Bess941
Entrou em dez. de 2003
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Avaliações3
Classificação de Bess941
An insipid 90-minute documentary about how women have the inner strength to make the world a better place. I absolutely agree with the premise, but so many of the women interviewed come off as silly that the film's point is almost entirely negated. The filmmakers do use clips from some intelligent and influential women. But all too many of the interviewees are over-made-up Hollywood actresses, yoga teachers and so-called life coaches with absolutely nothing intelligent to say. It doesn't help that the documentary is sprinkled with strange stock clips from the '50s or that motivational author Marianne Williamson is the film's principal voice. I'm a committed feminist, but I found this imbecilic movie painful to watch.
The makers of "Mona Lisa Smile" undoubtedly had good intentions, but their wildly exaggerated view of life at a prestigious women's college in the 1950s has little basis in reality. Clearly the movie's view of the college is some screenwriter's fantasy (two male screenwriters, I might add).
I'm sure there were some students at Wellesley College in the 1950s who were preoccupied with getting married. But many went on to illustrious careers (look at Madeline Albright, for instance), and the women I know who studied there in the 1950s did not have the kind of experience you see in the movie.
The scenery is gorgeous and the acting is mostly OK (although there is some pretty wild scenery-chewing from Marcia Gay Harden and several of the young women). And Julia Roberts is, as always, a pleasure. But this movie and its depiction of smart women in the 1950s are fantasy-land, nothing more.
I'm sure there were some students at Wellesley College in the 1950s who were preoccupied with getting married. But many went on to illustrious careers (look at Madeline Albright, for instance), and the women I know who studied there in the 1950s did not have the kind of experience you see in the movie.
The scenery is gorgeous and the acting is mostly OK (although there is some pretty wild scenery-chewing from Marcia Gay Harden and several of the young women). And Julia Roberts is, as always, a pleasure. But this movie and its depiction of smart women in the 1950s are fantasy-land, nothing more.