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IMDbPro

Conduzindo Miss Daisy

Título original: Driving Miss Daisy
  • 1989
  • Livre
  • 1 h 39 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,3/10
122 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
4.867
1.427
Morgan Freeman and Jessica Tandy in Conduzindo Miss Daisy (1989)
Period DramaComedyDrama

Uma velha judia e seu chofer afro-americano no sul dos Estados Unidos têm um relacionamento que cresce e melhora com o passar dos anos.Uma velha judia e seu chofer afro-americano no sul dos Estados Unidos têm um relacionamento que cresce e melhora com o passar dos anos.Uma velha judia e seu chofer afro-americano no sul dos Estados Unidos têm um relacionamento que cresce e melhora com o passar dos anos.

  • Direção
    • Bruce Beresford
  • Roteirista
    • Alfred Uhry
  • Artistas
    • Morgan Freeman
    • Jessica Tandy
    • Dan Aykroyd
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,3/10
    122 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    4.867
    1.427
    • Direção
      • Bruce Beresford
    • Roteirista
      • Alfred Uhry
    • Artistas
      • Morgan Freeman
      • Jessica Tandy
      • Dan Aykroyd
    • 223Avaliações de usuários
    • 74Avaliações da crítica
    • 81Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Ganhou 4 Oscars
      • 22 vitórias e 24 indicações no total

    Vídeos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:18
    Trailer
    Clip
    Video 3:02
    Clip
    Clip
    Video 3:02
    Clip

    Fotos270

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    Elenco principal25

    Editar
    Morgan Freeman
    Morgan Freeman
    • Hoke Colburn
    Jessica Tandy
    Jessica Tandy
    • Daisy Werthan
    Dan Aykroyd
    Dan Aykroyd
    • Boolie Werthan
    Patti LuPone
    Patti LuPone
    • Florine Werthan
    • (as Patti Lupone)
    Esther Rolle
    Esther Rolle
    • Idella
    Jo Ann Havrilla
    Jo Ann Havrilla
    • Miss McClatchey
    • (as Joann Havrilla)
    William Hall Jr.
    • Oscar
    Alvin M. Sugarman
    • Dr. Weil
    Clarice F. Geigerman
    • Nonie
    Muriel Moore
    • Miriam
    Sylvia Kaler
    • Beulah
    Carolyn Gold
    • Neighbor Lady
    Crystal Fox
    Crystal Fox
    • Katie Bell
    • (as Crystal R. Fox)
    Bob Hannah
    Bob Hannah
    • Red Mitchell
    Ray McKinnon
    Ray McKinnon
    • Trooper #1
    Ashley Josey
    • Trooper #2
    Jack Rousso
    • Slick
    Fred Faser
    • Insurance Agent
    • Direção
      • Bruce Beresford
    • Roteirista
      • Alfred Uhry
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários223

    7,3121.6K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    lcbabybleue

    The Growth of Affection

    After watching this film for the second time I realized just how important the affection that occurs between Hoke and Daisy really is. What grows between these two is something most people only wish to have in their lives. What is so special about it, though?

    From the beginning of their relationship, the two are forced to be together. Daisy is forced to have a driver and Hoke is hired on for that position. For both, the relationship is one out of need. Hoke needs a paying job and Daisy needs a driver in her old age (although, she would never admit it to anyone especially herself).

    As time goes by, though, Daisy's need of Hoke becomes clearer to herself. She begins to depend on him. This is definitely made clear at the end when Hoke is feeding Daisy her pumpkin pie, and she enjoys each bite fully.

    Another aspect of the movie which got to me was the great array of choices the director made with the filming. Hoke is a character of very few words but teaches Daisy so much. Morgan Freeman's acting in this character is amazing. The knowledge he shows within his eyes is one reason I almost felt closer to him than Daisy did throughout the first half of the movie. In a way, he teaches her a new way of life. He does so by showing himself truly and honestly.

    Another choice the director made was in the symbolic way the film was made. The beauty of the many seasons is shown through the changes of the landscape. The trees transform from winter to spring and the streets go from sheets of ice to warm asphalt. And the cars get larger and more high tech. Time is so important in Daisy's and Hoke's affection/friendship that this is a great way to show that.

    There are so many aspects of this film which I could go on and on about. It is a wonderful film of which any person can get a fulfilling movie watching experience out of. They can also learn a lot from it, too! Watch it.
    8SnoopyStyle

    Great performance from Tandy and Freeman

    Daisy Werthan (Jessica Tandy) is an elderly Atlanta Jewish woman. The movie opens with her backing the car into her neighbor's yard. Her son Boolie (Dan Aykroyd) is a wealthy Textile factory owner, and he refuses to allow her to drive. He hires Hoke Colburn (Morgan Freeman) as her driver. She hates having him around at first, but their relationships eventually grows to the closest of friendship.

