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7,5/10
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SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial, um agricultor azarado deixa sua casa no campo para trabalhar em uma fábrica na cidade grande. Gertie, sua esposa escultora, se junta a eles com relutância.Durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial, um agricultor azarado deixa sua casa no campo para trabalhar em uma fábrica na cidade grande. Gertie, sua esposa escultora, se junta a eles com relutância.Durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial, um agricultor azarado deixa sua casa no campo para trabalhar em uma fábrica na cidade grande. Gertie, sua esposa escultora, se junta a eles com relutância.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Ganhou 2 Primetime Emmys
- 5 vitórias e 7 indicações no total
Robert Swan
- Victor
- (as Bob Swan)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
10mrscjr31
"The Doll Maker" starring Jane Fonda, was probably the most memorable movie I have ever seen. I have seen it only one time. I do not need to see it again. I would love to, but my husband was so emotionally moved by the scene with the child, that I promised him that I would never bring it around him. This story is so very real. The scenery, the acting, the emotions, all become a true part of your soul, if only for a couple of hours. I loved "The Doll Maker"! This movie is a sociological work of art. I am trying to think of a movie, which could possibly come close emotionally to this story. I almost want to say "Old Yeller". The difficulty presented to both families, may be comparable. When I think of the coloration of the scenery in "The Doll Maker", I am somewhat reminded of the movie, "The Grapes of Wrath". "The Grapes of Wrath" was an epic film, the movie "Old Yeller" was a family oriented film. "The Doll Maker" is a "must see"!
Jane Fonda plays a Kentucky hillbilly with five children who knows no reality besides the constant obedience to her husband in The Dollmaker. Take a moment to absorb that sentence. If you're shaking your head thinking she could never pull a role like that off, rent the TV-movie that won her an Emmy. She's practically unrecognizable in her transformation. Gone is the beautiful, strong woman who helped millions of women exercise, and in her place is a frumpy, useful homemaker who works herself to the bone every day to keep her family afloat.
The Dollmaker takes place during WWII, and when Jane's husband Levon Helm gets drafted, Jane thinks her life will begin again. She's been secretly saving money for years from whittling dolls out of scrap pieces of wood, hoping to buy a farm while her husband's fighting in the war. When he comes home, he'll see how the family's thrived on the farm and he won't question her decision. However, Levon doesn't get accepted by the army. Instead he gets a factory job in Detroit and demands his family join him. Jane's mother, Geraldine Page, pressures her to obey her husband, so Jane packs up her five children and her nest egg and moves to Detroit.
In her new life, Jane lives through unspeakable horrors. She gives such a heartfelt, harrowing performance, at times you'll forget she's Jane Fonda. This is a once-in-a-lifetime performance, and it truly takes you back in time to an era when women blindly obeyed their husbands. Modern feminists will probably feel betrayed that Jane took on such a role, but they might feel better if they look at The Dollmaker as a cautionary tale, which it absolutely is. It's an extremely heavy drama, and it might not be for everyone. But if you like terribly depressing stories by Tom Hardy or John Steinbeck, you'll be in a better place to appreciate this tragedy. Get out your Kleenexes and get ready for the best performance of Jane Fonda's career.
Kiddy warning: Obviously, you have control over your own children. However, due to some upsetting scenes involving children, I wouldn't let my kids watch it.
I haven't been able to find this movie available on DVD anywhere, so if you'd like to watch it, click here to watch it on YouTube. And thanks "astrosbaseball2012" for posting!
The Dollmaker takes place during WWII, and when Jane's husband Levon Helm gets drafted, Jane thinks her life will begin again. She's been secretly saving money for years from whittling dolls out of scrap pieces of wood, hoping to buy a farm while her husband's fighting in the war. When he comes home, he'll see how the family's thrived on the farm and he won't question her decision. However, Levon doesn't get accepted by the army. Instead he gets a factory job in Detroit and demands his family join him. Jane's mother, Geraldine Page, pressures her to obey her husband, so Jane packs up her five children and her nest egg and moves to Detroit.
In her new life, Jane lives through unspeakable horrors. She gives such a heartfelt, harrowing performance, at times you'll forget she's Jane Fonda. This is a once-in-a-lifetime performance, and it truly takes you back in time to an era when women blindly obeyed their husbands. Modern feminists will probably feel betrayed that Jane took on such a role, but they might feel better if they look at The Dollmaker as a cautionary tale, which it absolutely is. It's an extremely heavy drama, and it might not be for everyone. But if you like terribly depressing stories by Tom Hardy or John Steinbeck, you'll be in a better place to appreciate this tragedy. Get out your Kleenexes and get ready for the best performance of Jane Fonda's career.
Kiddy warning: Obviously, you have control over your own children. However, due to some upsetting scenes involving children, I wouldn't let my kids watch it.
I haven't been able to find this movie available on DVD anywhere, so if you'd like to watch it, click here to watch it on YouTube. And thanks "astrosbaseball2012" for posting!
This movie is an undiscovered gem: a simple, beautiful story of a woman struggling with poverty and other obstacles in her life. Jane Fonda creates a picture of an Appalachian woman who is complex, brave, and at times resigned to the limitations of her life. This movie is unique in its straightforward presentation of a story about poverty that never swerves into sentimentality or condescension: ultimately it celebrates the strength, faith, and ingenuity of Gertie. Had this movie been released as a feature film it probably would have gotten more attention and be praised along side movies like "The Grapes of Wrath," which coincidentally was one of Jane Fonda's father's most memorable roles.
This is hands down, one of THE best movies/show ever shown on TV. I've only seen it a handful of times but I remember it so vividly. There isn't a single thing wrong with this movie. The acting, the directing, the script, costumes, everything is...well...perfect. Easily the best performance of Jane Fonda's career. I hope to come across it soon on DVD.
"The Dollmaker" deserves to be considered a classic. The story itself would be memorable and moving with or without Fonda, but her portrayal of Gertie Nevels, the mother, is very true to the type. There is no hint of the bumpkin in Fonda's interpretation of the uneducated, backwoods mother of five, who moves from the Kentucky hills to Detroit, where she and her family endure great hardships. Fonda plays the part of a strong Appalachian woman with dignity. Although "The Dollmaker" has not been picked up and replayed as one of the "modern classics," it truly deserves a place alongside other classics, such as "To Kill a Mockingbird" and "Coal Miner's Daughter." It has been quite a few years since I saw the film--probably at the time of its original release in 1984--but it touched me deeply enough that I have never forgotten it.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesMovie stars Jessica Lange, Sissy Spacek and Jane Fonda were all in 1985 invited to testify before the House Democrats' Farm Task Force dealing with the emotional toll of the financial stress experienced by farmers in the early 1980's. The three actresses were invited to this Capitol Hill meeting due to their lead film performances as troubled farmers from each of their then current farm films from that era. The pictures were, respectively, Minha Terra, Minha Vida (1984), O Rio do Desespero (1984) and Esculpindo Minha Vida (1984). Another farming picture at this time was Um Lugar no Coração (1984) which starred Sally Field but she did not attend the hearings.
- ConexõesFeatured in The 36th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1984)
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By what name was Esculpindo Minha Vida (1984) officially released in Canada in English?
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