A Patch of Blue - Wikipedia 푸른 하늘 아래서

A Patch of Blue - Wikipedia

A Patch of Blue

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Patch of Blue
Theatrical release poster
Directed byGuy Green
Screenplay byGuy Green
Based onBe Ready with Bells and Drums
1961 novel
by Elizabeth Kata
Produced byGuy Green
Pandro S. Berman
StarringSidney Poitier
Shelley Winters
Elizabeth Hartman
Wallace Ford
CinematographyRobert Burks
Edited byRita Roland
Music byJerry Goldsmith
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • December 10, 1965
Running time
105 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$800,000
Box office$6,750,000(rentals)[1]

A Patch of Blue is a 1965 American drama film directed and written by Guy Green about the friendship between an educated black man (played by Sidney Poitier) and an illiterate, blind, white 18-year-old girl (played by Elizabeth Hartman in her film debut), and the problems that plague their friendship in a racially divided America. Made in 1965 against the backdrop of the growing civil rights movement, the film explores racism while playing on the idea that "love is blind."

Shelley Winters won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, her second win for the award, following her victory in 1959 for The Diary of Anne Frank. It was the final screen appearance for veteran actor Wallace Ford.

Scenes of Poitier and Hartman kissing were cut from the film when it was shown in film theaters in the Southern United States.[2] These scenes are intact in the DVD version. According to the DVD audio commentary, it was the decision of director Guy Green that A Patch of Blue be filmed in black and white although color was available.

The film was adapted by Guy Green from the 1961 book Be Ready with Bells and Drums푸른 하늘 아래서 by the Australian author Elizabeth Kata. The book later won a Writers Guild of America award. The book's plot has a slightly less optimistic ending than the film.

In addition to the Best Supporting Actress win for Winters, the film was nominated for Academy Awards for Best Actress in a Leading Role (Elizabeth Hartman), Best Art Direction-Set Decoration (Black-and-White) (George DavisUrie McClearyHenry GraceCharles S. Thompson), Best Cinematography (Black-and-White) and Best Music (Original Music Score). Hartman, 22 at the time, was the youngest Best Actress nominee, a record she held for 10 years before 20-year-old Isabelle Adjani broke her record in 1975.[3]

Plot

Selina D'Arcey is a blind white girl living in a city apartment with her crude and vulgar mother Rose-Ann, who works as a prostitute, and her grandfather Ole Pa. She strings beads to supplement her family's small income and spends most of her time doing chores. Her mother is abusive, and Ole Pa is an alcoholic. Selina has no friends, rarely leaves the apartment, and has never received an education.

Selina convinces her grandfather to take her to the park, where she meets Gordon Ralfe, an educated and soft-spoken black man working night shifts in an office. The two become friends, meeting at the park almost every day. Gordon learns that she was blinded at age five when Rose-Ann threw chemicals on her while attempting to hit her husband and that she was raped by one of Rose-Ann's "boyfriends."

Rose-Ann's friend Sadie is also a prostitute, and she realizes that Selina can be useful in their business. Rose-Ann and Sadie decide to leave Ole Pa, move with Selina into a better apartment, and force her into prostitution.

In the meantime, Gordon has contacted a school for the blind, which is ready to take Selina. While Rose-Ann is out, Selina runs away to the park and meets Gordon. She tells him about Rose-Ann's plan, and he assures her that she will be leaving for school in a few days. Finding Selina missing from the apartment, Rose-Ann takes Ole Pa to the park and confronts Gordon. Despite Rose-Ann's resistance, Gordon takes Selina away. Ole Pa then stops Rose-Ann from chasing after them, telling her that Selina is not a child anymore.

At Gordon's house, Selina asks Gordon to marry her, to which he replies that there are many types of love, and she will realize that their relationship will not work. Selina tells him that she loves him and knows that he is black and his skin color doesn't matter to her. Gordon tells her she must meet more people and wait a year to find out whether their love is more than friendship. A bus arrives to pick up Selina for her trip to the school, and the two say goodbye. Gordon has given Selina a music box that belonged to his grandmother. When she leaves it in the apartment, he runs after her to give it back but misses the bus and walks back upstairs to his apartment building.

