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The Lovely Bones [DVD] (2009) by Mark Wahlberg
Formato: DVD
28,07€28,07€
Otras opciones en DVD | Edición | Discos | Precio Amazon | Nuevo desde | Usado desde |
DVD
25 agosto 2010 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | 1 | — | 7,99 € |
DVD
19 septiembre 2012 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | Edición definitiva | 1 | — | 8,94 € |
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Detalles del producto
- Dimensiones del paquete : 19,2 x 13,5 x 1,6 cm; 80 gramos
- ASIN : B01F462P0C
- Opiniones de los clientes:
Opiniones de clientes
4,7 de 5 estrellas
4,7 de 5
2.558 valoraciones globales
Cómo funcionan las opiniones y las valoraciones de los clientes
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Reseñas más importantes
Principales reseñas de España
Ha surgido un problema al filtrar las opiniones justo en este momento. Vuelva a intentarlo en otro momento.
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 11 de marzo de 2022
Un picó pobre, l'as actuacions de Raquel Weitz y s marido , mejor la actuacion de Saoirce Ronan
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 15 de mayo de 2015
Como madre de ninas adolescentes, la pelicula me ha angustiado por lo muy plausible que es la historia. Contada desde la perspectiva de un fantasma (la joven victima de un asesino en serie) es una historia inquietante, pero que le deja a uno clavada a la pantalla. Y si no le di 5 estrellas a la pelicula es porque no me gusto el final, pero no puedo explicar mas porque fastidiaria la historia. Merece la pena verse.
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 14 de noviembre de 2013
Una película excelente y altamente recomendable, que demuestra que Peter Jackson sabe manejar historias de corte intimistas tan bien como las superproducciones. La película oscila de forma cautivadora entre el relato poético, la intriga y el drama familiar con unos efectos especiales muy adecuadamente utilizados y unos actores muy convincentes, especialmente Stanley Tucci en un papel realmente incómodo. Como han apuntado anteriormente, la edición de este DVD es pobre; se habría agradecido la inclusión de algún extra. Pero por ese precio...
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 3 de septiembre de 2015
Esta pelicula quizás , siendo de suspense, thiller y terror, deja un espacio para la reflexsión ,en mi opinión esta tan bién cuidada en sus dialogos , no cae en el mal gusto, es de esas peliculas que trata temas para adultos ,pero que , los niños deberian ver acompañados de sus padres....
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 21 de marzo de 2018
Una película emotiva y original que consigue captar tu atención con un inesperado final, con imágenes muy bonitas del cielo.
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 19 de marzo de 2019
La presentación muy original y la película pues genial.
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 3 de junio de 2015
Un lujo visual que merece la pena verlo en un buen LCD o proyector. Historia preciosa y dura al mismo tiempo. Extras bastante completos para el tipo de película del que hablamos.
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 21 de octubre de 2019
Excelente!
Reseñas más importantes de otros países

Dalton McTeague
1,0 de 5 estrellas
Nonsense, Sorry!
Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 26 de abril de 2022
I bought the film for Saoirse Ronan and Mark Wahlberg and was disappointed. Pretty pictures do not make a story. The film looks like a throwaway promotion film for Ronan. You get bits and pieces of a story inserted into a nonsensical, unbelievable dream dreamscape of dead girl Ronan looking down from Heaven upon her family. If there is a Heaven it's not like LSD version you get in the movie. The movie is a collage expressionism, surrealism, magic realism that you have to be high to enjoy maybe. Might be a bad trip. I expected Puff the Magic Dragon and the monkeys from the Wizard of Oz to appear. And if you expect Mark to deal with the bad guy, forget it. Mark is a wimp in this story. And I really don't like the B.S. of a girl being tortured and murdered but that's okay because she lives happily ever after in Heaven. And thus the parents should just get over her death and move on with their lives. Sorry, in the real world it doesn't work that way. Parents never get over the loss of a child. The story is magic wishful thinking. And there is no payback. If you want a bad guy put down watch Taken, The Equalizer, The Brave One, or Death Wish. You won't get that satisfaction from this movie if you can finish it. Dizzy from the film's cinematic nuttiness I skipped through the story wanting to see how it ended. A waste of time.

