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Hysterical Blindness

  • Filme para televisão
  • 2002
  • TV-MA
  • 1 h 39 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,5/10
3,5 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Hysterical Blindness (2002)
Drama

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaTwo friends lament their unhappy single lives while searching for Mr. Right in 1980s New Jersey.Two friends lament their unhappy single lives while searching for Mr. Right in 1980s New Jersey.Two friends lament their unhappy single lives while searching for Mr. Right in 1980s New Jersey.

  • Direção
    • Mira Nair
  • Roteirista
    • Laura Cahill
  • Artistas
    • Uma Thurman
    • Juliette Lewis
    • Gena Rowlands
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,5/10
    3,5 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Mira Nair
    • Roteirista
      • Laura Cahill
    • Artistas
      • Uma Thurman
      • Juliette Lewis
      • Gena Rowlands
    • 71Avaliações de usuários
    • 12Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Ganhou 3 Primetime Emmys
      • 4 vitórias e 18 indicações no total

    Fotos25

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    Elenco principal25

    Editar
    Uma Thurman
    Uma Thurman
    • Debby Miller
    Juliette Lewis
    Juliette Lewis
    • Beth
    Gena Rowlands
    Gena Rowlands
    • Virginia Miller
    Justin Chambers
    Justin Chambers
    • Rick
    Ben Gazzara
    Ben Gazzara
    • Nick
    Anthony DeSando
    Anthony DeSando
    • Bobby
    • (as Anthony De Sando)
    Jolie Peters
    Jolie Peters
    • Amber Autumn
    Callie Thorne
    Callie Thorne
    • Carolann
    Lisa Altomare
    • Dora
    Laura Cahill
    • Tonya
    Johann Carlo
    Johann Carlo
    • Susan
    Alex Draper
    • Michael
    Russell Gibson
    • Diner Customer
    Jayne Haynes
    • Annie
    Susan Isaacs
    Susan Isaacs
    • Theresa
    Ali Marsh
    Ali Marsh
    • Trina
    Wade Mylius
    • Bill
    Bobby Tisdale
    Bobby Tisdale
    • Guy
    • Direção
      • Mira Nair
    • Roteirista
      • Laura Cahill
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários71

    6,53.4K
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    7jotix100

    Jersey Girls

    Mira Nair, the talented director of this film keeps surprising us. She gets excellent acting from the different casts in all her movies. "Hysterical Blindness" is no exception. Ms. Nair working on the screen play by Laura Cahill, and based on Ms. Cahill's own stage play, takes us to a town in New Jersey, so close to Manhattan in geography, but far away in the way these people seem to be living in another planet.

    Debby Miller blames her mother for whatever is wrong with her life. Her father left her when she was quite young. Her mother, Virginia, makes ends meet by working as a waitress in a local diner. Both daughter and mother have been cheated out of happiness because of the loss they have experienced. While Debby dwells on her unhappiness, Virginia seems to have adjusted quite well.

    Debby is a woman that is desperate to find a man. Obviously, she is quite capable to give her best into any relationship. It's sad how she goes after the one man she should have avoided in the worst way. It will be too late before she realizes the mistake she has made.

    Throughout the film, Debby and Beth, share their hopes and aspirations. While Beth is grounded, Debby is flighty, hoping for things she can't have. On the other hand, Virginia meets a nice man, Nick, at the diner. They begin a friendship that unfortunately is cut short by tragedy. All in all, the film final scenes tells us that Debby realizing her mistakes goes back to her roots and to her friendship with Beth.

    The strength in the movie is the great performances Ms. Nair gets out of the four principals. Uma Thurman is good as the Debby. Gena Rowlands, as the mother, makes an appealing Virginia, who makes us care about her. Juliette Lewis, as Beth, is also endearing. Ben Gazzara makes a short, but effective contribution as Nick, the man who finds love with Virginia.

    This is a film that shows Ms. Nair's talents perfectly.
    7octomancer

    Great performances, difficult message

    I rate this highly 'cos of the performances of Thurman and Lewis. They were absolutely outstanding. I take on board the comments about the dodgy accents, music, anachronistic details, but they don't matter to 99% of the people who watch. The characterisations were great! Even if they didn't leave you precisely where intended, they were consistent and you could buy into them.

    I really like the comment here to the effect that the film would have some merit if the characters achieved even a hint of self-awareness by the end of the film. This is an important point, and I would agree whole-heartedly if the film had a different title. The title is all that's needed to give this film perspective, to place it specifically and allow it to be what it is without reference to the frame that gives it meaning.
    6blakiepeterson

    A Mixed Bag of a Comedy-Drama

    Seeing Uma Thurman play a genuine, sensitive woman is a strange thing for me. Everyone (including myself) knows she's a terrific actress — but as a Tarantino die-hard obsessed with "Kill Bill" (I've legitimately seen "Vol. 1" at least thirty times), I'm hardly used to her portraying a woman capable of carrying on a soul-baring conversation without cutting someone in half with a Hattori Hanzō sword. Perhaps I should see what else she's capable of before I start making assumptions — so I suppose "Hysterical Blindness", an HBO TV-movie for which she won a Golden Globe, is a good place to start.

