AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
90 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Colin Clark, um funcionário de Sir Laurence Olivier, documenta as tensas interações entre Olivier e Marilyn Monroe durante a produção de O Príncipe Encantado (1957).Colin Clark, um funcionário de Sir Laurence Olivier, documenta as tensas interações entre Olivier e Marilyn Monroe durante a produção de O Príncipe Encantado (1957).Colin Clark, um funcionário de Sir Laurence Olivier, documenta as tensas interações entre Olivier e Marilyn Monroe durante a produção de O Príncipe Encantado (1957).
- Indicado a 2 Oscars
- 18 vitórias e 64 indicações no total
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAccording to executive producer and director Simon Curtis on his DVD commentary, Dame Judi Dench was unavailable for the principal photography period, and her parts had to be filmed about two weeks before the rest of the production. Throughout the movie, Dench and Michelle Williams are never seen in the same shot, including one in which Dench shakes hands with (seemingly) Williams' hand being extended from off-screen. Adam Recht's deft editing gives the illusion that Williams and Dench were being filmed at the same time.
- Erros de gravaçãoA frustrated Olivier tells Colin that he should have cast Vivien to play Elsie instead of Marilyn. Marilyn bought the rights to "The Sleeping Prince" from its author Terence Rattigan, and hired Olivier, who agreed to co-produce the film, to direct; she could not be replaced.
- Citações
Marilyn Monroe: Little girls should be told how pretty they are. They should grow up knowing how much their mother loves them.
- ConexõesFeatured in Maltin on Movies: The Muppets (2011)
- Trilhas sonorasWhen Love Goes Wrong (Nothin' Goes Right)
Written by Harold Adamson and Hoagy Carmichael
Performed by Michelle Williams
Published by EMI First Catalog Inc., Peer Music (UK) Ltd (c/o Songs of Peer Ltd)
Courtesy of The Weinstein Company
Arranged and Produced by David Krane
Avaliação em destaque
Here's the thing: knowing this is going to be about Marilyn, we expect certain things. Dazzling beauty exuding sex, insecure film star in search of the real person; perhaps some eye-popping excess about the business responsible for fabricating our dreams. And we expect these because Marilyn's story is Hollywood lore at its most pure: a pretty picture masking darkness of all sorts.
So because we already know that Marily was not just a sparkling movie star and because this is all so widely familiar and with its own widely referenced myth and iconography, the only reason to make this into a film is that you have come up with some unique angle that sheds new unexpected light into the thing. A structure that can hold together so many cinematic dreams implicit by having at the center this woman who gave flesh to them.
At least the premise is sound, if not remarkable. A young man has written a book about his short time together with her, and on a movie set. We trust that a lot of that is fictional and doctored, itself not far from a movie script. Ideally, our film has the option of conflating personal recollection, diary, rehearsal, film being made, into our film about the fabrication of myths and an actress looking to understand the real person behind the role she's given to play.
The first half holds. A breezy, sparkling, leisurely stroll around a movie set, as we like to imagine must have been everyday life around movie stars. We bask in the radiance of making movies and play-acting. What better life?
In the second half however we expect to know the other side of the idealized image. Sex as no longer delicious eye-candy but baring the soul naked.
What do we get instead? That same stereotyped image attached to a score of movie clichés: tabloid proclamations, banality, hackneyed emotion diffused into TV soap. We know that Marilyn and this world was more complex than this. Gentlemen preferred the blonde for a reason and the film does not even begin to understand why.
So because we already know that Marily was not just a sparkling movie star and because this is all so widely familiar and with its own widely referenced myth and iconography, the only reason to make this into a film is that you have come up with some unique angle that sheds new unexpected light into the thing. A structure that can hold together so many cinematic dreams implicit by having at the center this woman who gave flesh to them.
At least the premise is sound, if not remarkable. A young man has written a book about his short time together with her, and on a movie set. We trust that a lot of that is fictional and doctored, itself not far from a movie script. Ideally, our film has the option of conflating personal recollection, diary, rehearsal, film being made, into our film about the fabrication of myths and an actress looking to understand the real person behind the role she's given to play.
The first half holds. A breezy, sparkling, leisurely stroll around a movie set, as we like to imagine must have been everyday life around movie stars. We bask in the radiance of making movies and play-acting. What better life?
In the second half however we expect to know the other side of the idealized image. Sex as no longer delicious eye-candy but baring the soul naked.
What do we get instead? That same stereotyped image attached to a score of movie clichés: tabloid proclamations, banality, hackneyed emotion diffused into TV soap. We know that Marilyn and this world was more complex than this. Gentlemen preferred the blonde for a reason and the film does not even begin to understand why.
- chaos-rampant
- 22 de fev. de 2012
- Link permanente
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- My Week with Marilyn
- Locações de filme
- Hatfield House, Melon Ground, Hatfield Park, Hatfield, Hertfordshire, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Windsor Castle - interiors)
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- £ 6.400.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 14.600.347
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 1.750.507
- 27 de nov. de 2011
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 35.057.696
- Tempo de duração1 hora 39 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Sete Dias com Marilyn (2011) officially released in India in English?
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