Something About Amelia
- TV Movie
- 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
672
YOUR RATING
Counseling helps a family deal with the discovery that their daughter was sexually abused by a close relative.Counseling helps a family deal with the discovery that their daughter was sexually abused by a close relative.Counseling helps a family deal with the discovery that their daughter was sexually abused by a close relative.
- Won 3 Primetime Emmys
- 9 wins & 10 nominations total
Melissa Francis
- Beth Bennett
- (as Missy Francis)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
From a "survivor" from the 1960s/70s
This movie should be shown as an example of how NOT to think and act about incest and abuse. Back in the 1980s, it was all about forgiveness for the poor man who was forced to wreck a person's life because his wife or girlfriend wasn't putting out. For me, it was my brother, and my father would always ask me if the rapist was doing okay (!), and tell me I was "making a big deal out of it." Mothers almost always know but say nothing because they don't want to confront the man. This movie is a disgusting piece of unrealistic garbage with a sympathetic lead actor for a perpetrator, but unfortunately, that was the way it was and often still is. A policewoman didn't believe me only a few years ago. No one believes that people who do this are serial rapists, and that they can't get enough, so the victim is constantly under siege every single day, whenever the rapist has a spare minute. But no one believes it. Jeffrey Epstein admitted he needed to do it at least five times a day. There is no successful treatment, no therapy that works. And the resulting illness lasts for the victim's entire life.
excellent film
An excellent film that handles a difficult topic well. The casting and sets create an atmosphere to let the story unfold in a seemingly average American home, which adds both to the realism and power of this movie. Ted Danson plays the deceptively normal father to the hilt, and the rest of the cast handle their roles with a high degree of believability. This is a powerful film that handles a difficult subject with intelligence and emotion without sensationalizing. Highly recommended.
Still effective today
Groundbreaking movie is still good today. What a good cast. Ted Danson cast against type as the molesting father. It's quite horrific when he admits it. Glenn Close as his wife reacts realistically. First in disbelief then anger. Roxana Zal is the daughter and gives an understated effective performance.
There have been few movies about family incest since and this one stands the test of time.
There have been few movies about family incest since and this one stands the test of time.
I can't even process this
Glenn Close and Ted Danson are probably my two favourite actors of all time. So imagine my excitement when I came across this movie whilst doing my housework. What kind of sick mind created this. It excuses the molesters behaviour by essentially blaming the wife for not providing enough love. There is never an acceptable reason for child abuse and I cannot comprehend why anyone was involved in this film in the first place. It also states that the father just loved his daughter so much and at one point the lawyer (I think) mentions "we've all had incestuous thoughts at one point", um excuse me what? No. Just no. No one should ever watch this film. Ever. It's horrific.
Brave attempt at a controversial subject, but an impenetrable glaze of phoniness remains
13-year-old girl from an upper-middle class home, growing out of her 'daddy's girl' stage and tentatively starting to date, is struggling with a dark secret and finally lays on a bombshell on her mother: she's been the target of molestation by her own father. TV-movie produced with a high level of filmmaking competency (if not craft). The family at the center of this story, as written, isn't very believable, even with Emmy-nominated Glenn Close and Ted Danson cast as the parents; their stilted-bickering interactions both before and after Amelia's revelation aren't convincing. This is the kind of movie where the wife counts the number of weeks her husband hasn't made love to her, leading to her feeling like a scorned woman after digesting her daughter's story. The Emmy-winning teleplay by William Hanley fails, really, to give us a strong, sound foundation in which to build the central drama, while the young heroine (Emmy-winner Roxana Zal) internalizes her pain, becoming a somewhat somnambulant victim.
Did you know
- TriviaMichael Landon was the first choice to play Steven Bennett. He declined, feeling that he was so strongly identified with the role of the morally upright father Charles Ingalls on Little House on the Prairie (1974) that no one would accept him portraying a sexually abusive father.
- GoofsNear the start of the film, Steven is talking to Amelia about her date for the dance. At one point, he says, "I can't believe I didn't know anything about you going to a dance with another boy." He immediately repeats the words "with a boy" again.
- Quotes
Ruth Walters: Amelia, You haven't committed any crime, try to remember that.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 36th Primetime Emmy Awards (1984)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Amelia, mi hija, mi amor
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 40m(100 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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