    Thurman is Debby Miller, a thirty-ish, '80s bound, New Jersey bred, lonely heart in the process of sinking into the suppressed life of an old maid. She's desperate for love — she and her best friend, single mom Beth (Juliette Lewis), parade around seedy bars looking for potential suitors like a second job — but as her low self-confidence is more up front than her immense good looks, she turns most men off, finding herself in a plight of one-night-stands instead of meaningful relationships. She's torn between continuing her search for Mr. Right and completely giving up; she still lives with her mother (Gena Rowlands), and still holds onto a low-paying job she most likely got in her early twenties. Eventually, Debby finds a possible mate in Rick (Justin Chambers), a seemingly nice guy she met during one of her late-night escapades.

    The hysterical blindness of the title derives from a condition that causes its victim to temporary become visually impaired after a long period of unresolved stress. Debby, so mind-numbingly obsessed with her lack of a love life, experiences the bizarre phenomenon, twice in the film (once in the beginning, to develop her as a neurotic leading lady, and once toward the conclusion, as a dramatic high point that begs her to consider what the hell she's doing with her life).

    Directed by Mira Nair, "Hysterical Blindness" is a drama frustrating in its inability to stay earnest throughout its length. Most of the film is moving, well-acted, but Nair, against good judgment, feels the need to include "Girls Just Want to Have Fun" repeatedly in the soundtrack as if to make the impression that we're watching a sappy woman's world drama more spurious than sincere, to render Debby and Beth as stereotypically New Jersey as possible to make their desperation even more desperate. Thurman and Lewis are so broadly drawn that it's a relief that they stir our emotions during their more dramatic scenes — there, the acting school vulgarity disappears and we finally feel like we understand these women.

    It's irritating that "Hysterical Blindness" is so regularly prodded by fakery, because, at its realest, most truthful, it momentarily turns into a movie rich in its passion. It's at its best when focusing on the relationship between Virginia (Rowlands) and her new boyfriend, Nick (Ben Gazzara). Both in their sixties, both numbed and used to their discontent, the love they find together is unexpected and exciting; Rowlands and Gazzara, in a mini Cassavetes reunion, are deeply touching. The side-plot makes for a good contrast between that of Debby and Beth — they would do anything to have a meaningful romance, and while they wander around various taverns, Virginia, who has been a waitress the majority of her adult life, simple finds someone by being herself. The scenes between Rowlands and Thurman are palpably wistful, their mother-daughter bond so thick that it's less of a familial pairing and more of a friends-forever partnership that guarantees the other that when the going gets rough, sticking together will hardly be an action in question.

    "Hysterical Blindness" is mostly a mixed bag, a sometimes poignant, sometimes obviously calculated comedy-drama that hits home at its best moments but feels like leftovers from an actor's previous vie for an Oscar nomination that didn't quite make it at its worst. But the cast does well with the uneven material, especially Rowlands, making "Hysterical Blindness" decent enough to make even the most cynical of viewers take a look at the world around them and wonder just how many people live to love, throwing their happiness away when they can't quite find it.
    10dixxjamm

    A very pleasant surprise

    I think all women under 40 should see this movie.Thumbs up for the women director's vision on the issues depicted in this movie.Uma Thurman is absolutely gorgeous,very talented,very subtle.All actors are great.This is what women should mostly watch,not soap operas,Pretty Woman,Titanic and other crap.If all movies, TV and music would follow the same pattern of this movie (and other), as opposed to unrealistic,cheesy crap that you usually find,the world would be a better place, for both men and women. The scene in the end where Uma's character makes a spectacle of herself in the pub is right there with Pacino's "say hello to my little friend!".Beautiful.Realistic.Interesting.Shattering.

    I am speechless, 10 points.
    caspian1978

    Rowlands and Thurman are Excellent

    Hysterical Blindness starts where 1980's Gloria ended. Gena Rowlands is one of the most under-rated actresses in Hollywood. She is nothing less than terrific in this movie. Surprisingly, Uma Thurman is just as good. Most of her career has been dubbed as eye candy and a beautiful body with nothing else to offer. In the past few years, Uma has broke away from her earlier career to become a decent actor. Here, Uma gives her best performance. At time, Rowlands and Thurman make you want to switch the channel because their performances are too good. Moments of embarrassment and sadness over whelm you to believe that both characters are doomed to find happiness and to have fun with their lives. A somewhat happy ending, the movie identifies with the lives that these characters have. They are almost doomed from the very start of the film, but manages to find shreds of happiness to keep living. Somewhat of a Cassavetes depiction on human emotion, the movie falls under the category of yet another great film produced by HBO.

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    Drama

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    Você sabia?

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    • Curiosidades
      The scene in Rick (Justin Chambers)'s house - where Debby (Uma Thurman) offers to make breakfast had to be shot that way because the house actually had no kitchen. It had been gutted for renovation prior to being selected as a location for the film. The filmmakers contemplated building a fake kitchen, but the homeowner refused.
    • Erros de gravação
      The movie is set in 1987, but there are many late-90's model vehicles.
    • Citações

      Beth: Play anything by Zeppelin, you can't go wrong.

    • Conexões
      Featured in The 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards (2003)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Last Night A D.J. Saved My Life
      Written by Michael Cleveland

      Performed by Indeep, vocals by Réjane Magloire

      Courtesy of Sutra/Unidisc Records

      by arrangement with Unidisc Music Inc.

      © 1982 Unidisc Music Inc.

    Principais escolhas

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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 21 de agosto de 2002 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Desperata kvinnor
    • Locações de filme
      • Bayonne, Nova Jersey, EUA
    • Empresas de produção
      • HBO Films
      • Blum Israel Productions
      • Karuna Dream
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 39 min(99 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 1.78 : 1

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