyatt
    Jane Wyatt
    • Aggie Hunter
    George Coulouris
    George Coulouris
    • Jim Mordinoy
    Dan Duryea
    Dan Duryea
    • Lew Tate
    Roman Bohnen
    Roman Bohnen
    • Dad Pettyjohn
    Konstantin Shayne
    Konstantin Shayne
    • Ike Weber
    Katherine Allen
    • Millie Wilson
    • (não creditado)
    William Ambler
    • Bus Driver
    • (não creditado)
    George Atkinson
    • Man with Gramophone
    • (não creditado)
    Polly Bailey
    • Ma Floom
    • (não creditado)
    Ted Billings
    • Cockney Bum
    • (não creditado)
    Rosemary Blong
    • Dancer
    • (não creditado)
    Sammy Blum
    Sammy Blum
    • Drunk in Funfair
    • (não creditado)
    Marina Bohnen
    • Girl
    • (não creditado)
    Matthew Boulton
    Matthew Boulton
    • First Police Desk Sergeant
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Clifford Odets
    • Roteiristas
      • Clifford Odets
      • Richard Llewellyn
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários44

    6,42.9K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8movie-viking

    Rough, tough Ernie Mott - Cary Grant's only Diamond in the Very Rough!!!

    Tough guy Ernie Mott...and his life-battered widowed Mom (played by the great Ethel Barrymore-great aunt to Drew Barrymore) live on the bottom edge of London society. Ernie is the kind of guy who the law might sorta watch...but he does benefit from the counsel of a few older men he calls "Dad"...Will this Diamond in the Rough Ernie Mott make wise---or foolish choices??? The other reviews above suggest potent reasons why this is the best film the usually suave Cary Grant made. This really good film brings out the better reviewers!!! Grant, in real life a Cockney, had to usually play his "Smooth Romantic Leading Man" in too many movies...NONE but the Lonely Heart-is an exception! This film also enticed the great stage actress Ethel Barrymore into 10+ more years as a wonderful character actor. Tho no longer young, she absolutely dominates any scene with her wonderful old beauty and her elegant yet streetwise wisdom. (PS I heard that she was tough...She stood up to a abusive husband!) You get the sense of LOSS as the beginning narrative hints that Ernie Mott might well join the war dead of World War 2. (Movie is set just before WW2 erupts tho it came out in 1944.)

    Mott's depth is hinted at...He fights with his mom, but sticks with her when he finds she has incurable cancer. When she is tempted to make a disastrous choice, he comforts her...As he ponders a car crash, his musical ear is so fine that he can name the stuck horn tone as "e flat". This drifter, tinkerer and piano tuner...draws you in..You care what happens to him! He is willing to stand up to a gangster (George Couloris) to marry the gangster's abused ex wife...Bravery is not a problem, tho Mott does seem to get in the way of the law.

    Imagine that some wise WW2 military officer would have been glad to have the tough, rough Mott in his unit!
    jshaffer-1

    Painful but interesting.

    I found this movie to be very painful to watch. It is not your typical Hollywood, let's glamorise everything, everyone has money, let's make it look pretty. These people are grindingly poor, the mother is dying of cancer, and our boy is trying to be his own man, without money or position. Tuning pianos seems like a difficult way to earn a living, but makes use of the only talent he really has, which is perfect pitch. For those who don't know, it is the ability to name any tone or note that you hear. This movie has a great supporting cast, Barry Fitzgerald and Jane Wyatt, just to mention two. Grant's mother is one of my favorite actresses, Ethel Barrymore. She really has too much class for the part she plays. And the sets make you glad you don't have to live there. Still memorable, though, in spite of being so depressing.
    dr_salter

    The haunting music -None but the Lonely Heart, is a constant theme

    This 1944 movie is a masterpiece of black and white photography by Director Clifford Odets. The subtilty of background lighting and the shadow effects in the street scenes are magic. There are moments of sheer brilliance with Cary Grant as the independent unorthodox Cockney son Ernie Mott, who comes home and decides to run the secondhand furniture shop and care for his sick mother, Ethel Barrymore. Jane Wyman, makes money playing the cello and patiently loves Ernie from across the street. Mott has 'perfect pitch' and can tune pianos and does odd jobs. Grant brings this quirky character to life and makes us love him. Ernie is a combination of dark brooding and sanguine pathos. All the actors are excellent and bring the poetic language of the script to life. June Duprez as Ernie's girlfriend Ada is riveting. Barry Fitzgerald as genial family friend Henry Twite is special. Even the Dog called Nipper stole every scene. As you can see I loved this movie, hope you do too....
    7secondtake

    A terrific script and some full blooded acting, though it is a bit stiff in retrospect

    None but the Lonely Heart (1944)

    An odd but actually really interesting American movie set in London (and made on a huge soundstage built for the filming in California). At first you might twitch at Cary Grant's slightly affected accent—except that he grew up in working class London, though with a different neighborhood accent than this. His mother, played by Ethel Barrymore, doesn't even pretend at an accent, which is fine. She's tough as nails and she fights for her son's dignity with maternal hardness. "A breath of homeless wind," she calls him.

    This makes sense in context—the movie is from the big turning point and gruesome zone of World War II. It seems the Germans are losing ground at last, and Britain, a short Channel away from enemy soldiers, is desperate to keep morale up. A final scene has some badly done shadows of planes falling on a third major character, as he and Grant look up at the sky.

