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Shine

  • 1996
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
58K
YOUR RATING
Shine (1996)
Trailer 1
Play trailer2:22
3 Videos
60 Photos
Psychological DramaBiographyDramaMusicRomance

David Helfgott, a gifted pianist, struggles through childhood as his dysfunctional father abuses him and his siblings. Years later, he suffers a mental breakdown but manages to return as a l... Read allDavid Helfgott, a gifted pianist, struggles through childhood as his dysfunctional father abuses him and his siblings. Years later, he suffers a mental breakdown but manages to return as a legend.David Helfgott, a gifted pianist, struggles through childhood as his dysfunctional father abuses him and his siblings. Years later, he suffers a mental breakdown but manages to return as a legend.

  • Director
    • Scott Hicks
  • Writers
    • Jan Sardi
    • Scott Hicks
  • Stars
    • Geoffrey Rush
    • Armin Mueller-Stahl
    • Justin Braine
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    58K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Scott Hicks
    • Writers
      • Jan Sardi
      • Scott Hicks
    • Stars
      • Geoffrey Rush
      • Armin Mueller-Stahl
      • Justin Braine
    • 130User reviews
    • 50Critic reviews
    • 87Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 46 wins & 52 nominations total

    Videos3

    Shine
    Trailer 2:22
    Shine
    Shine
    Trailer 2:22
    Shine
    Shine
    Trailer 2:22
    Shine
    Shine: Piano
    Clip 2:53
    Shine: Piano

    Photos60

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    + 54
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    Top cast65

    Edit
    Geoffrey Rush
    Geoffrey Rush
    • David Helfgott - Adult
    Armin Mueller-Stahl
    Armin Mueller-Stahl
    • Peter
    Justin Braine
    • Tony
    Sonia Todd
    Sonia Todd
    • Sylvia
    Chris Haywood
    Chris Haywood
    • Sam
    Alex Rafalowicz
    • David Helfgott - Child
    Gordon Poole
    • Eisteddfod Presenter
    Nicholas Bell
    Nicholas Bell
    • Ben Rosen
    Danielle Cox
    • Suzie - Child
    Rebecca Gooden
    • Margaret
    Marta Kaczmarek
    Marta Kaczmarek
    • Rachel
    John Cousins
    • Jim Minogue
    Noah Taylor
    Noah Taylor
    • David Helfgott - Adolescent
    Paul Linkson
    • State Champion Announcer
    Randall Berger
    Randall Berger
    • Isaac Stern
    Ian Welbourne
    • Boy Next Door
    Kelly Bottrill
    • Louise - Baby
    Beverley Vaughan
    • Rabbi
    • Director
      • Scott Hicks
    • Writers
      • Jan Sardi
      • Scott Hicks
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews130

    7.657.9K
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    Featured reviews

    10Boba_Fett1138

    One of the great biopics.

    "Shine" is one of the great movies of the '90's, that became an unexpected success in 1996 and was the movie that earned Geoffrey Rush his as of yet only Oscar win and got the movie 6 more Oscar nominations, including best director and best picture.

    The movie shows how Australian born David Helfgott gets formed and influenced in his early life by his demanding and abusive father (wonderfuly played by Armin Mueller-Stahl), who is in strict control of the family. He asks a lot from the already very unstable David and influences ever step in his life, probably also to make up for his own shortcomings in life. He's an unpredictable character with two faces and you can really feel the fear he puts in the family and David in particular. Things go worse and worse mentally for David as he grows up and eventually goes to study in England at the Royal College of Music. He has a breakdown which for once and for all definitely labels him as a psychotic man. His personality could definitely been described as crazy.

