PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,4/10
11 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Un grupo de mujeres se organiza para protestar durante el evento de Miss Mundo, acogido en Londres en 1970.Un grupo de mujeres se organiza para protestar durante el evento de Miss Mundo, acogido en Londres en 1970.Un grupo de mujeres se organiza para protestar durante el evento de Miss Mundo, acogido en Londres en 1970.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 3 premios y 4 nominaciones en total
Ed Eales White
- Journalist 1
- (as Ed Eales-White)
Reseñas destacadas
True story of the women's rights group that disrupted the 1970 Miss World contest. Stars Keira Knightly.
I really like the source story and Knightly does a nice job, but it's a very slow burn. It doesn't really deliver emotional passion until the end which is easily the best part of the film. Nothing special here until the great ending.
I really like the source story and Knightly does a nice job, but it's a very slow burn. It doesn't really deliver emotional passion until the end which is easily the best part of the film. Nothing special here until the great ending.
A nice comedy about beauty contest, feminism, Bob Hope proposed, in fair way, by Greg Kienner and beautiful portrait of Dolores Hope by Lesley Manville. A reasonable social critic and inspired recreated atmosphere of the period.
Misbehaviour
I really enjoyed this movie from start to finished. The script tread a delicate line between the political and the comedic, and it did a fine job.
At the time, and in our innocence and naïveté, we all thought this was an "honest" competition that merely was part of the panoply of family entertainment with It's A Knockout and The Two Ronnies. This script was careful to show how public consciousness needed awakening to the obvious objectification of women and the stultifying job opportunities that were open to women at the time.
It was genuinely funny and really very heartwarming as the different characters came to grips with changing reality. Eric & Julie Morley were portrayed as the brains behind a global show and the success of that show was what guided their principles, they certainly did not believe their show exploited women, they believed is exalted female beauty for entertainment and gave the winners only dreamt of opportunities.
The acting was crisp the styling inspired and it breathed in all the right places. Millennials will be shocked forgetting that intent must lay behind any form of discrimination and that this show was mainly watched by women at the time who loved it.
I love this family movie and it reminds us that any form of objectification is a simplistic view of the world.
I really enjoyed this movie from start to finished. The script tread a delicate line between the political and the comedic, and it did a fine job.
At the time, and in our innocence and naïveté, we all thought this was an "honest" competition that merely was part of the panoply of family entertainment with It's A Knockout and The Two Ronnies. This script was careful to show how public consciousness needed awakening to the obvious objectification of women and the stultifying job opportunities that were open to women at the time.
It was genuinely funny and really very heartwarming as the different characters came to grips with changing reality. Eric & Julie Morley were portrayed as the brains behind a global show and the success of that show was what guided their principles, they certainly did not believe their show exploited women, they believed is exalted female beauty for entertainment and gave the winners only dreamt of opportunities.
The acting was crisp the styling inspired and it breathed in all the right places. Millennials will be shocked forgetting that intent must lay behind any form of discrimination and that this show was mainly watched by women at the time who loved it.
I love this family movie and it reminds us that any form of objectification is a simplistic view of the world.
The trouble with beauty contests that it means different things around the world.
In Britain they acquired a reputation of being a cattle market that degraded women. As the years went by beauty contests went off the main television channels.
In the Americas, it can be used as a stepping stone to further your career objectives.
Misbehaviour has to tread this fine line. Based on the true incident of the 1970 Miss World Contest co-hosted by Bob Hope (Greg Kinnear.)
Sally Alexander (Keira Knightley) and Jo Robinson (Jessie Buckley) led a protest that showered Hope with flour on the night. It should had been rotten eggs as his act stank.
Sally is a mature university student who has to deal with sexist attitudes at university. She is appalled that Miss World is regarded by her own family as wholesome entertainment.
On the other hand for black contestants like Jennifer Hosten (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) who is Miss Grenada and Pearl Jansen (Loreece Harrison) who is Miss Africa South. It offers an opportunity to break down barriers when the women are from impoverished backgrounds. Pearl Jansen is from a country where shs cannot even mix with whites.
Jansen was included as no black representative from South Africa had even entered. She would beat Miss South Africa in the contest. Miss Grenada was the first black winner, until then it would always be certain types that would win. White and blonde.
The film never quite gets to grip with the racial politics. It is lightly dealt with in contrast with the gender arguments. Sally and Jo could never appreciate the kind of world that some of the contestants came from.
One aspect of the competition that is glossed over was that the Morleys ran the contest with an iron grip.
