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IMDbPro

Nada é para Sempre

Título original: A River Runs Through It
  • 1992
  • 12
  • 2 h 3 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,2/10
68 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
3.595
1.061
Nada é para Sempre (1992)
Home Video Trailer from Columbia Tristar
Reproduzir trailer2:36
2 vídeos
99+ fotos
AmadurecimentoDocudramaDramaDrama de épocaTragédia

Relata a história dos dois filhos de um ministro, um deles um reservado e outro rebelde, que cresceram na zona rural de Montana enquanto pescavam.Relata a história dos dois filhos de um ministro, um deles um reservado e outro rebelde, que cresceram na zona rural de Montana enquanto pescavam.Relata a história dos dois filhos de um ministro, um deles um reservado e outro rebelde, que cresceram na zona rural de Montana enquanto pescavam.

  • Direção
    • Robert Redford
  • Roteiristas
    • Norman Maclean
    • Richard Friedenberg
  • Artistas
    • Craig Sheffer
    • Brad Pitt
    • Tom Skerritt
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,2/10
    68 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    3.595
    1.061
    • Direção
      • Robert Redford
    • Roteiristas
      • Norman Maclean
      • Richard Friedenberg
    • Artistas
      • Craig Sheffer
      • Brad Pitt
      • Tom Skerritt
    • 188Avaliações de usuários
    • 39Avaliações da crítica
    • 68Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Ganhou 1 Oscar
      • 4 vitórias e 11 indicações no total

    Vídeos2

    A River Runs Through It
    Trailer 2:36
    A River Runs Through It
    Robert Redford: The Con With Conviction & the End of a Legendary Screen Persona
    Clip 5:10
    Robert Redford: The Con With Conviction & the End of a Legendary Screen Persona
    Robert Redford: The Con With Conviction & the End of a Legendary Screen Persona
    Clip 5:10
    Robert Redford: The Con With Conviction & the End of a Legendary Screen Persona

    Fotos207

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    Elenco principal48

    Editar
    Craig Sheffer
    Craig Sheffer
    • Norman Maclean
    Brad Pitt
    Brad Pitt
    • Paul Maclean
    Tom Skerritt
    Tom Skerritt
    • Rev. Maclean
    Brenda Blethyn
    Brenda Blethyn
    • Mrs. Maclean
    Emily Lloyd
    Emily Lloyd
    • Jessie Burns
    Edie McClurg
    Edie McClurg
    • Mrs. Burns
    Stephen Shellen
    Stephen Shellen
    • Neal Burns
    Vann Gravage
    • Young Paul
    Nicole Burdette
    • Mabel
    Susan Traylor
    Susan Traylor
    • Rawhide
    Michael Cudlitz
    Michael Cudlitz
    • Chub
    Rob Cox
    Rob Cox
    • Conroy
    Buck Simmonds
    • Humph
    Fred Oakland
    • Mr. Burns
    David Creamer
    • Ken Burns
    Madonna Reubens
    • Aunt Sally
    John Reubens
    • Uncle Jimmy
    Arnold Richardson
    • Old Norman
    • Direção
      • Robert Redford
    • Roteiristas
      • Norman Maclean
      • Richard Friedenberg
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários188

    7,268.4K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    9DrewAlexanderR1

    A True Classic

    When I first saw this movie I was with my dad. He encouraged me to watch this movie because it was one of his favorites. After watching the movie it instantly became one of mine.

    A River Runs Through It is about two brothers who each take a different path in life. Norman Maclean (Craig Sheffer) is the older of the two brothers and sets out on the path of education. Paul Maclean (Brad Pitt) is the rebellious younger brother who travels on a path full of obstacles.

    The story follows these characters as the each walk their own path. There is no downside to this film. You will be entertained the whole way through. The acting, directing, and script are all perfect. The two things that are exceptional are the cinematography and the score. Both bring you into the world Robert Redford creates.

    This is an all around great film that is destined to be a classic. It sure is in my book. If you haven't seen it definitely watch it as soon as you can, because it will stay with you forever.
    8whpratt1

    Very Deep Heart Searching Film

    Enjoyed this film produced by Robert Redford which deals with a Presbyterian Minister who has two sons, one is reserved and the other is a hell raiser. This film takes place in Montana and the beauty of their rivers and wonderful land and its beautiful mountains. Tom Skeritt, (Rev. MacLean) plays the role of a very loving parent of Norman MacLean, (Craig Sheffer) who is basically a very straight arrow and also his brother Paul MacLean, (Brad Pitt) who is a newspaper reporter and has a very wild way living especially with drinking and plenty of women. There is a sweet romance between Norman MacLean and Jessie Burns, (Emily Lloyd) who fall in love with each other and these two people try to guide Paul MacLean into a better way of living but he just cannot seem to settle down. Great film about what life is really about in many families. Enjoy
    10macpherr

    This movie is very dear to my own Heart! Movies cannot get better than this!

