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IMDbPro

Miracle en Alabama

Original title: The Miracle Worker
  • 1962
  • 12
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
22K
YOUR RATING
Miracle en Alabama (1962)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:34
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Period DramaBiographyDrama

The story of Anne Sullivan's struggle to teach the blind, deaf and mute child Helen Keller how to understand and communicate.The story of Anne Sullivan's struggle to teach the blind, deaf and mute child Helen Keller how to understand and communicate.The story of Anne Sullivan's struggle to teach the blind, deaf and mute child Helen Keller how to understand and communicate.

  • Director
    • Arthur Penn
  • Writers
    • William Gibson
    • Helen Keller
  • Stars
    • Anne Bancroft
    • Patty Duke
    • Victor Jory
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.1/10
    22K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Arthur Penn
    • Writers
      • William Gibson
      • Helen Keller
    • Stars
      • Anne Bancroft
      • Patty Duke
      • Victor Jory
    • 122User reviews
    • 61Critic reviews
    • 83Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 Oscars
      • 13 wins & 13 nominations total

    Videos2

    The Miracle Worker
    Trailer 2:34
    The Miracle Worker
    The Miracle Worker (1962)
    Trailer 1:47
    The Miracle Worker (1962)
    The Miracle Worker (1962)
    Trailer 1:47
    The Miracle Worker (1962)

    Photos100

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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Anne Bancroft
    Anne Bancroft
    • Annie Sullivan
    Patty Duke
    Patty Duke
    • Helen Keller
    Victor Jory
    Victor Jory
    • Captain Arthur Keller
    Inga Swenson
    Inga Swenson
    • Kate Keller
    Andrew Prine
    Andrew Prine
    • James Keller
    Kathleen Comegys
    Kathleen Comegys
    • Aunt Ev
    Maribel Ayuso
    • Undetermined Role
    • (uncredited)
    Dale Ellen Bethea
    • Martha at Age 10
    • (uncredited)
    John Bliss
    John Bliss
    • Admissions Officer
    • (uncredited)
    Grant Code
    • Doctor
    • (uncredited)
    Michael Darden
    • Percy at Age 10
    • (uncredited)
    Michele Farr
    • Annie at Age 10
    • (uncredited)
    William F. Haddock
    William F. Haddock
    • 2nd Crone
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Hollander
    • Mr. Anagnos of Perkins School in Boston
    • (uncredited)
    Alan Howard
    • Jimmie at Age 8
    • (uncredited)
    Judith Lowry
    Judith Lowry
    • 1st Crone
    • (uncredited)
    Helen Ludlam
    • 3rd Crone
    • (uncredited)
    Beah Richards
    Beah Richards
    • Viney - Keller Maid
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Arthur Penn
    • Writers
      • William Gibson
      • Helen Keller
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews122

    8.121.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8GMJames

    An extremely well-acted adaptation of the stage play

    I'm not certain if it was fate but it is very interesting that I had the chance to finally see "The Miracle Worker" a few days after the sad news of the death of Anne Bancroft.

    The film, based on the play by William Gibson, is an extremely well-acted film, brilliantly opened up on the big screen. Anne Bancroft as teacher Annie Sullivan and Patty Duke as young Helen Keller are outstanding. Sullivan's determination to communicate to the deaf and blind Helen made for a compelling story on stage as well as on screen.

    I understand that when Hollywood wanted to make this movie, the powers-that-be did not want Bancroft or Duke. After finally seeing the movie, I'm glad that director Arthur Penn and producer Fred Coe chose to make this movie outside the so-called Hollywood establishment.

    One scene that was discussed in some other posts was the dining room in which Sullivan forces Helen to eat food from a spoon and not her hands. It almost felt like I was watching a fierce wrestling match. It was a physical, as well as an emotionally draining, sequence. A battle of wills between teacher and the unwilling student. It was brilliantly edited and directed.

    The film was not without faults. According to the IMDb, a number of flashback scenes were filmed in their entirety but did not work out very well. Those scenes were incorporated within the movie and it looked rather clumsy. The scenes could have been easily edited out completely.

    As with all plays adapted to the big screen, some scenes were a little bit stagy. But that involved just a few scenes and, overall, it did not ruin the movie.

    What I really liked about the movie was that the filmmakers were very successful at not succumbing to sentiment. This movie could have easily been very corny and sappy. Perhaps Bancroft and Duke and their performances had something to do with that.

    I've been a fan of Anne Bancroft for many years and I'm very glad that I had the chance to see her well-deserved Oscar-winning performance.

    RIP Ms. Bancroft.
    MOscarbradley

    Emotionally devastating

    Arthur Penn's superb, emotionally devastating screen version of William Gibson's play about the early life of Helen Keller and of how a great dedicated teacher, Annie Sullivan, dragged her kicking, if not necessarily screaming, out of her world of darkness. Penn's style is spare and unsensational, (even finding a good deal of humour in the early encounters between teacher and pupil; deaf, dumb and blind Keller may be but she is as wily as a cat and runs rings round Sullivan). The black and white images are straightforward and uncluttered and have the power of the images in silent cinema. As Sullivan and Keller, Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke are both astonishing. There is a rapport between these two actresses that seems to transcend mere 'acting' and raises the film to an altogether higher, more deeply moving plain.
    9howard.schumann

    Enormously moving

    Powerfully directed by Arthur Penn and supported by two Oscar-winning performances, The Miracle Worker dramatizes the early years of Helen Keller, the blind and deaf mute who became a famous author and prominent Socialist. Anne Bancroft's first lead role is as Anne Sullivan, Helen's lifelong teacher and friend and her performance is compelling. Patty Duke is also outstanding as Helen, portraying the disturbed child as she works to overcome bad manners and temper tantrums, the result of being overly indulged by her well meaning but ineffective parents. Moving into a small cottage away from her parents, Anne, who was partially blind herself, assists Helen with some tough love and begins to teach her to spell with her fingers.