Cast

Production

Guy Green bought the rights to himself. He made the film at MGM after another film he was going to make for that studio, The Forty Days of Musa Dagh, did not happen.[4]

Reception

Critical reception

The New York Times was critical: "There is no doubt about the good intentions of those who produced 'A Patch of Blue,'....But for the most part this little drama...seems a compound of specious contrivance. Miss Hartman...is just a wee bit too tidy and sweet...The action is too patly formulated, and Mr. Poitier, who is an honest performer, has to act like a saint. Why should it be, in a film of this nature...that the cold-water flat in which the heroine lives...looks like any phony slum apartment fabricated by the art department of a studio? And why should it be that the tune the girl is humming when the man comes upon her in the park is 'Over the Rainbow?' Why should they leap and frolic like a couple of Disney kids on a shopping spree in a supermarket? And why should she discover a French music box that plays a little tune that he sings, in French, when she first visits his apartment? These are small things, but many more like them, strung together in a get-this-clearly way, give an air of artificial fictionalizing to what should be a casual, gritty, human, throbbing film."[5]

The Chicago Tribune wrote: "That storied shrew, the Wicked Stepmother, is back again. This time she's played by Shelley Winters, who is not actually a step relative...but is wicked enough to make anyone see red....Not woman enough to do a solo set in sadism, Shelley shares her apartment with another Mean Person, a gin-guzzling grandfather....The park is the girl's salvation, for there she meets a young man who opens up a new world to her. As played by Sidney Poitier, he is both kind and practical, never patronizing.....As Selina, newcome Hartman extracts what she can from the mawkish, melodramatic script and effectively captures the personality nuances of the pale, gaunt girl whose frightened-rabbit isolation in the bleak apartment is transformed into a childlike exuberance in the park where a patch of green becomes her patch of blue."[6]

The Time magazine review was mixed: "'A Patch of Blue' takes some getting used to. It starts as a pointless little tearjerker, then turns abruptly into contemporary hope opera. To save it from itself requires extraordinary skill, and the movie is fortunate in having miracle workers at hand....Luckily, Director Guy Green...has a knack for sustaining the sort of idea that in lesser hands might easily slip from pathos into bathos. Green's style is simple, forceful and true, and he habitually activates a performer's most astonishing inner resources. The prize of his present cast is 21-year-old film fledgling Elizabeth Hartman....Patch of Blue flirts openly with the issue of interracial love, only to leave it unresolved in the last reel, and the film's message becomes almost immaterial. In their quiet, tender scenes together, Hartman and Poitier conquer the insipidity of a plot that reduces tangled human problems to a case of the black leading the blind."[7]

A Patch of Blue has a 89% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on nine reviews.[8]

Box-office

The film proved to be the most successful in Poitier's career, which proved a lucrative development considering he agreed to a salary cut in exchange for 10% of the film's gross earnings. In addition, the film made Poitier a major national film star with excellent business in even southern cities like Houston, Atlanta and Charlotte.[9]

Awards and nominations

AwardCategoryNominee(s)ResultRef.
Academy AwardsBest ActressElizabeth HartmanNominated[10]
Best Supporting ActressShelley WintersWon
Best Art Direction – Black-and-WhiteArt Direction: George Davis and Urie McCleary;
Set Decoration: Henry Grace and Charles S. Thompson
Nominated
Best Cinematography – Black-and-WhiteRobert BurksNominated
Best Music Score – Substantially OriginalJerry GoldsmithNominated
British Academy Film AwardsBest Foreign ActorSidney PoitierNominated[11]
Golden Globe AwardsBest Motion Picture – DramaNominated[12]
Best Director – Motion PictureGuy GreenNominated
Best Screenplay – Motion PictureNominated
Best Actor in a Motion Picture – DramaSidney PoitierNominated
Best Actress in a Motion Picture – DramaElizabeth HartmanNominated
Most Promising Newcomer – FemaleWon
Kansas City Film Critics Circle AwardsBest Supporting ActressShelley WintersWon[13]
Laurel AwardsTop DramaNominated
Top Male Dramatic PerformanceSidney PoitierWon
Top Female Dramatic PerformanceElizabeth HartmanNominated
Top Male Supporting PerformanceWallace FordNominated
Top Female Supporting PerformanceShelley WintersWon
Writers Guild of America AwardsBest Written American DramaGuy GreenNominated[14]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack to A Patch of Blue was composed and conducted by Jerry Goldsmith. It gained Goldsmith his second Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score following his score to Freud in 1962. It was one of the 250 nominated scores for the American Film Institute's top 25 American film scores.[15] The score has been released three times on CD; in 1991 through Mainstream Records (with the score to David and Lisa by Mark Lawrence), in 1992 through Tsunami Records (with his score to Patton), and an extended version in 1997 through Intrada Records.[16]

