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#Jeanette Hain
daisyridleyedits · 4 months
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"It feels amazing to play someone who has been forgotten. We all know there are many women who have been forgotten in history who have done amazing things. So to be able to tell the story of at least one of them is amazing. To play someone who was so determined and resilient a hundred years ago, told from all sides that she couldn't do it and then she did it. And the psychological barrier she broke for other women to think it was possible, too. It's hard to overstate her importance in sport. And the fact that she had the biggest parade ever in New York that's never been seen again. It's just very exciting."
—Daisy Ridley at the UK gala screening of Young Woman and the Sea
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moviemosaics · 27 days
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Young Woman and the Sea
directed by Joachim Rønning, 2024
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fourorfivemovements · 2 months
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Films Watched in 2024: 60. Young Woman and the Sea (2024) - Dir. Joachim Rønning
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movienized-com · 4 months
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Davos 1917
Davos 1917 (Serie 2023) #DominiqueDevenport #DavidKross #JeanetteHain #SunnyiMelles #AnnaSchinz #SvenSchelker Mehr auf:
Serie Jahr: 2023- Genre: Drama / Thriller / Kriegsserie Hauptrollen: Dominique Devenport, David Kross, Jeanette Hain, Sunnyi Melles, Anna Schinz, Sven Schelker, Stipe Erceg, Welket Bungué, Cornelius Obonya, Ruben Brinkman, Max Herbrechter, Hanspeter Müller, Joel Schnabel, Patrick Christopher Ehler, Anna Holmes … Serienbeschreibung: Im Jahr 1917, während des Ersten Weltkriegs, tobt in Europa…
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milliondollarbaby87 · 1 month
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Young Woman and the Sea (2024) Review
The true story of competitive swimmer Trudy Ederle who became the first woman to ever swim across the English Channel in 1926. ⭐️⭐️⭐️ Continue reading Young Woman and the Sea (2024) Review
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Young Woman and the Sea (PG): Celebrating the Extraordinary "Queen of the Sea", Trudy Ederle.
#onemannsmovies #filmreview of "Young Woman And The Sea". #YoungWomanAndTheSea. Daisy Ridley excels in a stirring true life story. 4.5/5.
A One Mann’s Movies review of “Young Woman and the Sea” (2024). I went into this new Daisy Ridley feature with no expectations at all. But it is a truly wonderful film and one that virtually all ages could go and enjoy. Bob the Movie Man Rating: Plot Summary: It’s New York in the early 1920’s. Trudy Ederle (Daisy Ridley) grows up a rebellious girl in a man’s world. In particular, she has a…
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thenerdsofcolor · 4 months
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NOC Review: 'Young Woman and the Sea' Defies the Odds and Inspires
NOC Review: 'Young Woman and the Sea' Defies the Odds and Inspires @DisneyStudios #YoungWomanAndTheSea
I’m not generally a fan of inspirational sports-themed dramas. I know Disney has been making bank off them since Remember the Titans way back in 2000 (back before star Ryan Gosling was a household name, by the way). But as someone who isn’t an athlete or a sports fan, I generally just don’t see these movies. But I’m very glad I saw Young Woman and the Sea. And I’m very glad it’s getting a…
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webanglikethat · 21 days
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On Cain and Lane, part two.
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†˚₊‧─────────‧₊˚†˚₊‧──────────‧₊˚†˚₊‧
on Lane and Cain,
for my lovely @taemcains
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Fanart by @sannaapsd on Telegram // Noah Kahan – Sticks Season // Faye Webster – A Dream With A Baseball // Sculpture 'Cathedral' by Auguste Rodin // Quote by Anonymous // Headless John The Baptist Hitchhiking, C.T. Salazar // Markus Zusak – The Book Thief // Fanart by MNLV on Telegram // Your Hands by Pablo Neruda // Madeline Miller – The Song of Achilles // I Would Let My Hands Bleed For You on Pinterest // Fanart by greshnyekrysi on Telegram // Terese Marie Mailhot – Heart Berries: A Memoir // Jeanette Winterson – Written on the Body // 13 October (1819): John Keats to Fanny Brawne // Fanart by @gehennacr | Telegram // Tujh Mein Rab Dikhta Hain – Roopkumar Rathod translated by this website
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elisacifuentes · 9 months
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"Nur eines Tages, da hat mich die kleine Hedwig erwischt, wie ich einen jungen Offizier bestohlen habe, der gerade in den Geheimdienst eingetreten war. Er hat mein Talent gesehen. Er hat mir vorgeschlagen, es fürs Vaterland zu nutzen. Er hat mir meine höhere Ausbildung ermöglicht und mir einen Weg gezeigt, wie ich für meine Familie sorgen konnte. Es gab nur eine Bedingung: Ich durfte sie nie wiedersehen. Barbara kam bei einem Unfall ums Leben und liegt in Essen begraben."