    He gets perfectly and beautifully portrayed by Geoffrey Rush, who truly deserved the Oscar he received for his role. But in fact he is only in the movie for perhaps halve the running time. For "Shine" uses lots of flashbacks about Helfgott's early life and as a young adult, when he is being played by different actors. One of those actors is the know very well known Noah Taylor, who also plays the part fine. Also really impressive is Armin Mueller-Stahl. He doesn't usually have very big parts in English spoken movies but in this movie he plays one of his bigger and more interesting roles. It's a true memorable performance from him and he also truly deserved his Oscar nomination for this movie. I keep thinking it's a great shame he got discovered so late by the big-money movie industry, since he is already close to 80 by now, which should mean that his biggest and greatest roles should already be behind him by now. But who knows, some actors just go on forever, till a very old age. Take for instance John Gielgud, who also stars in this movie. At the time he was already well over 90 years old and he would continue to play on in many more great and big productions, till his death in 2000. Some actors are just truly born as actors. It simply is in their blood and they can't stop playing.

    Moments in Helfgott's life are never portrayed too long but also never too short. This means that the story always comes right to the point and doesn't dance around it. The movie becomes very effective because of this and on top of that gets presented with a good steady pace. It's a reason why this movie is really one of the better autobiographic movies ever made. It's a really great directed and told movie, from Scott Hicks.

    But of course like every good biopic, the movie doesn't only presents facts and some things are altered, in order to enhance the movie and its story or characters. For instance right after this movie the real Helfgott became a true full God, while in all honesty David Helfgott is a great piano player but just not the genius one as portrayed in this movie. It's kind of like the piano man. The mysterious mute man who was found in Kent England in 2005. It was said he was a brilliant piano player, while in fact he just simply knew how to play a piano well but was by no means a great or professional player. Just like David Helfgott, it are just the unusual circumstances and character personalities that makes people say they are geniuses, rather than it's an objective reflection of their actual qualities. But like I said, this isn't anything unusual to do for a biopic, to play around a little with the facts and it certainly is no objection when it actually enhances the movie. "Shine" truly benefits from its approach and story.

    I also enjoyed David Hirschfelder nice little musical score (also Oscar-nominated). Of course the movie also benefits from it's classical compositions that are being featured. It's of course a very musical movie, since it's about the life of a musician but you really don't need a classic musical lover to enjoy or to appreciate this movie though.

    The movie ends quite abrupt and perhaps not satisfying enough but this is of course simply due to the fact that David Helfgot is still alive and active today. Who knows, perhaps they could had better waited for another 30 years to come up with a movie about his life, for who knows what more strange and beautiful moments his life shall know.

    Perhaps it's not the most stylish or greatest made movie but the combination of the interesting unique story, pace and main character (and of course Geoffrey Rush his performance of him) are what makes this movie such a basically flawless (you simply just forgive the movie for its flaws and shortcomings while you're watching it) and captivating one to watch.

    10/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    9ccthemovieman-1

    Intense, Well-Acted & Photographed Movie

    This was a very interesting movie and pleasant surprise, although sometimes that theme of the obsessive parent driving a kid crazy gets overworked. Nonetheless, it's a very well-made movie.

    Geoffrey Rush is fascinating in the lead role as "David Helfgott." However, I would give equal kudos to Noah Taylor, who played Helfgott as a teenager, and to Armin Mueller-Stahl, who was Helfgott's father. They were just as impressive as Rush.

    This is a supposedly true-life story of child prodigy piano player from Australia. As you can imagine, the music in here is excellent. Even better is the cinematography. Wow, this looks and sounds fantastic on DVD.

    Although not always pleasant to watch, the story is riveting; hard to put down once you've started watching. The ending turned me off a bit with the overt plug for astrology, but is a happy one for all parties and at least leaves the viewer feeling satisfied.

    In all, a very intense, beautifully-photographed biography.
    chaos-rampant

    Plausible harmony

    Okay, so I did some reading after this driven by idle curiosity about the account. The real Helfgott didn't spend 15 years abandoned in a room with a piano, he didn't have to stand in the rain outside of a bar before they would let him in. He was pretty well known in the local scene as a pianist, his father was not a Holocaust survivor and David had been married before. Father and son were never really estranged and David was present at his funeral.