    I have read the short story by Norman Maclean, and the movie did justice to Norman Maclean's writing. My husband tends to reread it occasionally, and I myself have read it over and scenes of the movie keeps coming to mind. We have videos of many of Redford ‘s movies and we have watched "A River runs through it" many times. Redford is part of the "famdamily" as he is always around. We never get tired of Redford's perception of Norman Maclean writings, and the beauty of Montana. The script reminds me very much of my own upbringing as my father had the same calling as Mr. Maclean's father. According to "A River Runs Through It," "Methodists are Baptists who can read," a line which by the way is not in the short story, but I think that is a funny line! My husband and I are well-read Baptists!

    I have heard a movie critic state that the pace of this movie is too slow. I disagree. As one search for inner peace, this is the type of movie that will make you contemplate the beauty of nature in three/four rhythm of the metronome. The photography is outstanding! The acting is great. I love the scene where Norman and Paul as boys talked and wondered whether one could be a fly fisher or a boxer! Then as adult Paul played by Brad Pitt (Se7ven) is the "perfect guy" who needs help with his alcoholism but will not accept it. The same applies to Neal Burns, who uses worms as bait, he also needed help but would not accept the fact that he needed help. The scene where Paul refuses to eat oatmeal and the entire family has to wait an eternity to say grace! Finally after hours, they all kneel around the table to say: "Grace!" and they all leave. But the oatmeal stayed on the plate! That scene where the two love birds and their tattoos on their posteriors! That is funny! The sunburn! The drive back home where Jessie Burns (Emily Lloyd) decides to go via the train line! Beautiful dialogue when Norman proposes to Jessie because he wants her to come to Chicago with him!

    Redford himself does a superb job as a narrator. I could not stop myself from comparing Brad to the young Redford (Barefoot in the Park). The nominated Director, Producer, Actor, is a visionary who deserves to be praised for his advancement not only in the cinema in the US but around the world. I am glad to live in nineteen hundred because I have seen the beginning of the black and white television, the movies and all the technology and special effects, to be able to watch videos at home and to live in the same century as Redford because I have had the chance to see his works. Redford needs no special effects to show us the beauty of Montana in this masterpiece. The river to me means that line that separates life from death, memories and realities. Redford shows the hands of the Creator so magnificently and a river runs through it.
    10defdewd

    Pay attention to the themes that never go away

    Have you seen The Graduate? It was hailed as the movie of its generation. But A River Runs Through It is the story about all generations. Long before Dustin Hoffman's character got all wrapped up in the traps of modern suburbia, Norman Maclean and his brother Paul were facing the same crushing pressures of growing up as they tried to find their place in the world. But how could a place like post WW1 Montana be a showcase for the American family, at a time when the Wild West still was not completely gone? Just what has Maclean tapped into that strikes so deeply at who we all are and what we have to go through to find ourselves? As the movie opens, Norman is an old man, flyfishing beside a rushing river, trying to understand the course his own life has taken. The movie is literally a journey up through his own stream of consciousness, against time's current and back to when he was a boy. He and his younger brother Paul were the sons of a Presbyterian minister and devoted mother. The parents fit snugly into their roles. Mom takes care of house and home. Dad does the work of the Lord. The boys ponder what they will be when they grow up. Norm has it narrowed down to a boxer or a minister like his dad. Given the choice, little Paul would be the boxer, since he's told his first choice of pro flyfisherman doesn't even exist. The boys grow up and get into trouble with their pranks, fight to see who is tougher and do the things brothers do, all the while attending church and taking part in all other spiritual matters like flyfishing. They are at similar points in their lives before college. But when Norm returns from his six years at Dartmouth, things are very different. Paul is at the top of his game. Master flyfisherman. Grad of a nearby college and newspaper reporter who knows every cop on the beat and every judge on the bench. Norman is stunningly well educated for his day but has little idea what to do with his life, even as his father grills him about what he intends to do. You're left feeling that at least to Pops, God will call you to your life's work. But you have to stay open and ready to receive it -- all your life. Father has always taken his boys to reflect by the side of the river and contemplate God's eternal words. "Listen," their father urges. It's both Zen and Quakerly. Pretty radical for a stoic clergyman. But with all the beauty and contemplation, and even though the Macleans are truly a God-fearing, scripture-heeding household, how is it that Rev. Maclean's family is unraveling? Paul is true perfection as he fishes the river, but he's feeling the pull of gambling and boozing, while his family doesn't know how to keep him from winding up where he seems to be headed. Mom, Dad and Brother all seem to have the same quiet desperation of not knowing what they should be doing and why they can't seem to help. Pauly just waves it all off with a grin and his irresistible charm. But the junior brother is losing his grip. Norman starts getting his life on track, finding love and career, but Paul continues to slide. The family that loves him watches helplessly. Mother, Father, Brother flounder in their own ways trying to help, but none very effectively. How can a family that loves each other so much be so ill-equipped to handle this? How can someone be so artful and full of grace when out in God's nature, yet be somehow unfit or unwilling to fit into the constructs of society that God's peoples have made for themselves? These are all questions Norman will ponder his entire life. The eternal words beneath the smooth stones of the river forever haunt him, yet keep their secrets. The movie is beautiful to watch. This is certainly God's country, and filming it won an Oscar. Director Robert Redford plays with the story from the book and teases the narration a bit to follow the emotional pattern he's presenting, and it works well. But do go back and read the book, too. You'll see Norman made connections with his old man even deeper than the movie can suggest -- and you'll see the places where the storyteller's very words gurgle and sing right off the page with an exuberance of a river running through it, leading into the unknown.
    9AZINDN

