The Glass Castle

2017 • 126 minutos
4.2
287 opiniones
52%
Tomatometer
PG-13
Calificación
Apto
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Chronicling the adventures of an eccentric, resilient, tight-knit family, THE GLASS CASTLE is a remarkable story of unconditional love. Oscar® winner Brie Larson brings Jeannette Walls’s best-selling memoir to life as a young woman who, influenced by the joyfully wild nature of her deeply dysfunctional father (Woody Harrelson), found the fiery determination to carve out a successful life on her own terms.
Clasificación
PG-13

Calificaciones y opiniones

4.2
287 opiniones
Evanthe Lindenau
22 de noviembre de 2017
But for the superb acting this film gets a D from me for many reasons. The true grit was left out of the film and for the wrong reasons. Hollywood always tries to make "the hard life" seem like it is all polished and neatly tied up with a bow. And to top it off this film attempts to glorify living with a drunk who needed serious therapy for childhood trauma. I don't care how you slice it the "nice" moments will NEVER make up for the drunk rants, the abuse, either verbal or physical. It all leaves scars and some so deep in the soul that it ruins you for your own happiness. This film goes as far as saying, "it's ok because he was nice sometimes"! That is so incredulous and what is wrong with America today.... we gloss over the parts we don't want to look at and we hold up the shinny part of the apple for everyone to see while the dark side rots away in our hands. Spreading it's mold to every other apple around it until the whole fruit bowl is a quagmire or den of debauchery with politicians running amuck and grabbing people wherever they please and others looking on and saying, "well, I never saw him do anything wrong"! WAKE UP, IT'S ALL WRONG! And I am sickened by it!
Esta opinión les resultó útil a 42 personas
Sean Ian
25 de noviembre de 2017
Some movies can be accused of glamorizing poverty or abuse. This movie takes verbal, physical, sexual, emotional and psychological abuse and packages it like a neatly decorated dessert at Starbucks. The protagonist's attempts at moving on with her life are treated as frivolous denials of her true identity. Rather than having anything insightful to say about the complicated relationship one shares with their parents following an abusive childhood, this movie pivots so abruptly to see the woman literally run back into the toxic, cultlike relationship she and her family once shared. It does this with all the sentimentality of a Hallmark movie, and the combination of the two is is jarring and feels like being slapped across the face before your assailant gives you a kiss to make it all better.
Esta opinión les resultó útil a 37 personas
Nabii
22 de julio de 2021
Every movie falls short of a book, because books have the power to describe details that don't translate cleanly to the screen. But even a book like "The Glass Castle" stands to benefit from a film adaptation that can present Walls' life as more of a panorama. Woody Harrelson's performance in this film is utterly sublime, transcending the screen and burrowing into the viewer's core. Brie Larson, too, is transcendent, etching the pain of Walls' past into every inch of her excellent showing. 5/5!