Jeanette Hain als Ilse von Hausner in Davos 1917 (2023)
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purpleplaid17 · 2 months
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Jess watches Final Results - Day 301 [x]
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My Lady Jane wins with 25 of 30 votes!
If Emily Bader continues to smile everytime she breaks away from kissing Guilford I fear that I, like King Edward, won't survive the season.
I voted for YWATS because I hate the title but enjoyed the film. Daisy looking all cute with her bisexual bob but it was her mother, played by Jeanette Hain, who I felt most drawn to. Fighting for her daughters to have the freedoms she could only dream of. Also, from the next room my mum heard Kim Bodnia laugh and shouted in "Is he from Killing Eve?" lmaooo.
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hussein-omar · 1 year
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IMDb: : The Reader
IMDb: : The Reader
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0976051/
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timetravelauthor · 19 days
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Review: Young Woman and Sea
As I posted in May, I am always in a history mood. As a reader and a TV viewer, I go out of my way to find a good story set in the past.
So it was a real treat to find Young Woman and the Sea, a biographical sports film currently streaming on Disney Plus. Set mostly in New York and France in the 1920s, the movie chronicles the early life of Gertrude Ederle, the first woman to swim across the English Channel.
in the film, Ederle, the daugher of a German American butcher, overcomes sickness, poverty, and soul-crushing misogyny and sexism to win Olympic medals, set world records, and finally cross the Channel, which she did on August 6, 1926. She also sets an example that inspired young women and swimmers generally for decades.
I found the movie even more compelling than The Boys in the Boat, a similar work featuring young American athletes overcoming the odds in the interwar years. Despite the cruelty she faces, Ederle never gives up and never loses her humanity. She serves as a role model for all.
Though Young Woman, based on the 2009 book by Glenn Stout, takes a few liberties with timelines, it offers a mostly accurate depiction of events. Daisy Ridley stars as Ederle, while Jeanette Hain and Tilda Cobham-Hervey shine as the swimmer's mother and sister.
I would recommend the film to anyone, particularly young women and athletes who like an inspiring true story. Rating 4.5/5.
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wahwealth · 3 months
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Richard Chamberlain | F. Scott Fitzgerald and The Last of the Belles
F. Scott Fitzgerald and 'The Last of the Belles' is a 1974 American made-for-television biographical romance drama film directed by George Schaefer and starring Susan Sarandon, Blythe Danner and Richard Chamberlain. The film, which is known as The Last of the Belles in Australia, was written by James Costigan based on F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1935 short story "The Last of the Belles". Cast Richard Chamberlain as F. Scott Fitzgerald Blythe Danner as Zelda Fitzgerald Susan Sarandon as Ailie Calhoun David Huffman as Andy McKenna Ernest Thompson as Earl Shoen Richard Hatch as Bill Knowles James Naughton as Captain John Haines Albert Stratton as John Biggs Alex Sheafe as Philippe Sasha von Scherler as Jeanette Thomas A. Stewart as Horace Canby Norman Barrs as Waiter Earl Sydnor as Oliver Brooke Adams as Kitty Preston Cynthia Woll as Mary Bly Harwood Tom Fitzsimmons as Don Cameron Never miss a video. Join the channel so that Mr. P can notify you when new videos are uploaded: https://www.youtube.com/@nrpsmovieclassics
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movienized-com · 7 months
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Luden: Könige Der Reeperbahn
Luden: Könige Der Reeperbahn (Serie 2023) #AaronHilmer #JeanetteHain #HenningFlusloh #LenaUrzendowsky #KarstenAntonioMielke #StefanKonarske Mehr auf:
Serie Jahr: 2023- Genre: Drama Hauptrollen: Aaron Hilmer, Jeanette Hain, Henning Flüsloh, Lena Urzendowsky, Karsten Antonio Mielke, Stefan Konarske, Stephan Kampwirth, Ada Philine Stappenbeck, Nicki von Tempelhoff, Tim Wilde, Burak Yigit, Lukas Watzl, Ulrich Bähnk, Imke Büchel, Lara Feith … Serienbeschreibung: In den 1980er Jahren wird die Reeperbahn in Hamburg zu einer unbändigen Partymeile,…
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progotechodaily · 4 months
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Review "Young Woman and the Sea" : Ridley Stuns and Earns Your Tears in This Beautifully Classical Movie
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Young Woman and The Sea a defiantly big-screen, consistently enthralling biopic that both earns one’s genuine tears, and inspires everyone of all ages to dream a little bigger, go a little further.