    Written by Alfred Uhry from his award winning play, this is a touching evolution of the two's relationship. Jessica Tandy and Morgan Freeman are absolutely wonderful. Tandy would win the Oscar. The beauty in this is that it doesn't hit the audience over the head. She's not some two dimensional racist. Mostly she doesn't want to put on airs, and she doesn't want somebody bothering her at the her house.
    7cardsrock

    Less is more

    I appreciated the fact that this film doesn't resort to overt lines of dialogue or actions to make its point. It relies on simple gestures and nuanced acting to convey its messages. Freeman and Tandy are excellent in doing this and are the driving force of the film. It goes at its own leisurely pace, which you can kind of respect. Though it it does seem to drag a little even with its short running time. Driving Miss Daisy is a pretty prototypical Best Picture winner for an old, sentimental Academy who respond to warm, old-fashioned films.
    10BrandtSponseller

    A gem

    Driving Miss Daisy is an unusual film. Although it's really more of an extended pair of entwined character portraits--spanning a quarter of a century--it has all of the narrative focus and tightness of a more traditionally structured mystery plot.

    The character portraits are of Daisy Werthan (Jessica Tandy) and Hoke Colburn (Morgan Freeman). The film is set in suburbs of Atlanta and begins in the late 1940s or early 1950s. Daisy is wealthy, but she wasn't born that way. Her son, Boolie (Dan Aykroyd) runs the successful family business--a large textile factory. At the beginning of the film, we see Miss Daisy, who is already around 60 years old or so, have a driving mishap--she has the car in the wrong gear and runs off of her driveway, almost completely backing over a 10 foot drop to the neighbor's driveway, at about 20 miles an hour. This naturally concerns Boolie, and when Daisy has a problem finding a company that is willing to insure her after the accident, Boolie hires Hoke--also rapidly approaching "elderly"--as her driver, against her protests. She doesn't want a driver. She doesn't want someone else in her house. She doesn't want to be treated as if she's incapable. Driving Miss Daisy is an exploration of Hoke and Daisy's relationship, all the way into the early 1970s.

    Alfred Uhry adapted the script from a play he wrote by the same name that was first produced Off-Broadway. Although the play began in a small theater, it had good reviews and good word of mouth, necessitating a move to a larger theater. Uhry eventually won a Pulitzer Prize for his work. He has said that that Driving Miss Daisy was semi-biographical about his grandmother and her driver.

    That fact probably helped create the remarkable depth of character shown in the film, although certainly director Bruce Beresford, Freeman, who also starred in the play, and Tandy do more than their share to build a charming, frequently funny and poignant portrayal of two very different humans learning to see eye to eye.

    It's significant that Driving Miss Daisy is set in the South and spans the period prior to and slightly after the civil rights movement in the US. And it's significant that Hoke is an African-American while Miss Daisy is Jewish.

    Miss Daisy is humorously fussy, prim and proper. Well, to the audience at least--I don't suppose it would be so humorous to have to deal with it. This helps create an initial "formal antagonism" between Daisy and Hoke. Only infinite calm and patience from Hoke earns a gradual softening of Daisy's public displeasure and curmudgeonliness. The unusual structure means that Driving Miss Daisy is more a series of vignettes, each significant to the gradual coming together of Hoke and Daisy, although most incidents are relatively minor in isolation. Uhry makes the film a collection of those small but memorable, important and frequently amusing (at least in retrospect) moments that make up a lifetime of telling memories in any familial relationship--and Hoke does become family. Eventually, Hoke and Daisy form a bond that is perhaps stronger than Daisy's bond with her own son.

    As for the significance of Hoke and Daisy's ethnic orientations, Miss Daisy makes a vocal point of not being racist or otherwise discriminatory. She also likes to focus on her humble beginnings--a few incidents near the beginning of her relationship with Hoke hinge on her being embarrassed at her wealth. And of course, as a Jew in the South, she is well aware of discrimination and disadvantage, having experienced it first hand.

    One of the more touching scenes of the film features Hoke and Daisy driving to Alabama to attend her brother's 90th birthday party. It's Hoke's first time outside of Georgia. They've parked temporarily on the side of the road. Two white Alabama policemen see Hoke and pull over. They want to know what Hoke is doing with a nice, new Cadillac. When they discover that Daisy is Jewish, they are disparaging through implicature, and they make a literally discriminatory remark to each other when Hoke and Daisy drive off. Although these kinds of events are much more major than say, apparently stealing a can of salmon, Uhry and Beresford tie them together wonderfully so that they all have about the same significance.

    Related to these themes, the film is also charming and moving for juxtaposing a kind of personal consistency throughout time with a rapidly changing society. That's why the profound social changes happening "just next door", so to speak, are largely kept in the background.

    Technically, Driving Miss Daisy is a gem. It's full of subtly complex and aesthetically pleasing cinematography, well blocked scenes and a fabulous and deservedly famous score from Hans Zimmer. But the story and performances are so good that it's almost difficult to notice the technical stuff.