Eric Morley (Rhys Ifan) comes across as a rough diamond. However they had strict rules which seemed absurd at the time. Constant chaperones for each contestant. If any contestant had posed nude or were married they would had been disqualified. In many ways such rules shielded the Miss World organisation from any later #MeToo allegations.
In the end Misbehaviour is an amiable film that overstates its feminist credentials.
In Britain they acquired a reputation of being a cattle market that degraded women. As the years went by beauty contests went off the main television channels.
In the Americas, it can be used as a stepping stone to further your career objectives.
Misbehaviour has to tread this fine line. Based on the true incident of the 1970 Miss World Contest co-hosted by Bob Hope (Greg Kinnear.)
Sally Alexander (Keira Knightley) and Jo Robinson (Jessie Buckley) led a protest that showered Hope with flour on the night. It should had been rotten eggs as his act stank.
Sally is a mature university student who has to deal with sexist attitudes at university. She is appalled that Miss World is regarded by her own family as wholesome entertainment.
On the other hand for black contestants like Jennifer Hosten (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) who is Miss Grenada and Pearl Jansen (Loreece Harrison) who is Miss Africa South. It offers an opportunity to break down barriers when the women are from impoverished backgrounds. Pearl Jansen is from a country where shs cannot even mix with whites.
Jansen was included as no black representative from South Africa had even entered. She would beat Miss South Africa in the contest. Miss Grenada was the first black winner, until then it would always be certain types that would win. White and blonde.
The film never quite gets to grip with the racial politics. It is lightly dealt with in contrast with the gender arguments. Sally and Jo could never appreciate the kind of world that some of the contestants came from.
One aspect of the competition that is glossed over was that the Morleys ran the contest with an iron grip.
Eric Morley (Rhys Ifan) comes across as a rough diamond. However they had strict rules which seemed absurd at the time. Constant chaperones for each contestant. If any contestant had posed nude or were married they would had been disqualified. In many ways such rules shielded the Miss World organisation from any later #MeToo allegations.
In the end Misbehaviour is an amiable film that overstates its feminist credentials.
Indeed, the best thing was the post-movie credits with the real heroines making an appearance.
How on earth they managed to create something so dull about women so inspiring ?
The real heroines, even at their 70's, have more passion, more inspiration, more feelings in their eyes and in the few seconds we saw them they gave us more emotions than the darn whole movie.
I wasn't aware about the events and even at the end of the movie I never felt like what the girls did was important for women's movement. It was quite anticlimactic.. Biggest problem was they never managed to build well the sexist/patriarchy environment the women were living in at the time, so we can understand the impact of their actions. Whoever wrote the script was like filtering everything through a 2020 optic. I am not even sure why a large portion of the story was dedicated to Bob Hope. Bit of a shame really this wasn't good.
All 5 stars for the real ladies at the end of the movie.
I wasn't aware about the events and even at the end of the movie I never felt like what the girls did was important for women's movement. It was quite anticlimactic.. Biggest problem was they never managed to build well the sexist/patriarchy environment the women were living in at the time, so we can understand the impact of their actions. Whoever wrote the script was like filtering everything through a 2020 optic. I am not even sure why a large portion of the story was dedicated to Bob Hope. Bit of a shame really this wasn't good.
All 5 stars for the real ladies at the end of the movie.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesContrary to what is portrayed in the film, the real infiltrators did plan on starting the protest while the Miss World candidates were on stage. However, it was Bob Hope's misogynistic jokes that made them change their plans and start throwing their flour bombs at that very moment.
- PifiasThe radio announcer advertising the 1970 Miss World says that the eyes of the world are once more on London for the first time in nearly 30 years since the Coronation, which took place in 1953, only 17 years earlier.
- Citas
Sally Alexander: [speaking on TV about The Miss World Competition] The only other forum in which participants are weighed, measured and publicly examined before being assigned their value is a cattle market.
- ConexionesFeatured in Sunday AM: Episodio fechado 8 marzo 2020 (2020)
- Banda sonoraRespect
Performed by Aretha Franklin
Written by Otis Redding and Anquette Allen
Published by Universal Music Publishing Limited
on behalf of Irving Music, Inc & Cotillion Music Inc. (BMI), All rights on behalf of Cotillion Music Inc. administered by Warner/Chappell North America Limited
Courtesy of Warner Music UK Limited
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- How long is Misbehaviour?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Misbehaviour
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 1.928.777 US$
- Duración1 hora 46 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1
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