AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,4/10
7,9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Após a morte de seu pai, o renomado fotógrafo de guerra Paul Prior volta para sua casa na Nova Zelândia. Ele se torna amigo de Célia, uma jovem ávida por descobrir a vida. Quando Célia desap... Ler tudoApós a morte de seu pai, o renomado fotógrafo de guerra Paul Prior volta para sua casa na Nova Zelândia. Ele se torna amigo de Célia, uma jovem ávida por descobrir a vida. Quando Célia desaparece, Paul torna-se o principal suspeito.Após a morte de seu pai, o renomado fotógrafo de guerra Paul Prior volta para sua casa na Nova Zelândia. Ele se torna amigo de Célia, uma jovem ávida por descobrir a vida. Quando Célia desaparece, Paul torna-se o principal suspeito.
- Prêmios
- 19 vitórias e 5 indicações no total
Mabel Wharekawa
- Winnie
- (as Mabel Burt)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe wartime photographs used for the film were taken by South African photojournalist Greg Marinovich. The photograph of the child was taken by Romano Cagnoni.
- Citações
Celia Steimer: I'd rather be a no-one somewhere, than a someone nowhere.
- Versões alternativasTo secure a "15" certificate UK versions are cut by 1 min 56 secs and remove a bedroom scene in which Paul asks a woman to sexually asphyxiate him with the belt of his trousers.
- ConexõesFeatured in In My Father's Den: Behind the Scenes Footage and Clips (2005)
- Trilhas sonorasChants d'Auvergne - Series 1: Bailero
Composed by Marie-Joseph Canteloube
Performed by Kiri Te Kanawa and The English Chamber Orchestra
Avaliação em destaque
A compelling story, half melodrama, half thriller, set in a quiet and fairly isolated region of New Zealand.
Two brothers meet up after a long separation and dark secrets from the past slowly unravel on a collision course with present day reality. Paul is a Pulitzer nominated war photographer who left home still quite young and is now deeply resented by sibling Andrew. Their father has died and split the Will three ways. There is further tension from Paul's ex-girlfriend Jackie, and a mysterious 16yr old, Celia. A concatenation of events draws Paul into knots of suspicion and trust, which the film juxtaposes with increasingly frequent flashbacks explaining shadowy glimpses of shame beneath façades of uprightness.
The beauty that first struck me about In My Father's Den was how it brought back to me the quietude of New Zealand, the untainted landscape where you can almost hear your own thoughts - and also the Kiwi ability to express much (for good or bad) without saying much. Having sat through a mainstream film immediately before this one, I had to do a 'gear shift' to concentrate enough to follow what was happening. This has it's own reward, and one of the reasons why art house movies have such impact the *active* attention and listening that is required (as opposed to the spoon-fed nature of Hollywood movies) means a greater investment of one's own energy, and the result, when worthwhile, becomes internalised to a greater degree. Perhaps there should be a word such as 'internalism' to mean the opposite of 'escapism', for that is what we also do when we make the effort to understand, to achieve an active empathy, and so find qualities in a film that resonate more deeply with us than can entertainment alone.
What I found rather sad is what has happened to the film even with the present day's more relaxed attitude to censorship. The British Board of Film Censors website entry on this movie reports: "The distributor chose to remove a scene which showed consensual asphyxiation in a sexual context in order to achieve a '15'. An uncut '18' was available to the distributor." So UK law and our film censors would allow adults to see an uncut a work of artistic merit (one that was part financed by UK Lottery money) but UK financial interests (distributors with an eye to maximising ticket sales) will not.
In My Father's Den is not without faults the intercut flashbacks towards the end come with such alarming rapidity that it is almost confusing, and some of the characterisation (like a 16yr old girl who writes world class poetry), however moving, can seem far-fetched. But overall the flaws are worth overlooking to enjoy the painting.
Two brothers meet up after a long separation and dark secrets from the past slowly unravel on a collision course with present day reality. Paul is a Pulitzer nominated war photographer who left home still quite young and is now deeply resented by sibling Andrew. Their father has died and split the Will three ways. There is further tension from Paul's ex-girlfriend Jackie, and a mysterious 16yr old, Celia. A concatenation of events draws Paul into knots of suspicion and trust, which the film juxtaposes with increasingly frequent flashbacks explaining shadowy glimpses of shame beneath façades of uprightness.
The beauty that first struck me about In My Father's Den was how it brought back to me the quietude of New Zealand, the untainted landscape where you can almost hear your own thoughts - and also the Kiwi ability to express much (for good or bad) without saying much. Having sat through a mainstream film immediately before this one, I had to do a 'gear shift' to concentrate enough to follow what was happening. This has it's own reward, and one of the reasons why art house movies have such impact the *active* attention and listening that is required (as opposed to the spoon-fed nature of Hollywood movies) means a greater investment of one's own energy, and the result, when worthwhile, becomes internalised to a greater degree. Perhaps there should be a word such as 'internalism' to mean the opposite of 'escapism', for that is what we also do when we make the effort to understand, to achieve an active empathy, and so find qualities in a film that resonate more deeply with us than can entertainment alone.
What I found rather sad is what has happened to the film even with the present day's more relaxed attitude to censorship. The British Board of Film Censors website entry on this movie reports: "The distributor chose to remove a scene which showed consensual asphyxiation in a sexual context in order to achieve a '15'. An uncut '18' was available to the distributor." So UK law and our film censors would allow adults to see an uncut a work of artistic merit (one that was part financed by UK Lottery money) but UK financial interests (distributors with an eye to maximising ticket sales) will not.
In My Father's Den is not without faults the intercut flashbacks towards the end come with such alarming rapidity that it is almost confusing, and some of the characterisation (like a 16yr old girl who writes world class poetry), however moving, can seem far-fetched. But overall the flaws are worth overlooking to enjoy the painting.
- Chris_Docker
- 30 de jun. de 2005
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
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- Centrais de atendimento oficiais
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- In My Father's Den
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- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- NZ$ 7.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 1.627.788
- Tempo de duração2 horas 7 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Um Refúgio no Passado (2004) officially released in India in English?
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