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IMDbPro

Meu Pé Esquerdo

Título original: My Left Foot: The Story of Christy Brown
  • 1989
  • Livre
  • 1 h 43 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,8/10
83 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
3.176
614
Daniel Day-Lewis in Meu Pé Esquerdo (1989)
Home Video Trailer from Miramax
Reproduzir trailer1:16
2 vídeos
99+ fotos
BiografiaDrama

Christy Brown, nascido com paralisia cerebral, aprende a pintar e escrever com seu único membro controlável: seu pé esquerdo.Christy Brown, nascido com paralisia cerebral, aprende a pintar e escrever com seu único membro controlável: seu pé esquerdo.Christy Brown, nascido com paralisia cerebral, aprende a pintar e escrever com seu único membro controlável: seu pé esquerdo.

  • Direção
    • Jim Sheridan
  • Roteiristas
    • Shane Connaughton
    • Jim Sheridan
    • Christy Brown
  • Artistas
    • Daniel Day-Lewis
    • Brenda Fricker
    • Alison Whelan
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,8/10
    83 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    3.176
    614
    • Direção
      • Jim Sheridan
    • Roteiristas
      • Shane Connaughton
      • Jim Sheridan
      • Christy Brown
    • Artistas
      • Daniel Day-Lewis
      • Brenda Fricker
      • Alison Whelan
    • 135Avaliações de usuários
    • 62Avaliações da crítica
    • 97Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Ganhou 2 Oscars
      • 23 vitórias e 20 indicações no total

    Vídeos2

    My Left Foot
    Trailer 1:16
    My Left Foot
    Which Movie Scarred Charlize Theron for Life?
    Video 1:52
    Which Movie Scarred Charlize Theron for Life?
    Which Movie Scarred Charlize Theron for Life?
    Video 1:52
    Which Movie Scarred Charlize Theron for Life?

    Fotos111

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    Elenco principal69

    Editar
    Daniel Day-Lewis
    Daniel Day-Lewis
    • Christy Brown
    Brenda Fricker
    Brenda Fricker
    • Mrs. Brown
    Alison Whelan
    • Sheila
    Kirsten Sheridan
    Kirsten Sheridan
    • Sharon
    Declan Croghan
    Declan Croghan
    • Tom
    Eanna MacLiam
    Eanna MacLiam
    • Benny
    Marie Conmee
    Marie Conmee
    • Sadie
    Cyril Cusack
    Cyril Cusack
    • Lord Castlewelland
    Phelim Drew
    Phelim Drew
    • Brian
    Ruth McCabe
    Ruth McCabe
    • Mary
    Fiona Shaw
    Fiona Shaw
    • Dr. Eileen Cole
    Ray McAnally
    Ray McAnally
    • Mr. Brown
    Pat Laffan
    Pat Laffan
    • Barman
    • (as Patrick Laffan)
    Derry Power
    Derry Power
    • Customer in Bar
    Hugh O'Conor
    Hugh O'Conor
    • Young Christy Brown
    Darren McHugh
    • Young Benny
    Owen Sharpe
    Owen Sharpe
    • Young Tom
    • (as Owen Sharp)
    Eileen Colgan
    Eileen Colgan
    • Nan
    • Direção
      • Jim Sheridan
    • Roteiristas
      • Shane Connaughton
      • Jim Sheridan
      • Christy Brown
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários135

    7,883K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    WalterFrith

    Don't feel sorry for this character!

    Daniel Day-Lewis' almost impossible performance as a man with cerebral palsy earned him a well-deserved Oscar in 1989 for Best Actor over the heavily favoured Tom Cruise in 'Born on the Fourth of July' and Morgan Freeman in 'Driving Miss Daisy'. The Academy was still riding the wave of awarding Dustin Hoffman a second Best Actor prize a year earlier for his performance as a mentally challenged individual in 'Rain Man' and since Day-Lewis' performance was superior to Hoffman's, the Academy had to recognize him. Day-Lewis probably would have won anyway as his performance was hard to ignore and he had never received any acting nominations from the Academy before this film despite turning in great work in such films as 'The Unbearable Lightness of Being' and 'My Beautiful Laundrette.'

