La vida de un médico y poeta ruso que, aunque está casado con otra persona, se enamora de la esposa de un activista político y pasa por dificultades durante la Primera Guerra Mundial y luego... Leer todoLa vida de un médico y poeta ruso que, aunque está casado con otra persona, se enamora de la esposa de un activista político y pasa por dificultades durante la Primera Guerra Mundial y luego la Revolución de Octubre.La vida de un médico y poeta ruso que, aunque está casado con otra persona, se enamora de la esposa de un activista político y pasa por dificultades durante la Primera Guerra Mundial y luego la Revolución de Octubre.
- Ganó 5 premios Óscar
- 21 premios y 13 nominaciones en total
- Liberius
- (as Gerard Tichy)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThis movie wasn't shown in Russia until 1994.
- PifiasThe little girl who plays Tonya at Yuri's mother's funeral starts to cross herself in the Roman Catholic manner, but quickly corrects herself and finishes in the Russian Orthodox style.
- Citas
Komarovski: Lara, I am determined to save you from a dreadful error. There are two kinds of men, and only two, and that young man is one kind. He is high-minded. He is pure. He is the kind of man that the world pretends to look up to and in fact despises. He is the kind of man who breeds unhappiness; particularly in women. Now, do you understand?
Lara: No.
Komarovski: I think you do. There's another kind. Not high-minded. Not pure. But alive. Now that your taste at this time should incline towards the juvenile is understandable. But for you to marry that boy would be a disaster. Because there's two kinds of women...
[Lara covers her ears, he forces her arms down]
Komarovski: There are two kinds of women and you - as we well know - are not the first kind.
[Lara slaps him, he slaps her back]
Komarovski: You, my dear, are a slut.
Lara: I am not!
Komarovski: We'll see.
- Versiones alternativasWhen it was first released, the film originally ran 197 minutes. Early in its run, David Lean and editor Norman Savage shortened it to 180 minutes; this version was in circulation for years. By the mid-1990s, the uncut version was restored.
- ConexionesEdited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
As materialists (matter precedes spirit, not vice versa), the Bolsheviks believed that they had found the holy grail of human progress in Marxism-Leninism, and were now able to assume the reins of history in their own hands. They believed that their violence was not only justified, but necessary, oblivious to the fact that they, too, somehow felt the angel of medieval teleology smiling over their shoulders.
In contrast to the Bolsheviks, Zhivago's ethos, if he had one, was almost identical to Kant's `categorical imperative,' which had just one axiom: treat people as ends in themselves, and not as ends to a mean. There couldn't be a sharper moral contrast.
There's a fabulous scene midway through the movie that highlights the difference in moral attitude. Dr. Zhivago confronts a communist functionary who has ordered the destruction of a village, a hamlet suspected of aiding the Mensheviks by selling them horses. To the Bolsheviks, if you weren't 100 percent behind them, you were a `counterrevolutionary,' sorta like Dubya's idea that you're either for us, or against us. And so Strelnikov, the passionate Bolshevik, glibly justifies his actions to Dr. Zhivago as easy as if he were tossing his hair aside, saying that the annihilation of the village, however cruel, is necessary to make a point. Zhivago replies: `Your point; their village.'
I love this film, a timeless epic. If there's a more beautiful heroine in all of movie-making history than Julie Christie (Lara), I'm not aware of it. And Omar Sharif is stunning as Iuri Zhivago, who heals the body with emetics, scalpels, antiseptic, and gauze, while he heals the soul with his poetry. Although the movie is three hours and 20 minutes long, the cinematography is so efficient, evocative, and densely layered that one hardly notices. This is, in my opinion, one of the best films of all time.
- csm23
- 6 mar 2003
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Doctor Jivago
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Morley Flats, Alberta, Canadá(Frozen house longshots)
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 11.000.000 US$ (estimación)
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 111.721.910 US$
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 111.926.200 US$
- Duración3 horas 17 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1