A Cinderella Named Elizabeth

The film's creators also made a short film about Hartman's selection to play the starring role. The short, titled A Cinderella Named Elizabeth, focuses on her status as an unknown actress from Youngstown, Ohio, and includes segments from her screen test and associated "personality test", in which the actress is filmed while being herself and answering questions about everyday topics such as her taste in clothing. The short also shows her visiting the Braille Institute of America to watch blind people being trained to do handwork – similar to the beadwork her character does in the film – and to perform tasks of daily living and self-care, of the sort that Poitier's character teaches Selina to do.

See also

References

  1.  "Big Rental Pictures of 1966". Variety. January 4, 1967. p. 8.
  2.  Canby, Vincent (April 5, 1966). "'A Patch of Blue' Draws in South"The New York Times. p. 42. Retrieved November 22, 2023.
  3.  "A Patch of Blue". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2012. Archived from the original on October 18, 2012. Retrieved December 26, 2008.
  4.  Schwartzman, Arnold (November 19, 1991). "Interview with Guy Green side 3"British Entertainment History Project.
  5.  Crowther, Bosley (December 16, 1965). "Moving Story is Spoiled by Sugary Treatment". The New York Times. p. 63.
  6.  Clifford, Terry (January 31, 1966). "As Film, 'Patch of Blue' Wears Thin". Chicago Tribune. p. b12.
  7.  ""Cinema" Color-Blind". Time. December 17, 1965.
  8.  "A Patch of Blue"Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved November 22, 2023.
  9.  Harris, Mark (2008). Pictures at a Revolution: Five Movies and the Birth of The New Hollywood. Penguin Books. pp. 159ISBN 9781594201523.
  10.  "The 38th Academy Awards (1966) Nominees and Winners"Academy of Motion Picture Arts and SciencesArchived from the original on January 11, 2015. Retrieved August 24, 2011.
  11.  "BAFTA Awards: Film in 1967"British Academy Film Awards. 1966. Archived from the original on August 8, 2014. Retrieved September 16, 2016.
  12.  "A Patch of Blue"Golden Globe Foundation. Retrieved July 5, 2021.
  13.  "KCFCC Award Winners – 1966-69"Kansas City Film Critics Circle. December 14, 2013. Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  14.  "Awards Winners"Writers Guild of America Awards. Archived from the original on December 5, 2012. Retrieved June 6, 2010.
  15.  "AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores Nominees" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 13, 2011. Retrieved August 19, 2016.
  16.  Clemmensen, Christian (June 24, 1997). "A Patch of Blue soundtrack review"Filmtracks.com. Retrieved April 14, 2011.



==


푸른 하늘 아래서

위키백과, 우리 모두의 백과사전.
푸른 하늘 아래서
A Patch of Blue
감독가이 그린
각본가이 그린
제작가이 그린
원작엘리자베스 카타
출연시드니 포이티어
엘리자베스 하트먼
촬영로버트 버크스
편집리타 롤랜드
음악제리 골드스미스
제작사메트로 골드윈 메이어
배급사메트로 골드윈 메이어
개봉일
  • 1965년 12월 10일
시간105분
국가미국의 기 미국
언어영어
제작비80만달러
흥행수익675만달러

푸른 하늘 아래서》(영어A Patch of Blue)는 1965년에 개봉한 미국의 영화이다.

출연

한국판 성우진(KBS)

외부 링크

==

いつか見た青い空

出典: フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』
いつか見た青い空
A Patch of Blue
監督ガイ・グリーン
脚本ガイ・グリーン
原作エリザベス・カタ
製作ガイ・グリーン
パンドロ・S・パーマン
出演者シドニー・ポワチエ
シェリー・ウィンタース
音楽ジェリー・ゴールドスミス
撮影ロバート・バークス
編集リタ・ローランド
配給MGM
公開アメリカ合衆国の旗 1965年12月10日
日本の旗 1966年6月17日
上映時間105分
製作国アメリカ合衆国の旗 アメリカ合衆国
言語英語
製作費$800,000
興行収入$6,750,000[1]
テンプレートを表示