    As Christy Brown, Daniel Day-Lewis makes his character unsympathetic as he doesn't want you to feel sorry for him. He achieved the great success of being an accomplished writer and artist. Director Jim Sheridan directs the film like a series of home movies that millions want to see.

    Brenda Fricker won the Oscar as Best Supporting Actress as Brown's mother and she is the real moral centre of the film and this film proves that Hollywood is capable of choosing small, lesser known films for Oscar consideration and 'My Left Foot' is a film that is uplifting without being sentimental.
    mulhollandman

    An amazing debut

    I can still remember the fuss that was made when this movie was first released. Everybody was applauding it. 14 years down the line the film is very dated, but still very enjoyable but more importantly very powerful. The story centers around Poet, artist and author to be Christy Brown. He suffers from Celerbal Paulsy (I hope that is spelled right) which means to be all three of the above occupations is some feat that should not go unnoticed. He lives in a large family (13 children, not all who suffered) in a small terraced house in Dublin's City Center. The movie begins with his birth and the late great Ray Mc Nally being told by a nurse that there were complications during the birth. We move forward a couple years to where we see a young Christy (played by Hugh O'Connor) being helped around by his mother. It is a sad sight to see him underneath the stairs of his family home watching his brothers and sisters (all Abled bodied) living a normal lifestyle (despite being poor) and knowing that he is just as well able to communicate. The finest scene in this early stage of his life is when Christy writes for the first time. In front of his family. His father is sceptical at first however his opinion is reversed when Christy finally proves that he is not the idiot that everybody thinks him to be. We then move to Christy's later teenage years where he meets a nurse with whose help he begins to learn how articulate his words. However Christy becomes infatuated with this lady. His mother is delighted that her son is happy however his father is once again the sceptic but this time he has good cause to as Christy's heart is broken when this woman announces that she is engaged to an Art dealer. This film is brilliant and I have a massive amount of praise for Daniel Day-Lewis who portrays Christy as an angry young man who is coming to terms with everything in his life. He is disturbed by womens reluctance to accept him and his condition, He is fed up of his fathers treatment of his mother and his siblings. Day-Lewis is totally immersed in his character and it is one of his finest roles. I have seen old interviews with the real Christy Brown and I can safely say that it is hard at times to distinguish is it Christy Brown or Daniel Day-Lewis on the screen. However the show is stolen from him by the finer performances of young Hugh O'Connor and Ray Mc Nally. Both of whom should have got Oscars as Best Supporting Actor (O'Connor) and Best Actor (Ray Mc Nally). O'Connor definitely proves himself in the role because he portrays the same qualities that Day-Lewis does as a frustrated youngster. Mc Nally defines the typical Irish Father role that would be made humorous by Colm Meaney in a number of films. It is such a great pity that he died shortly after this film. Brenda Fricker must also be mentioned as the doting mother who does everything that she can to help Christy reach his full potential. Again she is life like to Christy Browns real life mother however I think there were more deserving people for that Best Supporting Actress Oscar. This film is an amazing piece of independent film making and it really does so the potential of Jim Sheridan as a director and actor. He would further develop the themes of family, Irish society, loyalty in his other films. 9 out of 10.
    8JamesHitchcock

    A Great Performance from Day-Lewis

    A noted cinematic phenomenon of the late eighties and early nineties was the number of Oscars which went to actors playing characters who were either physically or mentally handicapped. The first was Marlee Matlin's award for "Children of a Lesser God" in 1986, and the next ten years were to see another "Best Actress" award (Holly Hunter for "The Piano" in 1994) and no fewer than five "Best Actor" awards (Dustin Hoffman in 1988 for "Rain Man", Daniel Day-Lewis in 1989 for "My Left Foot", Al Pacino in 1992 for "Scent of a Woman", Tom Hanks in 1994 for "Forrest Gump" and Geoffrey Rush in 1996 for "Shine") for portrayals of the disabled. Matlin, who played a deaf woman, is herself deaf, but all the others are able-bodied.

