PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,0/10
11 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Durante la Gran Depresión, un líder sindical y una joven se convierten en delincuentes para vengarse de la compañía de ferrocarriles.Durante la Gran Depresión, un líder sindical y una joven se convierten en delincuentes para vengarse de la compañía de ferrocarriles.Durante la Gran Depresión, un líder sindical y una joven se convierten en delincuentes para vengarse de la compañía de ferrocarriles.
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
David Osterhout
- McIver #2
- (as David R. Osterhout)
Grahame Pratt
- Emeric Pressburger
- (crédito solo)
'Chicken' Holleman
- M. Powell
- (crédito solo)
Harry Northup
- Harvey Hall
- (as Harry Northrup)
Jerry Cortez
- Sheriff
- (sin acreditar)
Louie Elias
- Boxcar Tough
- (sin acreditar)
Michael Fitzgerald
- Apple Peeler
- (sin acreditar)
Gerald Raines
- Train Engineer
- (sin acreditar)
Gayne Rescher
- Brothel Client
- (sin acreditar)
What Scorsese Film Ranks Highest on IMDb?
What Scorsese Film Ranks Highest on IMDb?
Cinema legend Martin Scorsese has directed some of the most acclaimed films of all time. See how IMDb users rank all of his feature films as director.
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesAfter he finished this film, Martin Scorsese screened it for John Cassavetes. Cassavetes, after seeing it, hugged Scorsese and said, "Marty, you've just spent a whole year of your life making a piece of shit. It's a good picture, but you're better than the people who make this kind of movie. Don't get hooked into the exploitation market, just try and do something different." Scorsese's next film was Malas calles (1973).
- PifiasThe currency shown in the film is all modern, post 1960s, with modern banking money bands.
- Citas
Boxcar Bertha: Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.
- Créditos adicionalesOpening Statement: The following events are adapted from the true experiences of Boxcar Bertha Thompson, as related in the book "Sister of the Road"
- Versiones alternativasThe restored 2020 version added a 12 seconds shot introducing the party around the 58th minute.
- ConexionesFeatured in Directores de cine: The Films of Roger Corman (1999)
Reseña destacada
Rumor has it Martin Scorsese showed this film, his second, to John Cassavetes, who labeled the movie "sh*t" and suggested Marty work on more personal projects in the future. This advice prompted Scorsese to direct Mean Streets, the first of his many masterpieces. Boxcar Bertha is not one of them, but it isn't as bad as Cassavetes stated, either. It's an average B-movie of the kind Roger Corman would offer to his students (Marty among them).
Plotwise this picture has a more defined structure than Who's That Knocking at My Door: the setting is small-town America, the Great Depression is far from over, and a young girl named Bertha (Barbara Hershey) joins union leader "Big Bill" (David Carradine) in a violent protest against the people who are managing a railroad. When things turn ugly, the two lovers are forced to run for their lives, while still hoping they will prevail.
Hardly an original story (it's essentially the poor man's Bonnie & Clyde), but Scorsese does his best in making it appealing to audiences, shooting in beautiful countryside locations and obtaining strong performances from Hershey (who would later play Mary Magdalene in The Last Temptation of Christ) and Carradine, most notably in a sex scene that, according to everyone involved, was not faked.
Beyond that, though, it is obvious Cassavetes had a point: there is nothing that gives Boxcar Bertha that unique Scorsese feel. He just did his job without finding anything in the script he could connect to; even the religious iconography used in the bloody climax seems to have been tucked in for no particular reason.
Still, the film is enjoyable and worth seeing, even just as the product of a young filmmaker still shaping into the master he was to become.
Plotwise this picture has a more defined structure than Who's That Knocking at My Door: the setting is small-town America, the Great Depression is far from over, and a young girl named Bertha (Barbara Hershey) joins union leader "Big Bill" (David Carradine) in a violent protest against the people who are managing a railroad. When things turn ugly, the two lovers are forced to run for their lives, while still hoping they will prevail.
Hardly an original story (it's essentially the poor man's Bonnie & Clyde), but Scorsese does his best in making it appealing to audiences, shooting in beautiful countryside locations and obtaining strong performances from Hershey (who would later play Mary Magdalene in The Last Temptation of Christ) and Carradine, most notably in a sex scene that, according to everyone involved, was not faked.
Beyond that, though, it is obvious Cassavetes had a point: there is nothing that gives Boxcar Bertha that unique Scorsese feel. He just did his job without finding anything in the script he could connect to; even the religious iconography used in the bloody climax seems to have been tucked in for no particular reason.
Still, the film is enjoyable and worth seeing, even just as the product of a young filmmaker still shaping into the master he was to become.
- MaxBorg89
- 31 ene 2008
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- How long is Boxcar Bertha?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 600.000 US$ (estimación)
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 6443 US$
- Duración1 hora 28 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was El tren de Bertha (1972) officially released in India in English?
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