いつか見た青い空』(いつかみたあおいそら、A Patch of Blue)は、1965年に公開されたアメリカ合衆国ドラマ映画エリザベス・カタ英語版による1961年の小説を原作としている。人種差別が問題視され公民権運動が起こる公開当時の時代を背景に、盲目の白人少女と黒人青年の触れ合いを描いた作品。監督はガイ・グリーン英語版。出演はシドニー・ポワチエなど。盲目の少女の役にはエリザベス・ハートマンが抜擢された[2]

第38回アカデミー賞では数多くの賞にノミネートされ、 シェリー・ウィンタース助演女優賞を受賞。また、ハートマンは当時最年少となる22歳で主演女優賞にノミネートされ、1975年イザベル・アジャーニが20歳でノミネートされるまで、この記録は10年間保持された[3]

あらすじ

キャスト

※括弧内は日本語吹替(初回放送1974年5月5日『日曜洋画劇場』)

受賞歴

部門人物結果
アカデミー賞主演女優賞エリザベス・ハートマンノミネート
助演女優賞シェリー・ウィンタース受賞
美術賞 (モノクロ作品)ジョージ・W・デイヴィス英語版
ウリー・マックリアリー英語版
ヘンリー・グレイス英語版
チャールズ・S・トンプソン英語版
ノミネート
撮影賞 (モノクロ作品)ロバート・バークス英語版ノミネート
作曲賞ジェリー・ゴールドスミスノミネート
英国アカデミー賞主演男優賞シドニー・ポワチエノミネート
ゴールデングローブ賞作品賞 (ドラマ部門)パンドロ・S・バーマン英語版
ガイ・グリーン英語版
ノミネート
主演男優賞 (ドラマ部門)シドニー・ポワチエノミネート
主演女優賞 (ドラマ部門)エリザベス・ハートマンノミネート
監督賞ガイ・グリーンノミネート
脚本賞ノミネート
新人女優賞エリザベス・ハートマン受賞
全米脚本家組合賞脚色賞 (ドラマ部門)ガイ・グリーンノミネート

脚注

  1. ^ "Big Rental Pictures of 1966", Variety, 4 January 1967 p 8
  2. ^ Fristoe, Roger. “A Patch of Blue”. TCM.comTurner Classic Movies. 2018年9月14日閲覧。
  3. ^ “NY Times: A Patch of Blue”The New York Times. (2012年). オリジナル

==


언젠가 본 푸른 하늘

출처 : 무료 백과 사전 "Wikipedia (Wikipedia)"
언젠가 본 푸른 하늘
A Patch of Blue
감독가이 그린
각본가이 그린
원작엘리자베스 카타
제작가이 그린
판도로 S 파먼
출연자시드니 포와티에 셰리
윈터스
음악제리 골드 스미스
촬영로버트 버크스
편집리타 롤랜드
배급MGM
공개미국 국기 1965년 12월 10일 1966년 6월 17일
일본의 국기
상영시간105분
제작국미국 국기 미국
언어영어
제작비$800,000
흥행 소득$6,750,000 [ 1 ]
템플릿 보기

언젠가 본 푸른 하늘」(언젠가 본 아오이소라, A Patch of Blue )은, 1965년 에 공개된 미국 의 드라마 영화 . 엘리자베스 카타 영어판 ) 에 의한 1961년 의 소설을 원작으로 하고 있다. 인종차별이 문제시돼 공민권운동 이 일어나는 공개 당시 시대를 배경으로 맹목적인 백인소녀와 흑인청년의 만남을 그린 작품. 감독 은 가이 그린 영어판 ) . 출연은 시드니 포와티에 등. 맹목적인 소녀의 역에는 엘리자베스 하트만  발탁되었다 [ 2 ] .

제38회 아카데미 상에서는 수많은 상에 노미네이트되어 셰리 윈터스가 조연 여배우  을 수상 . 또한 하트맨은 당시 최연소가 되는 22세로 주연 여배우상에 노미네이트되고, 1975 년 이사벨 아자니가 20세에 노미네이트될 때까지 이 기록은 10년간 유지되었다 [ 3 ] .

줄거리

캐스트

※괄호 안은 일본어 취체(첫회 방송 1974년 5월 5일 “ 일요양화극장 ”)

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