“They don’t make ‘em like this anymore,” we wistfully say these days when praising skillful mainstream movies, ones that remind us of a past when Hollywood used to stir us more regularly through moving original films. There is truth in that overused nostalgic acclaim, even though few movies actually deserve it as much as Joachim Rønning’s (“Kon-Tiki”) classically glorious “
For the film’s wondrous rebel Trudy Ederle (a graceful, commanding Daisy Ridley), who became the first woman to swim across the treacherous 21-mile English Channel in 1926, that big dream at first wasn’t even becoming a legitimate athlete, let alone a history-making pioneer. Born to German immigrant parents of modest means in the Coney Island of 1905, Trudy just wanted to swim, whichever way she would be permitted. But respectable girls weren’t really supposed to play around and waste time in splashy pools, and the young Trudy — beautifully portrayed by Olive Abercrombie in a brief but memorable performance — wasn’t allowed in community pools anyway, having barely survived a highly contagious case of measles.
Affectionately adapted from Glenn Stout’s book “Young Woman and the Sea: How Trudy Ederle Conquered the English Channel and Inspired the World” by Jeff Nathanson (of “Catch Me If You Can” and Barry Jenkins’ upcoming “Mufasa”), Rønning’s rousing film gives sufficient breathing room to Trudy’s childhood years, establishing her world and closest kin with exquisite care: her hardworking, headstrong mother Gertrude (Jeanette Hain) who won’t let Trudy give up on her ocean-bound dreams, her stubborn but affectionate father Henry (Kim Bodbia) who works as a proud butcher, her brother Henry Jr., and most importantly, her doting sister Margaret, a fellow swimmer played enchantingly by Tilda Cobham-Hervey in Margaret’s older years.
The two sisters are joined at the hip, even though Margaret is the only swimmer of the family at first. Eager to join her sister’s ranks and refusing to let her illness define her, Trudy sings to her dad day and night to annoy him, and force him into acceptance that Trudy must swim no matter what, even if that means severe hearing loss in the long run as the doctors fear. Well, this critic found Trudy’s tireless off-key chanting adorable, but the trick designed to irritate Henry works all the same, and before we know it, he decides to teach Trudy how to conquer the ocean, just to keep her quiet.
It can’t be overstated how delightfully these scenes play, bested only by the ones that follow Trudy in her teenage years, with the young woman still fighting for a spot in the community pool. Her mother comes to the rescue and makes a deal with the no-nonsense coach Charlotte Epstein (Sian Clifford) — Trudy would feed the boiler by the indoor pool, and practice after hours. Slowly but surely, she proves herself to her coach, surpassing the rest of the girls while Margaret’s life settles into a more common reality of the era: a marriage arranged by parents. But Trudy’s star rises to no end. After an efficiently constructed montage of her wins and a brilliant “You Go Girl!” sequence that would be too cruel to spoil, she finally finds herself in the big leagues: first, at the Paris Olympics and then, facing her first attempt to swim across the channel. But these avenues add up to no more than a pair of false starts, opportunities derailed by toxic men who just can’t let women compete and win as equals.
Women have always had it much harder, and this fact is a well-depicted, often blistering thread that runs through “Young Woman and the Sea.” From the headlines of scandalized newspapers that critique women’s skin-baring swimsuits to the condescending remarks Trudy frequently fields, several tidbits in the story remind the viewer that it isn’t only the dangerous currents and waves that Trudy is swimming against. Then again, the film sometimes spells things out too much, self-consciously applying today’s temperaments to the past. In one scene, for instance, an adorable, wide-eyed little girl approaches Trudy and thankfully gushes, “Because of you, they let me swim.” This moment feels jarringly redundant given women paving the way for future generations is already at the heart and soul of the entire film, one that abundantly celebrates the spirit of sisterhood.
“Young Woman and the Sea” searingly , culminating in a final stretch during which Trudy swims through the dangerous shallows alone and in the dark. It’s no spoiler to say that she will make it that’s history. But the real surprise here is the punch that Rønning manages to pack when the inevitable happens, an emotional feat that last year’s “Nyad” sorely lacked. In that, Trudy’s triumph followed eagerly around the world, including by her mom and brother in NYC feels no less magnificent than that famous moment in “Apollo 13” when Odyssey finally reconnects with Houston.
Throughout Rønning’s sophisticated film and alongside Ridley’s stunning performance a career highlight for her we all hold our collective breath and swim with Trudy. Talk about the kind of film they hardly ever make anymore.
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elisacifuentes · 8 months
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Jeanette Hain als Jutta in Luden: Könige der Reeperbahn
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