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Things to Come (1936)
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Revisión
Calificación de los usuarios:
Fecha de Lanzamiento:
31 marzo 1936 (Denmark) másFrase comercial:
What will the next hundred years bring to mankind? másPlot:
A story of 100 years: a decades-long second world war leaves plague and anarchy, then a rational state rebuilds civilization and tries space travel. full summary | add synopsisComentarios de los usuarios:
Often Lyrical, Logical and Beautiful On its Own Terms; a Classic of Ideas másReparto
(Reparto completo)| Raymond Massey | ... | John Cabal / Oswald Cabal | |
| Edward Chapman | ... | Pippa Passworthy / Raymond Passworthy | |
| Ralph Richardson | ... | Rudolph - The Boss | |
| Margaretta Scott | ... | Roxana / Rowena (as Margueretta Scott) | |
| Cedric Hardwicke | ... | Theotocopulos | |
| Maurice Braddell | ... | Dr. Harding | |
| Sophie Stewart | ... | Mrs. Cabal | |
| Derrick De Marney | ... | Richard Gordon (as Derrick de Marney) | |
| Ann Todd | ... | Mary Gordon | |
| Pearl Argyle | ... | Catherine Cabal | |
| Kenneth Villiers | ... | Maurice Passworthy | |
| Ivan Brandt | ... | Morden Mitani | |
| Anne McLaren | ... | The Child | |
| Patricia Hilliard | ... | Janet Gordon | |
| Charles Carson | ... | Great Grandfather |
Más detalles
También conocida como:
H.G. Wells' Things to Come (UK) (complete title)The Hundred Years to Come (UK) (working title)
The Shape of Things to Come (UK) (working title)
Whither Mankind (UK) (working title)
El mundo en guerra (Mexico) [es]
La vida futura (Spain) [es]
Lo que vendra (Argentina) [es]
más
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsDuración:
100 min | UK:117 min | Canada:91 min (VHS version) | UK:108 min (premiere cut) | UK:113 min (original version) | USA:92 min (cut version)País:
UKIdioma:
InglésColor:
Negro y BlancoRelación de Aspecto:
1.37 : 1 másSonido:
Mono (Western Electric Sound System Noiseless Recording)Cosas divertidas
Trivialidades:
Music recorded at The Scala Theatre, Charlotte Street, London, England UK másErrores:
Continuidad: During the bombing of Everytown, a man in a top hat follows several people across the hood of a car in an attempt to escape. There are footprints clearly all over the hood. A later scene shows more people using the same car, But this time the hood is clean. másCitas:
Raymond Passworthy: Oh, God, is there ever to be any age of happiness? Is there never to be any rest?Oswald Cabal: Rest enough for the individual man - too much, and too soon - and we call it death. But for Man, no rest and no ending. He must go on, conquest beyond conquest. First this little planet with its winds and ways, and then all the laws of mind and matter that restrain him. Then the planets about him and at last out across immensity to the stars. And when he has conquered all the deeps of space and all the mysteries of time, still he will be beginning.
[...]
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This early sci-fi masterwork by Herbert George Wells with music by Arthur Bliss is a powerful piece of film-making. Adapted from Wells' somewhat different work by the author, it presents a look at the human future with the subject of periods of war as versus periods of 'peace'. The structure is that after a contrasted-pair of episodes of normalcy and gathering clouds of war, the script allows the war to happen. Two families, the Cabells and the Passworthys disagree about what may happen; Passworthy takes a hopeful view of civilization's "automatic" progress; Cabell is the thinker, the doubter. Their city Everytown--obviously London-- becomes wrecked by a war featuring tanks, a magnificent war march by Bliss, and the end of civilization. The second portion finds people living in the wreckage of what had been the city under a "Boss", played with bravura by Ralph Richardson, whose woman, lovely Margaretta Scott, is as fascinating a dreamer as he is a concrete-bound dictator type. He is trying to rebuild old WWI airplanes so he can attack a nearby hill tribe to complete his petty kingdom; a young scientist complains about having his work continually interrupted demands for planes--etc.--everlastingly; this is Wells' comment on war versus progress. The survivors are subject to a plague called "The Wandering Sickness" also. Enter a modern flying machine piloted by the Cabell of the first section of the film, now part of Wings Over the World, an International Scientists' Coalition, who are planning to end warfare forever. This flight-suited modernist has fascinating conversations with the Boss and his woman, their attraction being evident; then Boss sends up his aircraft against them, the Scientists come with huge numbers of planes and drop the "Gas of Peace" onto the ruins of Everytown. Only the Boss dies, fighting too hard against the pacifying. The film then shows ore being mined and by slow steps being made into the girders of a magnificent new futuristic city of towers. In section three, a future Cabell argues with a future Passworthy over the morality of human science. Passworthy wonders if they have a right to send men to the Moon; Cabell champions man's right to advancement and the need to expand his horizons. The son of Passworthy and Cabell's daughter, are the astronauts being sent. Theotocopulos, a religious-minded Luddite, makes a fiery speech on a huge screen in the city's Forum and leads an attack on the 'space gun' that is to fire the new rocket free of Earth's gravity. The climax of the plot is the firing of the space gun successfully; the denouement and ending is a speech by Cabell praising worth and science that is universally considered to be the most profound defense of the mind ever penned. "It is all the universe--or nothing!" Cabell tells Passworthy. "Which shall it be?" As Cabell, Raymond Massey gives perhaps his greatest screen performance; he is thoughtful, compassionate, and reasonable, a true scientist. As the rabble-rouser who wants to end the Age of Science, Cedric Hardwicke is perfect and powerful. Edward Chapman playing Passworthy does admirably impersonating the voice of convention and fear. The storyline is logical, frequently beautiful and always interesting. Given the near-extinction of mankind, the idea of a civilization run by rebuilder scientists is rendered plausible and credible to the viewer. This is a triumph for the director, William Cameron Menzies, for Bliss and for all concerned. Listen to the dialogue with someone you love; within its constructed limits, this is a thinking man's drama debating two possible human futures--progress or its reactionary opposite.