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Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984)
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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writers:
Release Date:
14 December 1984 (USA)
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Tagline:
George Orwell's Terrifying Vision Comes To The Screen. more
Plot:
George Orwell's novel of a totalitarian future society in which a man whose daily work is rewriting history tries to rebel by falling in love. full summary | full synopsis
Plot Keywords:
Future
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1984
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Propaganda
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Big Brother
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Sex
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Awards:
Nominated for BAFTA Film Award.
Another 6 wins
&
1 nomination
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User Comments:
Comments on Comments
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Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| John Hurt | ... | Winston Smith | |
| Richard Burton | ... | O'Brien | |
| Suzanna Hamilton | ... | Julia | |
| Cyril Cusack | ... | Charrington | |
| Gregor Fisher | ... | Parsons | |
| James Walker | ... | Syme | |
| Andrew Wilde | ... | Tillotson | |
| David Trevena | ... | Tillotson's Friend | |
| David Cann | ... | Martin | |
| Anthony Benson | ... | Jones | |
| Peter Frye | ... | Rutherford | |
| Roger Lloyd-Pack | ... | Waiter (as Roger Lloyd Pack) | |
| Rupert Baderman | ... | Winston as a Boy | |
| Corinna Seddon | ... | Winston's Mother | |
| Martha Parsey | ... | Winston's Sister |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
1984 (UK) (alternative spelling)
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Parents Guide:
Runtime:
113 min
Country:
Language:
Color:
Color (Eastmancolor)
Aspect Ratio:
1.66 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:
Iceland:16 |
Canada:R (Manitoba/Nova Scotia/Ontario) |
Argentina:16 |
Australia:M |
Finland:K-16 |
Netherlands:12 |
Norway:18 (1984) |
Sweden:15 |
UK:15 |
USA:R |
West Germany:16 (f) |
Canada:13+ (Quebec)
Filming Locations:
Company:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Alexandra Palace, London, was built in 1873 as a "pleasure palace of the people" and named after the then-Princess of Wales. It was destroyed by fire a fortnight after opening. The present building was built in 1875 and lasted a bit longer. It was gutted by fire in 1980 and the roofless shell provided the structure for the rallies in Victory Square.
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Goofs:
Continuity: When Winston and Julia are together in the room upstairs for the second time, Julia asks Winston what time the clock says. He responds that it is 21 hours, or 9pm. When Julia leaves and Winston picks up the glass ball off the table, the clock behind it says 2:30.
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Quotes:
[first lines]
Big Brother: [voiceover] This is our land. A land of peace and of plenty. A land of harmony and hope. This is our land. Oceania. These are our people. The workers, the strivers, the builders. These are our people. The builders of our world, struggling, fighting, bleeding, dying. On the streets of our cities and on the far-flung battlefields. Fighting against the mutilation of our hopes and dreams. Who are they?
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Big Brother: [voiceover] This is our land. A land of peace and of plenty. A land of harmony and hope. This is our land. Oceania. These are our people. The workers, the strivers, the builders. These are our people. The builders of our world, struggling, fighting, bleeding, dying. On the streets of our cities and on the far-flung battlefields. Fighting against the mutilation of our hopes and dreams. Who are they?
more
Movie Connections:
Referenced in Fight Club (1999)
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Soundtrack:
Sex Crime
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FAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (127 total)
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I really have only one thing to comment on. Most of the other reviewers have stated just about everything about this wonderfully gritty, dark, foreboding movie that still remains an eerie parallel to our lives today, especially in the last 2 years...
But I'm confused by the number of people who have commented that claim to be put off by "the gratuitous nudity" by the two characters of Winston and Julia. Given the fact that everything in this society--waking up, food, habits, desires, work, workers, even the underwear and overalls--is so uniform, has it occurred to viewers that being nude was the only link to identity that these characters had? Everything in their world depends, thrives on sameness. Without clothes, everyone is unique. The two lovers were already in dire conditions by committing the sin of feeling for another human being, let alone carnally but in the heart. And they had to deceive and pretend and go through the motions of the dutiful cogs in the Big Brother wheel. But their only shared peace and comfort was their sacred time alone, and in love. They had finally found their own identities through loving each other. Their nudity was merely symbolic of that. In that sense, their union and expressions of that union only becomes more fragile, beautiful and honest, in such a heartless, cold, indifferent world.
May that be truly said of us, and all of us...
OK, that out of the way...one of the most gritty, realistic, honest translations ever to grace the screen. Wouldn't have changed a thing. Highly, highly recommended, along with the original 1955 version of "Animal Farm". Perfect double-feature for a somber, thoughtful evening's viewing.