PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,1/10
6,1 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
El escritor Harry Street reflexiona sobre su vida mientras agoniza a causa de una infección mientras realiza un safari a la sombra del monte Kilamanjaro.El escritor Harry Street reflexiona sobre su vida mientras agoniza a causa de una infección mientras realiza un safari a la sombra del monte Kilamanjaro.El escritor Harry Street reflexiona sobre su vida mientras agoniza a causa de una infección mientras realiza un safari a la sombra del monte Kilamanjaro.
- Nominado para 2 premios Óscar
- 1 premio y 3 nominaciones en total
Hildegard Knef
- Countess Liz
- (as Hildegarde Neff)
Vicente Gómez
- Guitarist
- (as Vicente Gomez)
Amanda Ambrose
- Pianist
- (sin acreditar)
Salvador Baguez
- Stretcher Bearer
- (sin acreditar)
Charles Bates
- Harry at Seventeen
- (sin acreditar)
Nina Borget
- Girl
- (sin acreditar)
Maurice Brierre
- Waiter
- (sin acreditar)
Arthur Brunner
- Accordion Player
- (sin acreditar)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesIn the scene where Gregory Peck lifts up Ava Gardner, he threw out his knee and production had to close down while he recovered. Unfortunately, all the scenes of his lying down in his sickbed had been shot already.
- PifiasOutside the Hotel Florinda in Madrid during the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), a 1948-1950 Ford truck is parked facing the camera.
- Citas
Countess Liz: You are everywhere, aren't you, darling?
Uncle Bill: It's the only attribute I share with the Almighty.
- ConexionesEdited from Sangre y arena (1941)
- Banda sonoraYou Do Something to Me
(alles war so leer) (uncredited)
Written by Cole Porter
Sung by Hildegard Knef
at the Piano: Amanda Ambrose
Reseña destacada
Having saved a young man from a hippo, writer Harry Street lies dying from an infection in his African safari campsite. As his unappreciated wife Helen tends to his wounds and ensures him everything will be alright, Harry sinks into feverish reminiscing about a life that he perceives as being a failure in terms of both writing and his love life. He recalls the one woman that he believes he truly loved which, helpfully for Helen, isn't his current wife but a woman called Cynthia Green whom he met in Paris. The more he recalls the deeper his depression and the more Helen watches him surrendering his fight and will to live.
Taking a "deathbed" flashback structure we always know that things between Harry and his other loves didn't work out and the only question is "why". On paper we are meant to be with a bitter angry man who is facing death with a superficial devil-may-care attitude but underneath carries a deep sense of regret. The first problem I encountered with the film was that the script didn't carry this off very well at all and I wasn't convinced about the supposed years of failure that are stacked on top of Harry people with such things have much more baggage than came out here. The flashbacks are reasonable interesting but are closer to melodrama than a searing tale of regret and loss, which personally I thought it should have been. The film does flit around the world which must have been a selling point for it at the time of release but it doesn't actually add much to the story or characters other than providing a different background for some scenes.
King's direction is fairly workmanlike; he enjoys the locations but the mix of his footage with stock footage doesn't sit well together I know it is a limitation of the period but it still doesn't work. Peck is solid enough in the lead but he does the superficial things and doesn't get to grips with anything deeper or more complex. He gets no help from Hayward who is watching her husband long for women past but never appears to have any problem with this whatsoever. Gardner is pretty but again she doesn't convince in her character when asked to do anything more (seeing her in the middle of the Spanish civil war was pretty funny as well). Support from Leo G Carroll is always welcome but he doesn't have much to work with here.
Overall this is a so-so film that never fulfils its potential or is as engaging as it should have been. Instead of being complex and full of pain it is melodramatic and soapy; instead of being about the tragic souls of the characters it seems to have as much interest in stock footage and global locations. The cast give solid but superficial performances in response to this and the film never really gets a handle on any of it.
Taking a "deathbed" flashback structure we always know that things between Harry and his other loves didn't work out and the only question is "why". On paper we are meant to be with a bitter angry man who is facing death with a superficial devil-may-care attitude but underneath carries a deep sense of regret. The first problem I encountered with the film was that the script didn't carry this off very well at all and I wasn't convinced about the supposed years of failure that are stacked on top of Harry people with such things have much more baggage than came out here. The flashbacks are reasonable interesting but are closer to melodrama than a searing tale of regret and loss, which personally I thought it should have been. The film does flit around the world which must have been a selling point for it at the time of release but it doesn't actually add much to the story or characters other than providing a different background for some scenes.
King's direction is fairly workmanlike; he enjoys the locations but the mix of his footage with stock footage doesn't sit well together I know it is a limitation of the period but it still doesn't work. Peck is solid enough in the lead but he does the superficial things and doesn't get to grips with anything deeper or more complex. He gets no help from Hayward who is watching her husband long for women past but never appears to have any problem with this whatsoever. Gardner is pretty but again she doesn't convince in her character when asked to do anything more (seeing her in the middle of the Spanish civil war was pretty funny as well). Support from Leo G Carroll is always welcome but he doesn't have much to work with here.
Overall this is a so-so film that never fulfils its potential or is as engaging as it should have been. Instead of being complex and full of pain it is melodramatic and soapy; instead of being about the tragic souls of the characters it seems to have as much interest in stock footage and global locations. The cast give solid but superficial performances in response to this and the film never really gets a handle on any of it.
- bob the moo
- 1 abr 2006
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- How long is The Snows of Kilimanjaro?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 16.620 US$
- Duración1 hora 54 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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Principal laguna de datos
By what name was Las nieves del Kilimanjaro (1952) officially released in India in English?
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