    Unless you are completely averse to anything even slightly in the realm of realist drama/light comedy, Driving Miss Daisy is a must-see. It's sentimental but not syrupy and touching but not overly serious--you'll laugh just as often as anything else. Don't miss this one if you haven't yet seen it.
    10bkoganbing

    Long Lingering Twilight

    When Jessica Tandy won her Oscar for Driving Miss Daisy a lot of people forget this was hardly the first southern lady that the British born Tandy played. On Broadway Jessica was the original Blanche Dubois in A Streetcar Named Desire and was the only one of the original cast who didn't make the trip to Hollywood with Vivien Leigh playing Blanche and winning a second Oscar for it. But there is a universe of difference between Blanche Dubois and Daisy Werthing and it ain't just age.

    In fact Tandy may play the only role film history where you start at 70 and then age in the part. She's a genteel southern woman, but formidable who happens to be Jewish. One day she has an accident and emerges unhurt, but the car is wrecked and son Dan Aykroyd decides that his mother needs a chauffeur.

    An idea not pleasing to Tandy as she's used to doing for herself. Even the presence of Esther Rolle as a cook was upsetting to her, but Rolle toughed it out and became a household fixture. So when Aykroyd hires Morgan Freeman to be a driver, Freeman will have his work cut out for him.

    The success of Driving Miss Daisy is really dependent on the chemistry between Tandy and Freeman. You haven't got that and the film would sink. Fortunately they click beautifully together.

    Author Alfred Uhry grew up in the Atlanta of the time and Atlanta was relatively a beacon of some light in the cracker and segregated south of the time. Mayor William B. Hartsfield of the period always advertised his city as the one too busy to hate. Given the parameters of the times, Hartsfield moved to gradually end segregation and to improve the services for Atlanta's black population. Hartsfield is mentioned in passing in the film. Remember Tandy's character is Jewish, a people not looked on too fondly either by a lot of the Deep South. But in Atlanta they have some measure of safety.

    Uhry's memories yielded him a Pulitzer Prize winning play and an Academy Award Best film. He also got an Oscar for adapting his off Broadway success to the screen. Of course Jessica Tandy became the oldest player to ever receive an acting Oscar. And Driving Miss Daisy also got an Oscar for Best Makeup.

    And it was nominated for Best Art&Set Direction, Best Editing, Best Costumes with Oscar nods for Morgan Freeman for Best Actor and Dan Aykroyd for Best Supporting Actor.

    For Freeman his best moment comes when on a trip to Mobile,Alabama with Tandy he puts up with the indignities and humiliation of segregation and exposes Tandy to a world she really wasn't aware of. And Tandy got her Oscar for the moment when she and those around her realize that Alzheimer's Disease has gotten control. For an elderly player to even contemplate such a thing that could so easily happen to them must be a nerve wracking experience. Jessica Tandy saw in her life such colleagues as Rita Hayworth, Dana Andrews, and Edmond O'Brien among others lose their last few years and careers to the long lingering twilight of Alzheimer's, no doubt she drew from all of them and her own fears that it could happen to her to deliver this performance.

    Driving Miss Daisy is one of the best films of the last half of the last century and one that will be studied and revived for years to come. Budding actors who need chemistry lessons should study what is working between Tandy and Freeman.

    Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Three black men are seen crossing railroad tracks in Atlanta. All three of these men are descendants of the real person (Will Coleman) that the "Hoke" character was based upon.
    • Erros de gravação
      The bombing of The Temple in Atlanta took place in 1958, yet is shown as occurring in 1966 or later (because it is shown after the scene in which Boolie receives an award in 1966). Hoke is also driving mid-1960s Cadillac in the scene.
    • Citações

      Daisy Werthan: Hoke?

      Hoke Colburn: Yes'm.

      Daisy Werthan: You're my best friend.

      Hoke Colburn: No, go on Miss Daisy.

      Daisy Werthan: No, really, you are...

      [Takes Hoke's hand]

      Daisy Werthan: You are.

      Hoke Colburn: Yes'm.

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      Film title logo appears at the end of closing credits
    • Conexões
      Featured in Precious Images (1986)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      After The Ball
      (1892)

      Words and Music by Charles Harris (as Charles K. Harris)

      Sung a cappella by Jessica Tandy (uncredited)

      Published by Charles K. Harris Publishing Company, Inc.

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    Perguntas frequentes23

    • How long is Driving Miss Daisy?Fornecido pela Alexa
    • What 1948 Hudson car model was featured in the early part of the movie?
    • Why was she addressed as Miss, and not Mrs Daisy ?
    • What movie was Idella watching when she dies of heart attack?

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 23 de fevereiro de 1990 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Hebraico
    • Também conhecido como
      • El chofer y la señora Daisy
    • Locações de filme
      • 822 Lullwater Road, Druid Hills, Atlanta, Geórgia, EUA(Miss Daisy's house)
    • Empresas de produção
      • The Zanuck Company
      • Allied Filmmakers
      • Majestic Films International
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 7.500.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 106.593.296
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 73.745
      • 17 de dez. de 1989
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 145.793.296
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 39 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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