    Until this point, Helen had no understanding of the meaning of words. This changed when Anne led her to the water pump and spelled out the word water as she pumped the water over Helen's hand. She is said to have learned thirty words the same day and eventually learned to read. In 1904 Helen graduated from Radcliffe College, becoming the first deaf-blind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree. The film could have easily descended into melodrama, but Penn keeps his focus and the result is enormously moving without being maudlin. The Miracle Worker is a miracle.
    Snow Leopard

    An Exceptional Movie That Appeals to the Imagination

    With two terrific leading performances, an absorbing and thought-provoking story, and many well-conceived touches by Arthur Penn and his production team, this classic version of "The Miracle Worker" is an exceptional movie that appeals to the imagination and that has much to say about humanity. The story itself is so good that even the lesser remakes have been worth seeing, but there is really no reason at all to look any further than this nearly flawless filming of the story.

    As Annie Sullivan and Helen Keller, Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke could not have been better. The battle of wills and wits between the two is engrossing, becoming quite involved and very interesting. The lengthy dining room struggle alone would make any movie worth watching - it is worthwhile even beyond the interesting action itself, as it brings out aspects of human nature and human learning that go beyond even Helen's own trials.

    There is a great deal of substance to the movie that goes beyond the immediate issues and confrontations, and a significant reason for the greatness of the film is the way that Bancroft and Duke tap into the imagination of the viewer. The concept of seeing an unseen world (and the challenge of helping someone to see it) is brought out in ways that are profound yet accessible.

    The two leads carry almost the whole picture, as the other characters are there primarily for Annie and Helen to play off of. Accordingly, the supporting cast keep their characters more simple, and their performances stylized and almost exaggerated, which allows Bancroft and Duke to have most of the moments of significance. The production also enhances the picture through simple but well-conceived settings, use of lighting, and other features that nicely complement the main action.

    It's always rather unfortunate that movies like this one, which take a little effort to appreciate fully, are not given more attention. If you stop to consider what Helen Keller had to face in life, it is a situation far more terrifying than facing any of the cartoonish, artificial movie villains that gain so much notoriety. And if you consider the job that Annie Sullivan had to do, her accomplishment is far more impressive and worthwhile than almost any scientific discovery, feat of athletics, or military exploit.

    That this movie is able to convey such themes makes it a memorable classic that is much more worthwhile than many movies that have received far more acclaim.
    10gevaultski

    MW: One one of the reasons I fell in love with film as art

    Although I am a long-time Patty Duke admirer, and thus far from objective, this film still stands the test of time. This is the kind of filmmaking that prompted me to fall in love with the movies. Brilliantly inspired writing by William Gibson, from his equally inspired play. Intelligent, austere direction by Arthur Penn (one of the true gentlemen and masters of the American cinema); Penn had the sense to retain the inate artistry and grit of the original stage play and simply allow the camera to capture the actors' intuitive - albeit, well rehearsed, performances, recreating their stage roles which generated an unheard-of 19 curtain calls when it first graced the stage in its Philadephia opening. The film, in stark, black and white, speaks total reality to the film audience of 1962 - and, of course, well beyond that year. Finally, one would be hard pressed to think of another film that so exquisitely defines the term "2-character" study. Bancroft and Duke deliver A-plus, no bones about it, top-drawer, performances. It is a film about the undaunted human spirit and our need to communicate. Although much has been written about 11-minute breakfast donneybrook, which is certainly wonderful cinema to behold, the entire film is breathtaking from opening credits to the final scenes. I dare anyone to even breathe during the climactic water pump scene when teacher Annie Sullivan finally "connects" and communicates with her "unreachable" charge, the deaf, blind, young Helen Keller. It's an absolutely astonishing, "can't take your eyes off it," moment of celluloid. Duke, Bancroft and Penn worked beatifully to create this incredibly touching masterpiece of dramatic filmmaking, which is not without its moments of "comedy," as all fine dramas are capable of conveying. It is a film which breathes life - and it is especially brought to life by two of the best actresses America has ever produced. The Miracle Worker is a story and film portraying real human courage, patience and individual, personal will. It continues to live in my memory as a work of art that has rarely been equalled before - or since - on screen.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Mark Twain was the first person to refer to Anne Sullivan as "the miracle worker". Twain was a friend of Helen Keller.
    • Goofs
      Annie Sullivan has to look up the word discipline in a dictionary later in the film even though she's used it in a letter near the beginning; however, she remarks that she must know how to spell it before teaching it to Helen, and may have simply used her best guess in the letter since nothing was at stake.
    • Quotes

      Annie Sullivan: Pity? For this tyrant? The whole house turns on her whims! Is there anything she wants she doesn't get? I'll tell you what I pity: that the sun won't rise and set for her all her life, and every day you're telling her it will! What good will your pity do when you're under the strawberries, Captain Keller?

    • Connections
      Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Le contrôle de l'univers (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Hush, Little Baby
      (uncredited)

      Traditional Southern lullaby

      Music adapted by Don Costa

      Lyrics by Arthur Siegel

      Sung by Anne Bancroft

      Also played in the score

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 10, 1962 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • American Sign Language
    • Also known as
      • Ana de los milagros
    • Filming locations
      • Middletown, New Jersey, USA
    • Production company
      • Playfilm Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,139
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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