    Picturesque and Literary: An Ode to the American Wilderness

    I have seen all the films directed by Robert Redford and appreciated his love of the American people and the land. In A River Runs Through It, Redford displays the lyric romanticism and visual splendor of the high Rocky Mountains of Montana as if he were a 19th century landscape painter of the ilk of Thomas Moran or Albert Bierstadt. This film makes love to the visual and the word with text by author Norman Maclean, and stunning camera work by Phillippe Rousselot (Serpent's Kiss, Reigne Margot).

    Redford's cast is perfect. Tom Skerritt is the Rev. MacLean, a man whose methods of education include fly fishing as well as the Bible, Brenda Blythen, the mother, and his sons, Craig Schaffer and Brad Pitt create a family whose interactions reflect the same problems all encounter with growing teenage sons, and later, complex young men. Both Schaffer and Pitt are totally believable as the brothers whose love of fly fishing and each other will tie them together forever. It is the relationships between men, father and sons, brothers, and their women to the outside world that grounds A River Runs Through It to a vein of storytelling that is missing in so many of Hollywood films produced in recent years.

    What makes these relationships special however, is the attention Redford gives to the language as spoken in dialogue. This is a literate script, beautiful to hear and unforgettable when coupled with the stunning Montana rivers and mountains. The words and setting are equal to performances by a cast that rises to their material. While the idea of fly fishing may seem an odd device to center a story, it is not so implausible in Redford's directorial hands. Given the material, Redford's elegant ode to a simpler time and life is worth revisiting again and again.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Brad Pitt trained himself to fly-fish for four weeks before shooting. Since he was not near any river in Los Angeles, he trained on top of a building.
    • Erros de gravação
      While on the library steps, Norman speaks of meeting boxer John L. Sullivan while at Dartmouth. Norman's departure for college was 1919, yet Sullivan died in 1918.
    • Citações

      Rev. Maclean: Each one of us here today will at one time in our lives look upon a loved one who is in need and ask the same question: We are willing help, Lord, but what, if anything, is needed? For it is true, we can seldom help those closest to us. Either we don't know what part of ourselves to give or, more often than not, the part we have to give is not wanted. And so it those we live with and should know who elude us. But we can still love them - we can love completely without complete understanding.

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      No fish were killed or injured during the making of A RIVER RUNS THROUGH IT. The producers would like to point out that, although the Macleans kept their catch as was common earlier in this century, enlightened fisherman today endorse a "catch and release" policy to assure that this priceless resource swims free to fight another day. Good fishing.
    • Versões alternativas
      The US DVD has different composer credits for the widescreen/pan & scan version. The widescreen version lists Elmer Bernstein (whose score was rejected) while the pan & scan version lists Mark Isham (who replaced Bernstein).
    • Conexões
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The Public Eye/Candyman/Under Siege/A River Runs Through It/Night and the City (1992)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      The Sheik of Araby'
      Written by Harry B. Smith, Ted Snyder, and Francis Wheeler

      Used by Permission of

      Mills Music Corp, Inc. / Jerry Vogel Music Co.

      Ted Snyder Music Co. / Bienstock Publishing Co., on behalf of Redwood Music Ltd.

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    Perguntas frequentes20

    • How long is A River Runs Through It?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 30 de abril de 1993 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Nada es para siempre
    • Locações de filme
      • Granite Falls, Wyoming, EUA(row boating into waterfall)
    • Empresas de produção
      • Allied Filmmakers
      • Wildwood Enterprises
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 12.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 43.440.294
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 298.277
      • 12 de out. de 1992
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 43.440.294
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 2 h 3 min(123 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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