AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,3/10
457
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaDying English jet-setter marries her doctor and lives the best year of her life.Dying English jet-setter marries her doctor and lives the best year of her life.Dying English jet-setter marries her doctor and lives the best year of her life.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Richard Bebb
- Racetrack Official
- (não creditado)
Peter Evans
- Party Guest
- (não creditado)
Alex Graham
- Barman at Party
- (não creditado)
Pat Hagan
- Party Guest
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
Susan Hayward, at the height of her beauty, gives a stunning performance here as an American farm girl turned jet setter due to family wealth in the oil business, who is diagnosed with a brain tumor. Now living in England, the film concentrates on how she adapts to her reality and finally accepts it with courage and grace, never forgetting the humble roots from which she came. Hayward's performance here ranks second to her Oscar winning role in "I Want To Live," but it is a terrific one. She is totally believable and manages to make the viewer sympathize with her without being overdramatic and sensational. Although wealthy and a member of the social elite, she developes a character that you can identify and sympathize with no matter what you own social standing is. You just like this woman no matter what. The ending is quite beautiful and very memorable in its sincerity and grace. Comparisons to Bette Davis' also great performance in "Dark Victory" are unfair. This was a different era with more modern circumstances and relationships.
Filmed in England, the outdoor settings are exquisite, captured quite stunningly by director Daniel Petrie. The sets and costumes are rich looking and very well done even by 2021 standards. Even the opening credits designed by Maurice Binder (famous for the Bond film credits) are special and when they are combined with the theme song by Mort Lindsey and Marilyn and Alan Bergman, it lets you know that you are in for a special story and an extremely lovely, complicated performance by Hayward.
Filmed in England, the outdoor settings are exquisite, captured quite stunningly by director Daniel Petrie. The sets and costumes are rich looking and very well done even by 2021 standards. Even the opening credits designed by Maurice Binder (famous for the Bond film credits) are special and when they are combined with the theme song by Mort Lindsey and Marilyn and Alan Bergman, it lets you know that you are in for a special story and an extremely lovely, complicated performance by Hayward.
Susan Hayward was a great actress, a stunning beauty, and a box office movie queen. One went to see a "Susan Hayward" picture full well knowing that the film would be centered on the dynamic fashionable Susan Hayward.
The Mirisch Corporation remade "Dark Victory" and called it "Summer Flight" and cast Ms Hayward in the role Bette Davis made legendary. Bette Davis was none too happy re this film noting "Some Pictures Should Never Be Remade" Bette Davis and Susan Hayward would co star in 'Where Love Has Gone' a year later and the Ladies did not get along at all. Wonder if Susan Hayward's starring in 'Summer Flight' got under Bette's skin? Up to their working on 'Where Love Has Gone', Bette Davis was famously quoted "There was no one whose performance I admired more than Susan Hayward" Susan Hayward would join Joan Crawford and Miriam Hopkins as well as later on Lillian Gish and Faye Dunaway on Bette Davis' hate list.
Transferring the locale to the British Isles, this UA film is stunning in its scenic beauty, and allows Susan Hayward to give a very fine performance. Diane Baker handles a supporting role well. The climatic ending is well known and Ms. Hayward plays it beautifully and with restraint as directed by Daniel Petrie.
'Summer Flight' was also called "Stolen Hours". I recommend this film to see an artist of the first rank Susan Hayward essay a great woman's role. They just don't make movie stars like Susan Hayward anymore!
The Mirisch Corporation remade "Dark Victory" and called it "Summer Flight" and cast Ms Hayward in the role Bette Davis made legendary. Bette Davis was none too happy re this film noting "Some Pictures Should Never Be Remade" Bette Davis and Susan Hayward would co star in 'Where Love Has Gone' a year later and the Ladies did not get along at all. Wonder if Susan Hayward's starring in 'Summer Flight' got under Bette's skin? Up to their working on 'Where Love Has Gone', Bette Davis was famously quoted "There was no one whose performance I admired more than Susan Hayward" Susan Hayward would join Joan Crawford and Miriam Hopkins as well as later on Lillian Gish and Faye Dunaway on Bette Davis' hate list.
