Nadia (TV Movie 1984) Poster

(1984 TV Movie)

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8/10
Delightful classic for gymnastics fans
Etoile16 August 2004
Filmed just after Nadia dropped out of international spotlight and defected to the United States, this movie is a real classic for gymnastics fans. It is extremely difficult to find but occasionally turns up on television or eBay.

The film follows Nadia from childhood through the 1980 Olympics, and along the way chronicles her battles with her coaches, depression, suicide, and the lack of a "normal" childhood. There is also some perspective on the changes taking place in the Romanian government, and of course some wonderful gymnastics routines. Highlights include actual footage of Nadia at the Montreal Olympics (when she got the first perfect 10) and also great performances by Marcia Frederick.
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8/10
Talent can be born anywhere
aldoloup7 July 2008
I was 10 years old when I saw this movie for the first time. That was back in those days before cable TV, so the norm was to show each film only once. A reprise might come next year or so. But this little movie broke a record in my country: It was first aired on a Monday evening, and everybody was talking about it at school the next morning. Then we heard that due to viewers' positive phone calls to our local TV channel, they will be airing it again on Wednesday. So everybody saw it again two days later. You have to understand what was going on in the head of us children, addicted to sports as we were at that young age, thinking in the possibility of achieving world sport stardom even if you come from some obscure town somewhere in a little known country. Then, by the end of that week, that I remember as one of my major memories from fifth grade, there was once again a TV spot, almost a minute long, this time just showing a Nadia Comaneci's routine in slow motion, she literally flying, with a triumphant music theme in the background, and the announcer went like this: "This Sunday afternoon, for the first time in the history of Paraguayan TV, and due to overwhelming viewers' request, a movie will be aired for the third time in the same week". Still to these days, 24 years later, no other movie was ever aired again three times in the same week on a free air TV channel. That says it all!
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8/10
She Never Attempted Suicide, It was an accident!!!
Wokkai4 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Nadia Comaneci is without a doubt one of the most influential people I have ever discovered in my life. She became a source of inspiration very early in my life and continues to inspire me to this day. Now to the point.

To all those who think this movie portrays Nadia attempting suicide, watch it again.

It clearly show that she picks up the wrong cup (with her foot, mind you), by mistake, as she had two cups right next to each other on the table, one with bleach, and the other with juice.

Having read her autobiography as well, I can report that this is also well documented in there. So there are no "fake" contents in this movie. I actually found it was a thoroughly accurate account of the life of Nadia up until the after the 1980 Moscow Olympics.

Having cleared that up , this is a brilliant movie, which I have watched time and time again, and it never gets old. All those with even a passing fancy of gymnastics should see it, and those who are fans of Nadia should definitely see it. There are not many movies about gymnastics out there, and apart from "Stick It", this is probably the only other decent one I have ever seen.
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10/10
A inspiring and realistic look at gymnasts and Nadia Comenechi
smile_27018 April 2001
I really enjoyed the movie Nadia. I am 13 years old and have always wanted to be a gymnast. The movie Nadia really showed how hard and how much effort you had to put into gymnastics, and also how Nadia got to the top. It was a very informative and interesting movie
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10/10
Great film
TaylorElwell150515 April 2022
I love this film, I have lost court how many times I have watched it since I was 12 years old. Its a delight to watch and I have learnt it is very true to life. If you are gymnastics fan this film is for you.

My copy is now 36 years old and I still watch it with my 17 year old daughter who was an elite gymnast herself.
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9/10
Download the movie
shobha-aradhya25 September 2012
I had seen this movie when it was released in India first time. I was studying in school. The whole school went to the theater by walk around 5-6 kilometer to watch this movie. Though I do not remember the whole story, its an excellent and inspirational movie. I just remember the climax and a few scene from this movie, Recently one of my friend was talking about our school days and this movie. We felt watching this movie and make our kids also see this movie. We enquired nearby shops but could not get the movie. We requested those persons also to check for the availability but still we could not. Is there any link where I can purchase this movie online or download this movie? Or torrent download?

Regards, Aradhya
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3/10
Has Fake Contents...
kalpal9619 March 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I have never actually seen the movie but by reading the summary already makes me believe there is fake contents.

By stating it tells about her "suicide attempt" I assume they mean when she consumed soap/bleach.

It gives you a wrong idea of Nadia's life.

The "suicide attempt" was fake. It never happened. She did consume soap of some sort but it was by TOTAL accident. She was frustrated with constant supervision from coaches. And she was not paying total attention. She had drinking water in a cup next to the cup of soap or bleach.

Any person has made a mistake of drinking from the wrong cup when two cups are next to each other. Especially if you are not paying attention.

Nadia Comaneci is by far one of THE BEST gymnasts of all time. she did get the first perfect ten. Anyone who has enough lack of respect for her to believe ridiculous tabloid stories should not spend time talking about her or reading about her or making a movie about her life. I do not mean to offend this movie or its creators but Nadia Comaneci deserves much more respect than that. Anyone who has been a gymnast, is a gymnast,has ever been associated with gymnastics, or even read Nadia's autobiography would say the same.

