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IMDbPro

Marcada pela Calúnia

Título original: That Hagen Girl
  • 1947
  • Approved
  • 1 h 23 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,2/10
750
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Shirley Temple, Ronald Reagan, and Rory Calhoun in Marcada pela Calúnia (1947)
Drama

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaMary Hagen lives in a small town in Ohio and goes to Jordon Junior College. For years, there have been whispers, rumors and gossip about who her real parents are. After Tom Bates returns to ... Ler tudoMary Hagen lives in a small town in Ohio and goes to Jordon Junior College. For years, there have been whispers, rumors and gossip about who her real parents are. After Tom Bates returns to town, he takes over the house and practice that Judge Merrivale left him following his dea... Ler tudoMary Hagen lives in a small town in Ohio and goes to Jordon Junior College. For years, there have been whispers, rumors and gossip about who her real parents are. After Tom Bates returns to town, he takes over the house and practice that Judge Merrivale left him following his death. As Tom has been away a number of years, this leads to more gossip and Mary believes th... Ler tudo

  • Direção
    • Peter Godfrey
  • Roteiristas
    • Charles Hoffman
    • Edith Kneipple Roberts
  • Artistas
    • Ronald Reagan
    • Shirley Temple
    • Rory Calhoun
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,2/10
    750
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Peter Godfrey
    • Roteiristas
      • Charles Hoffman
      • Edith Kneipple Roberts
    • Artistas
      • Ronald Reagan
      • Shirley Temple
      • Rory Calhoun
    • 29Avaliações de usuários
    • 5Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 vitória no total

    Fotos9

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    Elenco principal71

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    Ronald Reagan
    Ronald Reagan
    • Thomas J. (Tom) Bates
    Shirley Temple
    Shirley Temple
    • Mary Hagen
    Rory Calhoun
    Rory Calhoun
    • Ken Freneau
    Lois Maxwell
    Lois Maxwell
    • Julia Kane
    Dorothy Peterson
    Dorothy Peterson
    • Minta Hagen
    Charles Kemper
    Charles Kemper
    • Jim Hagen
    Conrad Janis
    Conrad Janis
    • Dewey Koons
    Penny Edwards
    Penny Edwards
    • Christine Delaney
    Jean Porter
    Jean Porter
    • Sharon Bailey
    Harry Davenport
    Harry Davenport
    • Judge Merrivale
    Nella Walker
    Nella Walker
    • Molly Freneau
    Winifred Harris
    Winifred Harris
    • Selma Delaney
    Moroni Olsen
    Moroni Olsen
    • Trenton Gateley
    Frank Conroy
    Frank Conroy
    • Dr. Stone
    Kathryn Card
    Kathryn Card
    • Miss Grover
    Douglas Kennedy
    Douglas Kennedy
    • Herb Delaney
    Barbara Brown
    Barbara Brown
    • Lorna Gateley
    Tom Fadden
    Tom Fadden
    • Village Loafer
    • Direção
      • Peter Godfrey
    • Roteiristas
      • Charles Hoffman
      • Edith Kneipple Roberts
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários29

    6,2750
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8klasekfilmfan

    Supreme Forties Melodrama

    I must admit that this movie was the sort that you can't stop watching after it starts. Shirley Temple plays a 17-year-old (Mary Hagen) that has mystery surrounding her birth and who her parents are - and as a result is mercilessly discriminated against by the entire "town elite". Temple is splendid in this role as I believe is the best performance of her career. Solid performance by co-star Ronald Reagen as he played the man who everyone suspected was Mary Hagen's father. The entire cast puts in solid performances as well.

    Give "That Hagen Girl" movie a chance, I don't care what the average rating is!
    10Barney_Beers1947

    Not "Totally Improbable"

    I disagree with the person who said the story line of "That Hagen Girl" is "totally improbable." Scandals involving premarital and extramarital sex and illegitimate children were prevalent in small towns in the 1940s and still are. Also, in the 1940-1960s many small towns (including the one where I grew up) still had an influential white collar class of people who acted and dressed exactly like the characters in "That Hagen Girl." As for the Ken Freneau character being a spineless Mama's boy, there are people of this sort in every generation and in every community. I grew up in a small town in Indiana where my ancestors were the founders, and I moved back here after living in a big city for a few years. "That Hagen Girl" does an excellent job of depicting the nature and the populace of small towns in the Midwest.

    I believe the film was not appreciated initially because it was ahead of its time, for all that it presented social issues in a very tasteful and diplomatic way. No one has mentioned the mental illness of Grace (the high school girl friend of Tom Bates) or the reason for her condition. I believe the film implied that Grace's parents had pressured her to avoid scandal by having an abortion in Chicago and that afterward Grace was treated for a mental and emotional breakdown during the months she was absent from home. The Tom Bates character also hinted to Mary Hagen that Grace's "going away" and subsequent months in a psychiatric facility were the "reason" Mary could not be the illegitimate child he and Grace were suspected of conceiving.

    "That Hagen Girl" is very much like "Peyton Place," another film that shows the dark side of a small town. I believe "That Hagen Girl" is an equally well-written and well-acted film that deals with serious social problems. The film's tasteful approach to moral problems is what I would like to see in today's films. -- Mrs. Barney Beers
    6Hermit C-2

    Not particularly good but does hold some latter-day interest.

    Why wouldn't the moviegoing public accept Shirley Temple as a grown-up after being a child star? As a 19-year-old in this film she is as beautiful as she was cute as a child; and if she hadn't yet proved herself to be a great actress, her more mature screen persona beats her insufferably cute act as a child any day as far as this viewer is concerned.