    This phenomenon aroused some adverse comment at the time, with suggestions being made that these awards were given more for political correctness than for the quality of the acting. When Jodie Foster failed to win "Best Actress" for "Nell" in 1994 some people saw this as evidence of a backlash against this sort of portrayal. My view, however, is that the majority of these awards were well deserved. I thought the 1992 award should have gone to either Clint Eastwood or Robert Downey rather than Pacino, but apart from that the only one with which I disagreed would have been Hanks', and that was because I preferred Nigel Hawthorne's performance in "The Madness of King George". In that film, of course, Hawthorne played a character who was mentally ill.

    "My Left Foot" was based upon the autobiography of the Irish writer and painter Christy Brown. Brown was born in 1931, one of the thirteen children of a working-class Dublin family. He was born with cerebral palsy and was at first wrongly thought to be mentally handicapped as well. He was for a long time incapable of deliberate movement or speech, but eventually discovered that he could control the movements of one part of his body, his left foot (hence the title). He learned to write and draw by holding a piece of chalk between his toes, and went on to become a painter and a published novelist and poet.

    Life in working-class Dublin in the thirties and forties could be hard, and the city Jim Sheridan (himself a Dubliner) shows us here is in many ways a grim, grey, cheerless place, very different from our normal idea of the "Emerald Isle". (Sheridan and Day-Lewis were later to collaborate on another film with an Irish theme, "In the Name of the Father"). Against this, however, must be set the cheerfulness and spirit of its people, especially the Brown family. Much of Christy's success was due to the support he received from his parents, who refused to allow him to be institutionalised and always believed in the intelligence hidden beneath a crippled exterior, and from his siblings. We see how his brothers used to wheel him round in a specially-made cart and how they helped their bricklayer father to build Christy a room of his own in their back yard.

    The film could easily have slid into sentimentality and ended up as just another heart-warming "triumph over adversity" movie. That it does not is due to a number of factors, principally the magnificent acting. In the course of his career, Day-Lewis has given a number of fine performances, but this, together with the recent "There Will Be Blood", is his best. He is never less than 100% convincing as Christie; his tortured, jerky movements and strained attempts at speech persuade us that we really are watching a disabled person, even though, intellectually, we are well aware that Day-Lewis is able-bodied. The other performances which stand out are from Fiona Shaw as his mentor Dr Eileen Cole, from Hugh O'Conor as the young Christy and from Brenda Fricker as Christy's mother (which won her the "Best Supporting Actress" award).

    The other reason why the film escapes sentimentality is that it does not try to sentimentalise its main character. Christy Brown had a difficult life, but he could also be difficult to live with, and the film gives us a "warts and all" portrait. He was a heavy drinker, given to foul language and prone to outbursts of rage. He could also be selfish and manipulative of those around him, and the film shows us all these aspects of his character. Of course, it also shows us the positive aspects- his courage, his determination and his wicked sense of humour. Day-Lewis's acting is not just physically convincing, in that it persuades us to believe in his character's disability, but also emotionally and intellectually convincing, in that it brings out all these different facets of Christy's character. His Oscar was won in the teeth of some very strong opposition from the likes of Robin Williams and Kenneth Branagh, but it was well deserved. 8/10
    10jafar-iqbal

    It's the Daniel Day-Lewis show!!

    'My Left Foot' is the remarkable story of Christy Brown, born into a working-class Irish family with cerebral palsy. Growing up in a life full of poverty and extreme prejudice, Christy defied everyone's expectations. Using his left foot, the only part of his body he had proper control over, the young man learned to write and paint.

    I could spend this review talking about the film's excellent portrayal of working class Ireland, and the working class Irish family specifically. I could talk about how the film does a good job of showing how the attitudes towards Christy Brown changed as Ireland's own political landscape changed. I could probably also talk about the role of women in Christy's life, from his mother and sisters, to the loves in his life. All of these things are worthy of mention.

