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Lo que no fue

Título original: Brief Encounter
  • 1945
  • Approved
  • 1h 26min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.0/10
47 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
4,788
489
Lo que no fue (1945)
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Reproducir trailer3:04
3 videos
99+ fotos
Tragic RomanceDramaRomance

Después de conocer a un extraño en una estación de tren, una mujer siente la tentación de engañar a su marido.Después de conocer a un extraño en una estación de tren, una mujer siente la tentación de engañar a su marido.Después de conocer a un extraño en una estación de tren, una mujer siente la tentación de engañar a su marido.

  • Dirección
    • David Lean
  • Guionistas
    • Noël Coward
    • Anthony Havelock-Allan
    • David Lean
  • Elenco
    • Celia Johnson
    • Trevor Howard
    • Stanley Holloway
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    8.0/10
    47 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    4,788
    489
    • Dirección
      • David Lean
    • Guionistas
      • Noël Coward
      • Anthony Havelock-Allan
      • David Lean
    • Elenco
      • Celia Johnson
      • Trevor Howard
      • Stanley Holloway
    • 297Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 146Opiniones de los críticos
    • 92Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado a 3 premios Óscar
      • 4 premios ganados y 3 nominaciones en total

    Videos3

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:04
    Trailer
    Brief Encounter
    Trailer 2:59
    Brief Encounter
    Brief Encounter
    Trailer 2:59
    Brief Encounter
    Top 5 Forbidden-Love Films With 'Disobedience' Star Alessandro Nivola
    Video 2:33
    Top 5 Forbidden-Love Films With 'Disobedience' Star Alessandro Nivola

    Fotos105

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    Elenco principal24

    Editar
    Celia Johnson
    Celia Johnson
    • Laura Jesson
    Trevor Howard
    Trevor Howard
    • Dr. Alec Harvey
    Stanley Holloway
    Stanley Holloway
    • Albert Godby
    Joyce Carey
    Joyce Carey
    • Myrtle Bagot
    Cyril Raymond
    Cyril Raymond
    • Fred Jesson
    Everley Gregg
    Everley Gregg
    • Dolly Messiter
    Marjorie Mars
    Marjorie Mars
    • Mary Norton
    Margaret Barton
    • Beryl Walters - Tea Room Assistant
    Wilfred Babbage
    • Policeman at War Memorial
    • (sin créditos)
    Alfie Bass
    Alfie Bass
    • Waiter at the Royal
    • (sin créditos)
    Wallace Bosco
    • Doctor at Bobbie's Accident
    • (sin créditos)
    Sydney Bromley
    Sydney Bromley
    • Johnnie - Second Soldier
    • (sin créditos)
    Noël Coward
    Noël Coward
    • Train Station Announcer
    • (sin créditos)
    Nuna Davey
    Nuna Davey
    • Herminie Rolandson - Mary's Cousin
    • (sin créditos)
    Valentine Dyall
    Valentine Dyall
    • Stephen Lynn - Alec's 'Friend'
    • (sin créditos)
    Irene Handl
    Irene Handl
    • Cellist and Organist
    • (sin créditos)
    Dennis Harkin
    • Stanley - Beryl's Man
    • (sin créditos)
    Edward Hodge
    • Bill - First Soldier
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • David Lean
    • Guionistas
      • Noël Coward
      • Anthony Havelock-Allan
      • David Lean
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios297

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    Opiniones destacadas

    stryker-5

    "Huge Cloudy Symbols Of A High Romance"

    Steam ... cut-glass accents ... Rachmaninov's 2nd Piano Concerto ... the refreshment room at Milford Junction ... "the shame of the whole thing - the guiltiness, the fear ..." - it all adds up to David Lean's famous film treatment of the Noel Coward tale of love blossoming and withering at a suburban railway station. Laura Jesson is a complacent middle-class housewife who gets a piece of grit in her eye one day and is helped by Doctor Alec Harvey, and the romance begins.