    Actually this movie's bad reputation is not hard to understand. Amazingly, Ms. Temple plays a high school student widely believed by the residents of her small town to be (gasp) illegitimate! to use an unfortunate term. Although she's as clean-cut and moral a young woman as you'll ever see, the small-minded townspeople think the worst of her in any slightly suspicious situation. Even though the movie is rather light-heated in tone, and never uses words like "illegitimate" or "pregnant," it's obvious the American public could not accept Temple in such a role.

    The few dark moments that intrude into this overall lightweight movie don't mesh very well, and the film is really a rather prosaic soap opera, but it does hold some interest for latter-day viewers because of its stars. Ronald Reagan plays the man assumed to be Temple's father. It's become a cliche of Reagan's political opponents to say he's a bad actor, but the truth is he doesn't show much range in this film and it doesn't appear to be the kind of role he's suited for. Still, I find the older Shirley Temple interesting to watch and for this reason I'd recommend it to any of her fans, or movie fans in general.
    10istara

    Curious and unsettling film, but worth seeing

    That Hagen Girl is a curious film. It stars Shirley Temple and Ronald Reagan, along with a supporting cast of other well-known actors.

    It's uncomfortable and odd viewing. In the film, Tom Bates, the male lead, is suspected by the entire village - and Janie herself - of being her true father (though he's not). He meets her as a young woman, when she is aged about seventeen and he is approximately twice that. He tries to help her, encouraged by a local teacher. The townfolk get meaner and meaner, because they view Janie as being "of bad stock" because she's believed to be illegitimate and adopted. Then suddenly right at the end Tom has proposed and they're getting married. There's no build up, there is no relationship progression. It's not apparent that he has ever had romantic feelings for her, let alone her for him. So it's rushed and jarring and odd.

    Ronald Reagan apparently viewed the age gap as problematic, and wanted to change the ending. This left me wondering whether - rather like Girls' Dormitory (1936) - they changed the ending of the original story. In the play Girls' Dormitory is based on, the headmaster ends up marrying a teacher colleague of a similar age who has loved him for years. In the film, Herbert Marshall ends up proposing to Simone Simon, his teenage student, leaving his poor colleague with a broken heart.

    I was so curious that I managed to source a copy (they are rare and it was expensive). As it turns out, for the most part - and particularly the start - the movie is quite faithful to the book. Both conjure up a similarly convincing atmosphere of poisonous small minds in a small town. The ending is also the same, in that Tom Bates does end up with Janie, not with the teacher of similar age who loves him.

    However the book shows Tom Bates' romantic interest in Janie clearly developing from early on, and to a lesser extent, hers in him. This isn't entirely satisfactory on his side because she is in love with and engaged to someone else, Tom leaves, then Janie is jilted, and eventually she starts seeing someone else whom she doesn't really care for. Then at the eleventh hour, Tom returns and suddenly they're both going off into the sunset. The book feels rushed as well, though not nearly so much as the film does.

    Ultimately, the conundrum remains unresolved. My speculation is that scenes between Temple and Reagan were cut - either from the script, or in editing - because they just weren't deemed palatable. Temple had been a child star, after all. It's one thing for her to evolve to "grown up" roles, like other child stars (Hayley Mills managed this smoothly). It's another to cast her alongside a much older man, in a story with deliberate and pervasive nuances of incest.

    I would definitely recommend seeing this movie, as it has many points of quality and interest. Just don't expect a conventional story, or a satisfying (or realistic) ending.
    5moonspinner55

    What a hoot!

    Years ago I owned a book called "The Fifty Worst Movies" by dreaded film critic Michael Medved (you know the guy, he plugs his ears when he hears a naughty word). This Warner Bros. melodrama was one of his 50 worst; seeing it today, I'm amazed Medved hated it so much (he probably longs for something refined like this now after viewing today's new-jack street dramas). It's a fairly ridiculous soaper concerning adorable teenager Shirley Temple who is--gasp!--adopted. Worse, she has (sort of) acquired a crush on a much-older man who, gossips say, is her biological father! Campy adaptation of Edith Roberts' book is full of howlers and mediocre acting. Shirl and Ronald Reagan try very hard to sell the material, but the ending seems to come out of nowhere. Still, I had fun watching the dumb thing and imagining what audiences in 1947 tried to make of it. ** from ****

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    • Curiosidades
      In his autobiography "Where's the Rest of Me?", Ronald Reagan wrote that he attempted to persuade director Peter Godfrey to have the ending rewritten, arguing that audiences wouldn't approve of a romantic pairing between Reagan and the 17-years-younger Shirley Temple. According to Reagan, Godfrey pointed out that his own wife, Renee Hall Godfrey, was 20 years younger than himself, and Reagan decided it would be unwise to press the matter.
    • Citações

      Sharon Bailey: Mary, you're never gonna be happy if you're always gonna be sad. Now, you've got nice teeth and took two years of French, so why don't you look on the bright side of things!

    • Conexões
      Featured in The Reagan Show (2017)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Ice Cold Katy
      (uncredited)

      Music by Arthur Schwartz

      Played at the Spring Hop

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    Perguntas frequentes16

    • How long is That Hagen Girl?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 1 de novembro de 1947 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • That Hagen Girl
    • Locações de filme
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, Califórnia, EUA(Studio)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Warner Bros.
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 1.327.000 (estimativa)
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 23 min(83 min)
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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