Since I have never actually seen the movie though, my assumption of the suicide attempt they talk about could be wrong. Even though Nadia never did attempt suicide(unless you consider gymnastics a suicide attempt)
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4/10
Little Miss Perfect
JamesHitchcock17 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
This is the only American biopic I know of about an Eastern Bloc sportswoman. During the seventies and eighties women's gymnastics had a higher profile than it does today- indeed, it was one of the few sports whose female participants were better-known than the male ones. This was largely due to the achievements of three remarkable young women at three consecutive Olympiads. The star of Mexico City in 1968 was the Czech Vera Caslavska whose popularity in the West was partly due to her striking platinum-blonde looks and partly to the fact that she was an outspoken supporter of her country's dissident movement at a time when the "Prague Spring" had recently been crushed by Warsaw Pact troops.

The heroine of Munich in 1972 was Olga Korbut, the girl who put the "artistic" back in "artistic gymnastics", showing that her precise, disciplined sport could also be a vehicle for personal expression. Olga's vibrant, lovable personality won so many hearts that it is often forgotten that she was not the Olympic all-around champion in 1972. (That honour went to her team-mate Ludmilla Tourischeva, a precise, disciplined gymnast of the classical Soviet school). Unlike Caslavska, Korbut was not an outspoken dissident, but in the West she was widely seen as a youthful free spirit at odds with the grey conformism of Brezhnev's regime.

And then in 1976 at Montreal there was the Rumanian Nadia Comaneci, the first gymnast ever to score a "perfect ten", even though she was only fourteen at the time. (The scoreboard, unable to cope with more than three digits, recorded her score as "1.00" rather than "10.00"). Although in her gymnastic style and her reserved personality Nadia was closer to Tourischeva than to Korbut, "Little Miss Perfect" became a media sensation overnight. Her popularity increased when, now a beautiful young woman, she won two further gold medals at the 1980 Moscow Olympics, although she lost her all-around title to Elena Davydova, allegedly because of biased scoring by Soviet judges.

Nadia did not take part in the Los Angeles Olympics in 1984 although she was only 22, not old even by gymnastic standards. (Caslavska had been 28 in 1968). She had been forced into retirement by Rumania's Ceausescu dictatorship, which at the height of her fame had milked her victories for all they were worth but which became deeply suspicious of her after her coaches, Béla and Márta Károlyi, defected to the West in 1981. Terrified that his country's most famous citizen might follow suit, Ceausescu banned her from travelling abroad. This suspicion was, of course, well-founded. Nadia had no more love for the Communist system than Caslavska, and did indeed defect in 1989, shortly before the regime's overthrow.

This film might have been better had it been made after 1989, when Nadia's full story was known. As things were, it came out in 1984, and relies heavily on the account given by the Károlyis, who acted as consultants to the film-makers, although it largely avoids political controversy. The Károlyis' many clashes with authority are ascribed to one self-important official in the Rumanian Sport Federation rather than to the Communist system itself. Predictably, Béla becomes the film's hero, a handsome, charismatic figure, a strict disciplinarian when need be but generally a loving father-figure to his girls.

The early part of the film is not bad, largely because Leslie Weiner, the adorable child-actress playing the young Nadia, is excellent. There is one enchanting scene when Nadia first meets her future great friend and team-mate Teodora Ungureanu and the two spontaneously go into a sort of dance. This part of the film was evidently shot in autumn and there are some attractive views of the misty Yugoslavian countryside, here standing in for Rumania.

The film's narrative structure is based around the rise, fall and rise again of a great champion; the climax comes with the 1979 World Championships when Nadia, despite nursing an injured wrist, registers a near-perfect score to help her team to a gold medal. Rather oddly, the 1980 Olympics are omitted altogether, possibly out of a wish to avoid the controversy surrounding the judging. The problem comes with the "fall" part of the story. Nadia is shown attempting suicide, quarrelling bitterly with Teodora and putting on weight due to overeating. The trouble is that all these incidents are either fictitious or based upon misunderstandings; Nadia did indeed put on weight during her mid-teens, but this was due not to gluttony but to the fact that she was growing much faster than most girls of her age. She grew seven inches in height between the ages of fourteen and sixteen; it would have been far more worrying if she had shot up like this without a corresponding increase in weight. It is no wonder that when Nadia eventually saw the film she hated it.

Things are not helped by the casting of the wooden Johann Carlo as the older Nadia. (Despite that masculine-looking forename, Carlo is female). She bears little resemblance to Nadia and at 27 was far too old to portray her between the ages of 14 and 17. This film is largely forgotten today; I was only aware of it because I came across an old video in a charity shop and bought it because of my interest in gymnastics. Nadia deserved better than this. 4/10

Some goofs. We see a Rumanian flag the wrong way round, with the red stripe rather than the blue closest to the flagpole. It's a pity the producers didn't ask Károlyi to advise them on pronunciation as well as gymnastics, because we hear various pronunciations of his surname, but never the correct one. (KAH-ro-yee, with the "l" silent). And "Comaneci" is pronounced "common-etch", not "common-each".
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