J. McDonald 🏴
4,0 de 5 estrellas
The Lovely Bones.
Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 31 de agosto de 2017
Adapting Alice Sebold`s rather complex fantasy novel for the big screen can't have been an easy task and there are plenty of reviewers on this page critical of how its been done.
Susie is the 14 year-old victim of a serial killer and the film shows her observing from an indeterminate state of limbo (neither heaven or the real world) how her family copes in the aftermath of her death.
I think Peter Jackson has done rather well, all things considered; the story is a melancholic one and even the book isn't without plot flaws and a certain lack of resolution. The film has the advantage of making visual instantly what the novel takes long passages to describe and the relationship between Susie and Ruth is underplayed (and I think better handled) in the film version. Some have accused it of sentimentality, but really, how can you tell a story of this kind without feeling the emotions it entails?
Saoirse Ronan as Susie gives a really accomplished central performance for such a young actor and Susan Sarandon as Grandma Lynn is in a class of her own. There is fine support from the rest of the cast and Stanley Tucci portrays George Harvey with a chilling authenticity.
Beautifully filmed - even aside from the special effects - it is, underneath, a quite harrowing story that needs the balancing weights of pathos and emotion to make it work. I've watched it some 3 times since its release and feel I can better assess it now and in comparison to the novel which I read before this film came out.
A Flawed film, perhaps, but if you give it a fair chance it will stay with you and there is much to appreciate about this tragic but moving story.
The DVD release has nothing in the way of extras; there are subtitles, but you may have to adjust your screen settings in order to see them fully.
Susie is the 14 year-old victim of a serial killer and the film shows her observing from an indeterminate state of limbo (neither heaven or the real world) how her family copes in the aftermath of her death.
I think Peter Jackson has done rather well, all things considered; the story is a melancholic one and even the book isn't without plot flaws and a certain lack of resolution. The film has the advantage of making visual instantly what the novel takes long passages to describe and the relationship between Susie and Ruth is underplayed (and I think better handled) in the film version. Some have accused it of sentimentality, but really, how can you tell a story of this kind without feeling the emotions it entails?
Saoirse Ronan as Susie gives a really accomplished central performance for such a young actor and Susan Sarandon as Grandma Lynn is in a class of her own. There is fine support from the rest of the cast and Stanley Tucci portrays George Harvey with a chilling authenticity.
Beautifully filmed - even aside from the special effects - it is, underneath, a quite harrowing story that needs the balancing weights of pathos and emotion to make it work. I've watched it some 3 times since its release and feel I can better assess it now and in comparison to the novel which I read before this film came out.
A Flawed film, perhaps, but if you give it a fair chance it will stay with you and there is much to appreciate about this tragic but moving story.
The DVD release has nothing in the way of extras; there are subtitles, but you may have to adjust your screen settings in order to see them fully.