    Coward's screenplay is characteristic of his oeuvre. There is the neat precision of the circular plot, beginning and ending with the brainless intrusion of Dolly Messiter, and the matching sub-plot of the Albert-Mrs. Bagot courtship. There are tongue-in-cheek self-references (on the cinema screen, "Flames Of Passion" coming shortly) and the trademark Cowardian grounding in exaggerated Englishness ("One has one's roots, after all"). Most typical of all is that overwrought cascade of middle-class vocabulary (" ...so utterly humiliated and defeated, and so dreadfully, dreadfully ashamed"). Coward patronises working-class people abominably. Albert and Mrs. Bagot amble effortlessly through their romance because, bless them, they are simple folk. Alec and Laura suffer torments, having so much more sensitivity, and, you see, they have reputations to lose ("the furtiveness and the lying outweigh the happiness").

    Having made the transition from editor to director in 1942, Lean was at the helm for the fourth time for "Brief Encounter", all four films being Coward projects - and a highly creditable job he made of this one. The scene in which Alec explains coal-dust inhalation and Laura falls in love is a model of sensitive direction. Reflections of Laura's face in the train window and the make-up mirror suggest in visual terms the existence of her 'other self', the id to her ego. Thundering steam trains and Rachmaninov stand for the irrepressible sexual urge. Stephen Lynn's flat, with its bachelor urbanity, contrasts cleverly with Laura's safe, staid home and safe, staid husband Fred ("I don't understand!") Alec's silent hand on Laura's shoulder is wonderfully poignant, the suppressed emotion eclipsed by stupid Dolly Messiter, her face filling the screen and 'wiping out' the great moment.

    Sex has to be dealt with obliquely, but it is very much the driving-force of the film. "If we control ourselves, and behave like sensible human beings ..." offers Laura hopefully but hollowly. Neither man nor woman is capable of restraint, at least until after the climax in Stephen's flat. The boathouse and the little bridge hint furtively at sexual union. Other reviewers have declared the liaison to be 'unrequited' or 'unconsummated', but I am not so sure. In the grammar of 1940's cinema, the return to the love-nest of tousle-haired, hatless Laura is the equivalent, I would suggest, of our modern bedroom scene. Isn't that why Alec suddenly decides to take the job offer?
    8ptb-8

    Closely watched trains.

    I found this David Lean version of BRIEF ENCOUNTER to be a simply enchanting and entrancing film. Part of the enjoyment was the style of writing and acting that is purposely theatrical in order for the 1940s British subject matter to be handled in the fairly explicit way that it was. For those who 'don't get it' or find it boring well what can those who do 'get it' say? How sad perhaps that something so lovely and so humane and so complex in its dialogue and beautifully formal in its British tone cannot be enjoyed by a few who demand ..DEMAND.. it suit them in 2009. Hilarious! Maybe the multiplex mind thought BRIEF ENCOUNTER was about colliding underpants, which just might be right for them. CLASH OF THE TIGHT'UNS anyone? Maybe a remake with Adam Sandler and Drew Barrymore called HERE/NOW might be the right update. This gloriously stuffy and furtive Noel Coward play is transformed in this film to be the black and white smoky British damp equivalent of HUMORESQUE or NOW VOYAGER.. and if you love those films (so easy!) you will love this.
    TipuPurkayastha

    Lean, spare & beautiful

    I didn't think I'd write this comment till I saw the 2 previous ones criticizing 'BE'. I don't know how much this movie would appeal to camp-followers of an in-your-face go-getting culture. Some of the frequent adjectives describing this movie is 'civilised', 'restrained', 'noble'. To those who call this movie dated, I'll say that these are indeed qualities which are hardly followed & upheld today, especially in movies. However movies do reflect contemporary social mores, & maybe the story of two illicit lovers sacrificing their love for something as obvious as home & family does not find to many buyers today.

    For those who think a movie can convey some of the most intimate emotions, conflicts & visions known to us, those who believe 2 art forms (Rachmaninoff's 2nd, Lean's 4th) can coexist brilliantly, & finally for those who believed David Lean got body-snatched in mid-career to make over-blown nonsense like 'Dr. Zhivago' this is one of the best ways to spend 86 minutes!
    Philby-3

    Briefly, a great film

    There's not a lot to say. Like many classics this film is simply constructed with all the elements in balance so that none stands out. Everything in it contributes something essential; the lighting, the unromantic railway station sets, the minor characters and of course the music, the ultra-romantic Rachmaninov Piano Concerto no 2. The emotional rollercoaster of the illicit affair has seldom been better portrayed. Perhaps it is a little understated for transatlantic tastes but no-one viewing this movie would not appreciate that the English can be as passionate as the rest of us.