    However, when talking about 'My Left Foot', there is one thing that stands out above everything else; that being Daniel Day-Lewis. Day-Lewis had already proved his acting chops in the excellent 'My Beautiful Laundrette, but it was this movie that put him on the map globally. And rightly so: he is absolutely fantastic as Christy Brown.

    Acting is difficult at the best of times, when you're playing a fully-functioning human being. What Day-Lewis achieves, therefore, is even more admirable. It is an extremely effective and realistic portrayal of someone suffering from cerebral palsy, and the actor goes gung-ho with both the physicality expressiveness required for the role. It is a joy to watch.

    An honourable mention also needs to go to Hugh O'Conor, who plays the younger Brown. I can only assume that it is even harder for a child to go through the rigours that the role requires, but O'Conor is brilliant. What makes the character difficult to play is that, in trying to make it look real physically, the emotion required can be lost. Both actors avoid that problem with what seems like relative ease: at no point does the efficacy or emotion of the moments falter.

    All the other stuff mentioned above are worthy of talking about, if I intended to write a longer review. But for this small thing, I think it is more than enough to say that 'My Left Foot' deserves to be seen just for this landmark Daniel Day-Lewis performance. Whatever you may think of the film as a whole, or whether you care about the story of Christy Brown or not, it is secondary to the simple appreciation for an actor at the top of his game.
    8SnoopyStyle

    Terrific Daniel Day-Lewis performance

    Christy Brown is born with cerebral palsy. His father (Ray McAnally) refuses to give him up and he learns to live with controlling only his left foot. His loving mother (Brenda Fricker) tirelessly raise him. As a child (Hugh O'Conor), everybody assumed that he's a simpleton until he wrote MOTHER with chalk. As a young man (Daniel Day-Lewis), he is rejected by the pretty girl. His father loses his job and becomes abusive. He falls for Dr. Cole (Fiona Shaw) treating his cerebral palsy but she's engaged. As an older man, he falls for his nurse Sheila (Alison Whelan).

    It's a tough way to act for Daniel Day-Lewis. It's not just the physicality but he has to make sense despite his speech pattern. He has to be understandable without speaking understandable English. It's his anger and his unlikeability that brings out his humanity. He's not playing a saint or a caricature. It's a real person. It's an all-around performance.

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    • Curiosidades
      According to the "Making of My Left Foot" segment on the Special Edition DVD, Sir Daniel Day-Lewis broke two ribs during filming from assuming the hunched-over position in his wheelchair for weeks of filming. He also would refuse to come out of character. On visits to the set canteen, other people would have to help him with food. On one visit from his English agent, Day-Lewis again refused to come out of character as Christy Brown, and his frustrated agent took off.
    • Erros de gravação
      In the beginning of the movie, when Mary Carr gets Christy Brown into the library, the shadow of the boom mic can clearly be seen on a white door.
    • Citações

      Christy Brown: I've had nothing but Platonic love all me life. Do you know what I say? FUCK PLATO! And fuck all love that's not a hundred percent commitment!

    • Conexões
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Immediate Family/The Bear/Dad/Next of Kin/Carnival of Souls (1989)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Foggy Dew
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

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    • How long is My Left Foot?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 30 de março de 1990 (Brasil)
    • Países de origem
      • Irlanda
      • Reino Unido
    • Centrais de atendimento oficiais
      • Miramax (United States)
      • Official Facebook
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Mi pie izquierdo: la historia de Christy Brown
    • Locações de filme
      • Ardmore Studios, Herbert Road, Bray, County Wicklow, Irlanda(Studio)
    • Empresas de produção
      • Ferndale Films
      • Granada Television
      • Hell's Kitchen Films
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • £ 600.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 14.743.391
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 41.165
      • 12 de nov. de 1989
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 14.743.391
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 43 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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