Edgar R Wagner
4,0 de 5 estrellas
The lovely bones starring Mark Wahlberg and Saoirse Ronan
Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 15 de noviembre de 2021
A strange film, with a far-fetched, often unpleasant, story line, saved, I think, by its extraordinarily top flight acting cast.
A 1960's - early 1970's murderer of a number of pre-adult girls of different ages called Mr Harvey is played by Stanley Tucci. There is a hint that Mr Harvey is also a sex offender, but, fortunately, there is no sex or nudity in this film, and we never get to see the gruesome murders actually carried out before our eyes on screen.
The Salmon family comprises Mr Salmon played by Mark Wahlberg, Mrs Salmon played by Rachel Weisz, the mother of Mrs Salmon, referred to as "your mother" by Mark Wahlberg, and a very formal "Grandmother" by the Salmon children, is played by Susan Sarandon, and the three Salmon children, two daughters and a son, include the murdered girl called Susan / Suzie Salmon played by Saoirse Ronan.
The main credits do not mention the younger sister, Lindsay Salmon, and you really have to look hard to find out that she is called Rose McIver in real life, which is strange in itself because she has an important, albeit utterly far-fetched, role in that she finds the evidence that proves that Mr Harvey is the abductor and murderer of her slightly older sister, Suzie. She is also scene stealingly beautiful and attractive. All credit has to go to the film director, Peter Jackson, and the film crew in, arguably, getting it "just right" when filming Lindsay Salmon / Rose McIver, because any more of her and the film would be entirely about her just on her looks and physical attractiveness alone, given that she is also a first class actress in her own right. Saoirse Ronan is excellent throughout, but could easily have found herself, (and, it has to be said, the other women in the film), completely eclipsed by Rose McIver if Peter Jackson and the film crew had spent even a little bit more time and attention than they did on Linsay Salmon / Rose McIver.
In this film the murdered Susan Salmon watches over her family and through will-power directs them, in particular her Dad, but also her younger sister Lindsay, towards the murderer, who, although not caught by the authorities, meets a satisfyingly grisly end. In real life, I would contend, it would not be the deceased who watches over the family, directing them, and, it has to be said, the authorities, particularly in a functioning modern state, in the right direction, but an Angel.
Mr Harvey is a solitary figure, but in real life the kind of bloke who does this sort of thing almost always has a woman, along the lines of Fred and Rosemary West in the UK.
In short, a very good film, marred, I thought, by modern stereo-typing and political correctness, (on all fronts ... the new age-type religion that has the deceased Suzie Salmon hanging about directing the living, the intrepid / extra-ordinarily brave teenage girl as played by Lindsay / Rose McIver when getting the evidence from Mr Harvey's house, the creepy middle-aged bloke who lives on his own, abducting, sexually abusing, and murdering young girls, the central Asian looking girl murdered by Mr Harvey in what was obviously very white parts of 1960's United States who pals up with Suzie in that new age inbetween religious state that comes between dying here and going to heaven ...), with only the strength of the acting cast saving an often truly far-fetched, unpleasant, storyline from total oblivion.
A 1960's - early 1970's murderer of a number of pre-adult girls of different ages called Mr Harvey is played by Stanley Tucci. There is a hint that Mr Harvey is also a sex offender, but, fortunately, there is no sex or nudity in this film, and we never get to see the gruesome murders actually carried out before our eyes on screen.
The Salmon family comprises Mr Salmon played by Mark Wahlberg, Mrs Salmon played by Rachel Weisz, the mother of Mrs Salmon, referred to as "your mother" by Mark Wahlberg, and a very formal "Grandmother" by the Salmon children, is played by Susan Sarandon, and the three Salmon children, two daughters and a son, include the murdered girl called Susan / Suzie Salmon played by Saoirse Ronan.
The main credits do not mention the younger sister, Lindsay Salmon, and you really have to look hard to find out that she is called Rose McIver in real life, which is strange in itself because she has an important, albeit utterly far-fetched, role in that she finds the evidence that proves that Mr Harvey is the abductor and murderer of her slightly older sister, Suzie. She is also scene stealingly beautiful and attractive. All credit has to go to the film director, Peter Jackson, and the film crew in, arguably, getting it "just right" when filming Lindsay Salmon / Rose McIver, because any more of her and the film would be entirely about her just on her looks and physical attractiveness alone, given that she is also a first class actress in her own right. Saoirse Ronan is excellent throughout, but could easily have found herself, (and, it has to be said, the other women in the film), completely eclipsed by Rose McIver if Peter Jackson and the film crew had spent even a little bit more time and attention than they did on Linsay Salmon / Rose McIver.
In this film the murdered Susan Salmon watches over her family and through will-power directs them, in particular her Dad, but also her younger sister Lindsay, towards the murderer, who, although not caught by the authorities, meets a satisfyingly grisly end. In real life, I would contend, it would not be the deceased who watches over the family, directing them, and, it has to be said, the authorities, particularly in a functioning modern state, in the right direction, but an Angel.
Mr Harvey is a solitary figure, but in real life the kind of bloke who does this sort of thing almost always has a woman, along the lines of Fred and Rosemary West in the UK.
In short, a very good film, marred, I thought, by modern stereo-typing and political correctness, (on all fronts ... the new age-type religion that has the deceased Suzie Salmon hanging about directing the living, the intrepid / extra-ordinarily brave teenage girl as played by Lindsay / Rose McIver when getting the evidence from Mr Harvey's house, the creepy middle-aged bloke who lives on his own, abducting, sexually abusing, and murdering young girls, the central Asian looking girl murdered by Mr Harvey in what was obviously very white parts of 1960's United States who pals up with Suzie in that new age inbetween religious state that comes between dying here and going to heaven ...), with only the strength of the acting cast saving an often truly far-fetched, unpleasant, storyline from total oblivion.

rotay44
5,0 de 5 estrellas
Unusual murder story
Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 30 de octubre de 2022
This is no "whodunnit" as we know that all along. What makes this film outstanding is that we follow the victim, played by the wonderful Saoirse Ronan, through her journey into the afterlife. She is pulled back to her family to resolve the mystery of her disappearance. Can't give any more without giving away the plot. To say this is a most unusual murder thriller is an understatement. Beautifully filmed and some wonderful acting, and some touching moments.

Chocolate Addict
5,0 de 5 estrellas
Simply superb
Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 7 de octubre de 2018
I read the book ‘Lovely Bones’ more than a decade ago, and the moving story has stayed in my memory ever since. I usually avoid movies based on my favourite books as they never stick to the plot enough, and the actors never usually match the characters in my imagination, so I never went to see this movie at the cinema. But when I came across the cheap DVD on Amazon I couldn’t resist giving it a go. To my pleasant surprise, the film is genuinely amazing. I watched it with my 11 year old daughter and her Dad, and they were both incredibly moved by the determination of a father to not allow his daughter’s killer to escape. The film makers literally brought the book to life. If this movie didn’t earn an Oscar, it certainly deserved one.