    Celia Johnson as Laura and Trevor Howard as Alec are perfect together. It being 1945, they do not get to bed – that would have ruined the audience's sympathy for them in those rather more censorious times. It's all in their minds but their faces give the game away – to each other and to the bystanders. Nothing happens to drag anyone near the awful divorce courts, but you are left wondering whether Celia will ever feel quite the same about her dull, comfortable, patronising and boring husband. As for Alec, he professes he will love her forever but then, he's a man.

    Noel Coward produced this film from a short play of his from 1935 (the war and post-war shortages are absent), and his dulcet tones may be recognised in the railway station announcements. David Lean directed, and it is a remarkable collaboration. The action is opened out a little – a row on the lake, a drive in the country - but the scenes from the play set entirely in the railway refreshment rooms still remain the centre of the story. The parallel relationship between Albert the station guard (Stanley Holloway), and Myrtle the refreshment room attendant (Joyce Carey), is an interesting counterpoint to the angst-ridden middle class would-be adulterers. Surely Noel old boy you weren't suggesting that the working class handles this sort of thing better? We see things largely from Laura's point of view and perhaps Alec didn't feel quite so guilty, but their consciences are going to make them pay. A gem of a movie.
    gbtbag

    Ignore That First Review. This Is A Classic

    The person who wrote the first review of this movie must be either a complete moron or has an acute lack of appreciation for what constitutes great moviemaking.

    "Brief Encounter" is the perfect encapsulation of a very specific time in both women's and British history. The immediate post-WW 2 era in the UK was a period that saw Brits struggling with the disppearance of traditional social mores that had endured for over a century and the new world order that came about at the conclusion of the war. (For another, beautifully crafted cinematic example, see Neil Jordan's exquisite movie "The End of the Affair.")

    Food rationing was still in place in postwar Britain. Women were having to deal with getting to know their menfolk again, after their years of absence at war. Like their American "Rosie the Riveter" counterparts, British women had enjoyed newfound and unfamiliar independence during wartime, working for the war effort. And, like their US "sisters", they were expected to relinquish those jobs to returning men.

    "Brief Encounter" is, in many ways, a metaphor for the struggle that men and women were going through, stuck with having to conform to social expectations while bursting to escape to the greater independence glimpsed fleetingly and pleasurably during the war, when everything and everyone were turned upside down.

    Being the work of Noel Coward, that master observer of and commentator on English manners, "Brief Encounter" frames this struggle as a torrid love story bubbling under the surface of British reserve, which demands maintaining appearances at all costs, regardless of the personal pain involved.

    This passionate pair, who never even exchange a kiss, are constrained and ultimately kept apart by expectations--of their families, of their social positions, of Great Britain.

    When Alec puts his hand on Laura's shoulder at their final, unexpectedly truncated meeting in the station snack bar/waiting room, it's as erotic and far more touching than just about every sex scene you'll see in movies.

    The first reviewer completely missed the point and the relevance of this movie in film history and, especially, in British cinema history.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      This movie was shot during the final days of World War II, going into production in January 1945. Filming was completed in May, with an interruption on May 8 to celebrate Germany's surrender.
    • Errores
      Carnforth Station has had its name board covered and replaced with a big sign reading Milford Junction, but the smaller platform notices (behind Laura when Alec tells her about the job in South Africa) still show the next train's destinations as Hellifield, Skipton, Bradford and Leeds.
    • Citas

      Laura Jesson: It's awfully easy to lie when you know that you're trusted implicitly. So very easy, and so very degrading.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in A Touch of Class (1973)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No.2.
      Written by Sergei Rachmaninoff (uncredited)

      Played by Eileen Joyce with The National Symphony Orchestra

      Conducted by Muir Mathieson

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    Preguntas Frecuentes19

    • How long is Brief Encounter?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Is "Brief Encounter" based on a novel?
    • Why was "Brief Encounter" initially banned in Ireland?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 28 de mayo de 1947 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Francés
    • También se conoce como
      • Brief Encounter
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Carnforth Station, Carnforth, Lancashire, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(exterior of Milford Junction Station)
    • Productora
      • Cineguild
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • GBP 170,000 (estimado)
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 119,447
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 26 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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