Mary Jane Harper Cried Last Night
- Filme para televisão
- 1977
- 1 h 40 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,2/10
247
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA disturbed young mother with some serious psychological problems begins to take them out on her infant daughter.A disturbed young mother with some serious psychological problems begins to take them out on her infant daughter.A disturbed young mother with some serious psychological problems begins to take them out on her infant daughter.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
- Indicado para 1 Primetime Emmy
- 2 indicações no total
Charles Lucia
- Bill Harper
- (as Chip Lucia)
Linda Gillen
- Joy
- (as Linda Gillin)
Avaliações em destaque
I remember seeing this movie on TV when I was 10 years old and I've never forgotten it. I can't believe I can still remember this movie. I remember at the time, I found it to be disturbing that a mother could do that to her own child. I came from a family that was not abusive in any way, so to see this happening and nobody stopping it was shocking to me. Neighbors didn't want to get involved? That was weird, too. Amazing when a movie is so powerful that yo never forget it. Susan Dey gave an outstanding performance, and so did Natasha Ryan. I think they should show this movie in reruns on TNT or Lifteime. But, at least it's on YouTube.
this movie is disturbing but what is the worst is that stupid whiny brat. No wonder her mother couldn't stand her. She was disobedient all the time and I can see why her mom got so fed up. The mother really was a train wreck, but that kid certainly didn't help. The mom came from a bad situation at home and it's too bad she didn't get treatment before she had the brat. I think her husband disappeared to Mexico or something and who can blame him? He probably couldn't stand the brat either. There was just something about that child that was so *** irritating. Maybe it's just me, but she drove me crazy right when she wouldn't listen to a word her mother said.
It hard to make a film about child abuse funny but this one makes it wonderfully ! I am a fan of Susan Dey and I thought she did well with the material given to her.The child playing Mary Jane is enough to annoy anyone-she even spits food at poor Susan's face!!!-I'd a slapped her too! Just like mommy dearest I feel more for the "abuser " than the child,and both films were hilarious ! I know this is not p.c. but I rather tell the truth.There are so many funny scenes here I hardly "know were to begin-Rhea Pearlman saying "She's freaking out in a motel room in the dessert" Pricilla pointer telling her daughter that she looks like a rag puller Or the general over acting of the doctor that is on the child's side. Ahh the 70's were good for cautionary tales and this one great example.Hilarious get out the popcorn and have a good laugh.
Writer Joanna Lee never got out of the television rut; having written for programs such as "The Flintstones" and "Gilligan's Island" (among others), she finally got to write a piece based on her own life which became the acclaimed TV-drama "I Want To Keep My Baby" in 1976. Fresh off that triumph, Lee attempted to score again with this child-abuse story, and her heart was certainly in it (if not a reality-based sense of dynamics). Susan Dey is the young single mother, afraid of her wealthy papa, who takes out her frustrations on her little girl; Tricia O'Neil is the bleeding-heart doctor who treats the battered kid and sees exactly what's going on. Though well-produced and acted, the film takes such a rigid stand against the mother (with no subtlety in the handling or interest in exploring this woman's personality) that O'Neil's do-gooder comes off rather laughably (she's like a private detective in a murder mystery). It's possible that impressionable viewers will be moved by the denouement here, but the handling is stiff and turgid, and Lee's teleplay (failing to examine all points of this story with depth) is straightforward in all the wrong ways. She's compassionate, yes, but her soap-box rantings are wearisome.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesWhen Dr Buccieri first meets the social worker, Dave Williams in his office, she compliments him on the abstract painting on the wall, which he says he did himself. Williams was played by football player/actor Bernie Casey where acting and writing poetry, were among his additional talents.
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
Detalhes
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente
Principal brecha
What was the official certification given to Mary Jane Harper Cried Last Night (1977) in France?
Responda