Jessica Lange protagoniza um drama de época sobre uma família se mudar para uma base militar, e rapidamente se torna parte de um encobrimento envolvendo testes de bombas nucleares.Jessica Lange protagoniza um drama de época sobre uma família se mudar para uma base militar, e rapidamente se torna parte de um encobrimento envolvendo testes de bombas nucleares.Jessica Lange protagoniza um drama de época sobre uma família se mudar para uma base militar, e rapidamente se torna parte de um encobrimento envolvendo testes de bombas nucleares.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Ganhou 1 Oscar
- 4 vitórias e 5 indicações no total
- Ned Owens
- (as Tim Scott)
Avaliações em destaque
I don't follow film awards, but Jessica won an Oscar for her performance as the hysterical wife and she deserved it. For this reason many hail the first two acts of the film, and Tommy Lee as well. Unfortunately, her character comes across as unlikable and even scary. You start to feel sad for the daughters!
Some people criticize Boothe as being too dastardly of a villain. Don't believe it. Do these critics really think there aren't any high-ranking military personnel with a Genghis Khan complex? Men who think they're above the rules and can get away with anything their arrogant butts' desire? Boothe's character comes across as a solid military leader who's tempted by a subordinate's sultry wife and then does everything he can to save himself. This type of behavior is older than David and Bathsheba.
Some complain about how unbelievable the last act is. Two things: (1.) This is a movie and movies always amp up the dramatics. The filmmakers essentially have to do this because, well, it's a movie and they only have 2 hours to tell the story. (2.) Besides, the film's making a point about Lange's character and it's important to the story. ***SPOILER ALERT*** It shows that, as erratic and unlikable as she is in the first two acts, she redeems herself by literally risking everything for her husband. It's a powerful and necessary point. ***END SPOILER***
This is also a good film about life on a military base, like "The Great Santini" with some similarities to "Desert Bloom", albeit not quite as good as either.
The film was shot in Selma, Alabama, Florida and El Paso, Texas. It runs 101 minutes.
GRADE: B
But the main story is their troubled relationship, and how through good, bad and worse they get through it with each other's support. Jessica Lange's performance as an unstable woman was amazing, not over the top in which it would have been typically done, but was portrayed truely and its fine nuance conveyed the subtle change in her mental state.
Blue Sky is set in the years of the Kennedy Administration and it's plot concerns a dedicated Army Major, Tommy Lee Jones and his family consisting of wife Jessica Lange and daughters Amy Locane and Anna Klump.
Jones is more than an army officer, he's a nuclear scientist and deeply concerned about the collateral effects of radiation on the population. I well remember the time. President Eisenhower in his second term of office made an unilateral executive decision to stop above ground nuclear testing, but the Russians continued. I well remember Premier Khrushchev in a bit of saber rattling, exploded a one hundred megaton hydrogen bomb.
Anyway President Kennedy decided at one point to resume nuclear testing to get the Russians back to the bargaining table for a nuclear test ban treaty. That's the background for this story and we all know that the first thaw in the Cold War was that test ban treaty that was ratified during the summer of 1963.
Anyway Jones is looking to ban it all, writing all kinds of reports that the army isn't taking too seriously and in fact transfers him from California to Alabama where he's told in no uncertain terms by his commander Powers Boothe to cool it. The military wasn't exactly thrilled with what Kennedy was trying to do.
But Jones has some pressing concerns on the domestic front. Jessica Lange is a lusty woman with needs and her husband isn't doing right by her. She looks like Marilyn Monroe and really does have all the army polishing its brass for her. Including Powers Boothe who sends Jones away so they can play.
It all ends in disaster, but Jessica summons up a lot more character than we would have first given her credit for to right the situation. It's in those last scenes that Jessica Lange brought home Oscar.
Young Chris O'Donnell is in the cast as well as Carrie Snodgrass as the son and wife of Boothe and O'Donnell the young man about to go to West Point finds out just what kind of rat his father really is. And Boothe does very well as the rat.
But in the last twenty minutes of the film Jessica's change in character dominates the film and it's reason enough to check out Blue Sky
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe film was completed in 1991, but was shelved and not released theatrically until three years later. This was due to studio production house Orion Pictures' bankruptcy.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe major has a full serving of "scrambled eggs" which is reserved for Generals. A Major is entitled to wear only a single row of Oak Leaves on the bill of his cap.
- Citações
Hank Marshall: You take water, for example. Sometimes it's water, sometimes it's ice. Sometimes it's steam, vapor. It always the same old H2O. It only changes its properties. Your mother's like that. She's like water.
- ConexõesFeatured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Tommy Lee Jones (1993)
- Trilhas sonoras(Baby) You've Got What It Takes
Written by Clyde Otis & Murray Stein
Performed by Brook Benton & Dinah Washington
Courtesy of PolyGram Special Products
A division of PolyGram Group Distribution, Inc.
Principais escolhas
- How long is Blue Sky?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 16.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 3.359.465
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 763.890
- 18 de set. de 1994
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 3.359.465
- Tempo de duração1 hora 41 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1