    But just the same, the 'objective' point-of-view that purports to explain him, or any of us at any time based on a few facts, is in the end no less hypocritical than any attempt to pass dramatization as 'the real story'. This matters. Someone can be present at a funeral without being truly present, and someone can feel forgotten and alone even when they're factually surrounded by people, estranged from a parent even when formally this was never so.

    The film is at a simple emotional level where the attempt to conquer a maddening complexity (music, life) snaps the tethers of mind and in due time the reconfiguring of this damage into blossoming art. The moral is that we must keep trying and hope for the best, perhaps the worthiest lesson even if it appears slightly trite in the context of a more or less happy ending.

    Still, why feel the need to invent all those things, knowing you are doing so? When the violence inflicted on the son could be inferred by a more ambiguous tension instead of an outright beating.

    Because, it seems, we can only choose to accept the lesson if at the center we find a good soul worthy of the saving. In other words, it is not the fact that he gives a great last recital that matters, but that he plays at all; not that a genius was salvaged because he might never have been that, but a human being. And this is what rankles so much Helfgott's critics who find him borderline incompetent in his playing - he is cheered on in concerts because he is the character from this film.

    Ideally we would be able to discern all these points here instead of one harmony: the truly damaged but kind soul, the inability to place blame for that damage on any ogre father or Holocaust, and being able to somehow experience his music (the real Helfgott recorded for the film) as a trained ear would, fixated flourishes followed by distraction and incompetence according to critics, musically extending the damaged self.

    For a more demanding film on the same subject of madness and transcendent musical genius see a little known film on a medieval composer called Death in Five Voices: all about the dissonance between different voices trying to harmonize a story and this carried in the music itself.
    7FilmOtaku

    A little slight on the writing, but the acting and presentation is brilliant

    When I originally saw this film in the mid-90's, I was absolutely devastated throughout the first forty-five minutes. So much so, I was pretty much uncontrollably weeping, much to the chagrin of the friend I went with. Time has softened the film a lot for me, but it still remains a powerful, tender and somewhat inspirational film about a piano prodigy who has led a pretty tragic life. Geoffrey Rush is unbelievable as the piano prodigy David Helfgott, and although the film is kind of sewn up a little quickly with the Vanessa Redgrave subplot (what about Helfgott made her so in love with him in a short period of time as to want to marry him?) it is a very well done film that I highly recommend to just about anyone, but especially musicians and music lovers.

    --Shelly
    9peter.codner

    excellent film, good in all departments, seriously moving

    This is a good film in every sense but will mean most to fathers with strong views :).

    The story of a brilliant young pianist whose relationship with his father drives him to some sort of mental illness. Watchable, absorbing, brilliantly edited, deeply seriously moving, one of the rare films that pays attention to incidental sound. Wonderful direction and acting. This is a seriously good film.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Geoffrey Rush had once learned the piano up until aged fourteen. He took up piano lessons again thirty years later for this movie and also acted as his own hand double and body double.
    • Goofs
      The character shows all signs of schizophrenia; not bipolar disorder (formerly known as "manic-depressive disorder"), as is claimed in the film. The real David Helfgott likewise displays many symptoms of schizophrenia and none of bipolar disorder.
    • Quotes

      Cecil Parkes: You must play as if there's no tomorrow.

    • Crazy credits
      Himself: hand double for Geoffrey Rush
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Star Trek: First Contact/Shine/Jingle All the Way/Sling Blade/Microcosmos (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      With A Girl Like You
      Written by Reg Presley

      © 1966 Dick James Music Limited

      Performed by The Troggs

      © 1966 Mercury Ltd. London

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    FAQ20

    • How long is Shine?Powered by Alexa
    • Why is David's father so strict with his family?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 9, 1997 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Australia
    • Official sites
      • South Australian Film Corporation
      • Warner Bros. (United States)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Yiddish
    • Also known as
      • Tỏa Sáng
    • Filming locations
      • Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
    • Production companies
      • Australian Film Finance Corporation (AFFC)
      • Film Victoria
      • Momentum Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $5,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $35,892,330
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $162,179
      • Nov 24, 1996
    • Gross worldwide
      • $35,999,121
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 45 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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