    There are a hundred great moments here, many of them in the clever, homey script (which is filled with old school aphorisms like, "They milk the cow that stands still"). And then there's the moment when Grant appears at the bottom of the stairs in a new striped suit. What a sight!

    Underneath all this is a tender, sad, triumphant story amidst the ruins of this mother and son family. You can read it two ways. The first is simple: a gadabout young man hasn't paid much attention to his aging, widowed mother and the two have to find ways of getting to know each other again. Both of the leads are terrific actors, and though they might seem mismatched in style, they are decent enough to pull of this seesaw of emotions.

    The other story is a social message about young men with skills coming to the aid of those who need them. In the bigger picture this means Great Britain in its fight against the Nazis. As the personal ups and downs fly around us while we watch (there is tumult of romantic and criminal activity), the bigger truth is developing—Grant's troubled character has to find some inner stability to make him a useful, happy human being. It's not about being a homeless wind after all.

    Overall there is a stage-like stiffness to part of the film (Odets was a playwright above all), but it's so moving at times, and so well written at others, I recommend it anyway. A classic? No. But it helps fill in some gaps in Grant's career (he just finished filming "Arsenic and Old Lace") and it does satisfy some dramatic impulse in me.

    An example of a great tidbit? Midway, Grant is making advances on the leading lady, and she rebuffs him flat. "Rolled a nice cold pickle jar down my back, you did," he says. A little later she says, "There's about twenty good kisses left in me but you'll never get one." Where the heck does this kind of great, old-fashioned, writing come from? The writer of the movie, of course, Clifford Odets, who also is directing. This is one of two movies the great writer directed. And this, in the end, is why to see it. He's not a terrific director, but he knows how to respect a good writer when it's himself. And there is so much that works here amidst the slightly awkward direction it's worth seeing.

    For those who love old movies, that is. And for anyone trying to get a grip on the effect of WWII on England, and London, and regular folk.
    8bkoganbing

    The Perils of Typecasting

    Cary Grant wanted to do something different than being a comedic or romantic leading man. He'd have liked to do more serious things like None But the Lonely Heart a good deal more frequently.

    In point of fact Grant understood the character of Ernie Mott far better than any of his other more upper class characters. Ernie Mott was the kind of fellow Cary would have run into back in the days when he was Archie Leach. Grant came from a hardscrabble background growing up in London. In many ways Cary Grant was the greatest role he ever played.

    Grant had played cockneys before on the screen, but in a more comic vein in Sylvia Scarlett and Gunga Din. However what we've got in None But the Lonely Heart is far more serious.

    It's an original screenplay by Clifford Odets and adapted from a novel by Richard Llewellyn who also wrote How Green Was My Valley. Odets was at that time a sensation on Broadway with a whole string of dramas of social significance from the Thirties. The grinding effects of poverty are just about the same whether it's the Lower East Side of New York or the cockney slums of London. Odets also directed this film, one of only two times he did that.

    Grant understood that very well and he turned in one bravura performance as Ernie Mott who wants desperately to get ahead and makes a few bad choices in trying to do so. The only one who understands him is his mother played by Ethel Barrymore who returned to the screen for the first time in a decade.

    It was a great performance for Cary Grant and it lost a fortune for RKO Studios as the public as Sam Goldwyn said, stayed away in droves. They would not accept Grant in a dramatic part. Cary got his second and last nomination for Best Actor, but lost the Academy Award to Bing Crosby in Going My Way.

    Ethel Barrymore won a Best Supporting Actress Oscar that year for this film. It led to a permanent break from the stage and she spent the rest of her life in Hollywood in a variety of films. Unlike brother Lionel she wasn't tied down to a long term contract to one studio and she picked and chose wisely in roles when she stayed in Hollywood.

    George Coulouris is the best from the rest of the cast as a small time racketeer in the neighborhood who Grant gets mixed up with. Coulouris always exudes menace, one of the best in doing that.

    What happened to Cary Grant is the same thing that happened to Tyrone Power when he appeared in Nightmare Alley, great critical reviews and the public wouldn't buy it. Both of those guys were limited by type casting their entire careers. Power did manage to do Witness for the Prosecution at the premature end of his career, the closest Grant did to a dramatic part after this was Crisis which also was a commercial flop.

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Author Richard Llewellyn was strongly opposed to the casting of Cary Grant, demanding to know how the 40-year-old actor could play a teenager.
    • Erros de gravação
      As Ernie and Henry part at the end, a flute is playing a slow, sorrowful dirge. There is a flautist leaning against the wall, and it appears that he should be the one playing; however, his finger movements are more along the lines of a fast jig than a slow dirge.
    • Citações

      Ernie Mott: They say money talks... all it's ever said to me is goodbye.

    • Versões alternativas
      Also shown in computer-colorized version.
    • Conexões
      Featured in The 42nd Annual Academy Awards (1970)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Romance No.6, Op.6 (None But the Lonely Heart)
      (1869) (uncredited)

      Music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

      Played during the opening credits and often in the score

      Played by Jane Wyatt on cello

      Played by Cary Grant on piano

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    Perguntas frequentes

    • How long is None But the Lonely Heart?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 17 de outubro de 1944 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • None But the Lonely Heart
    • Locações de filme
      • RKO Studios - 780 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Califórnia, EUA(Studio)
    • Empresa de produção
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 1.300.000 (estimativa)
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 53 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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