Transferring the locale to the British Isles, this UA film is stunning in its scenic beauty, and allows Susan Hayward to give a very fine performance. Diane Baker handles a supporting role well. The climatic ending is well known and Ms. Hayward plays it beautifully and with restraint as directed by Daniel Petrie.
'Summer Flight' was also called "Stolen Hours". I recommend this film to see an artist of the first rank Susan Hayward essay a great woman's role. They just don't make movie stars like Susan Hayward anymore!
Perhaps I am too much of a fan of Susan Hayward to be objective, but this film, which I saw when I was a nineteen-year-old sophomore in college, was one of the most memorable films I have seen. It was definitely a "chick flick" and my friends and I, needing a break from studying, went to see it only because there was nothing else playing. The film's emotional impact caught me off guard. I remember walking out of the theater after seeing the film. I recall walking into the damp San Jose, California night and feeling the pleasure ordinary sensations at a much more intense level - the cold fog against my face, the street lights reflected off of the wet streets, the sound of my footsteps on the sidewalk - the appreciation of each moment of life. Perhaps some would say Hayward was too old for the part. But Hawyard, as she had demonstrated over and over again (e.g. I Want to Live), could carry a film on the power of her acting. And at 45, she was still a knock out - even in the eyes of a 19-year old. Like many great actresses, she overacted. If you could accept it and allow her to draw you in, you could experience her character at a deeper emotional level than you would ever enjoy had she been held back by a director who did not appreciate her artistry. I highly recommend this film. I would, however, recommend that the film be viewed on a big screen. The cinematography is an important part of the film and it cannot be appreciated on a TV screen. Two other fabulous actresses did this story: Betty Davis in the original Dark Victory, and Elizabeth Montgomery in an excellent made-for-TV piece made, as I recall, in the 1980's. Both were fantastic. But I believe that you will find Susan Hayward's interpretation to be more compelling.
To get past Bette Davis' original star turn in this heart-tugging tale. Although I love Susan Hayward, she could not match the passion and authenticity Davis mastered. Hayward's, in comparison, comes off as pure melodrama. Wanted to manage a 7 rating for this, but 6 seems appropriate if only for the beautiful cinematography and stunning English countryside.
A very intelligent screenplay by Jessamyn West, updating the classic 1939 "Dark Victory" (which in turn was derived from the 1934 Broadway play of the same name). Although some of the character structuring is changed (the best friend of the protagonist now becomes her younger sister, for example) and the geography moves from NYC, Long Island and Vermont to London and the English countryside, still the basic story and message remain intact - to use one's life to achieve something of value. My only complaint, and an ambivalent one to be sure, is the casting of Susan Hayward in the lead. Although this legendary actress does a terrific job with the part, she was simply too old for the role at the time. (In "D.V.", the doomed heroine was 23, in this picture Hayward was already 45 - so her untimely death seems a little less tragic, the talk of having children with her much-younger doctor-husband is less credible, etc.); overall, however, a perfectly sound film, with some truly lovely photography of the Kentish countryside and the Cornish coast.
Você sabia?
- Curiosidades10 years after this film, Susan Hayward was diagnosed with brain cancer and later died at her home in Beverly Hills on March 14, 1975.
- Erros de gravaçãoIn the garden scene with Laura, her sister Ellen, Mike & John, Ellen and Mike have a scene where they are looking at Laura and they move closely together, almost touching. The camera immediately changes to a distance shot with all four people in it, and now Ellen and Mark area almost 2 feet apart.
- Citações
Laura Pember: You shouldn't encourage me - I drink too much.
Dr. John Carmody: You drink very little - it increases your vertigo.
Laura Pember: I'm not accustomed to being contradicted!
Dr. John Carmody: You're not accustomed to being told the truth either.
- ConexõesReferenced in Michael Craig (2022)
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- How long is Stolen Hours?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Summer Flight
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 37 min(97 min)
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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