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  1. Passion Fish. 1992 · 2 hr 16 min. R. Drama · Independent. After a terrible accident leaves her wheelchair bound, a former soap opera star is looked after by a nurse who has her own share of troubles. Subtitles: English. Starring: Mary McDonnell Alfre Woodard Angela Bassett. Directed by: John Sayles. After a terrible accident leaves her ...

  2. Passion Fish. Passion Fish és una pel·lícula estatunidenca escrita i dirigida per John Sayles, estrenada el 1992. La van protagonitzar Mary McDonnell, Alfre Woodard, Vondie Curtis-Hall, David Strathairn i Leo Burmester . Explica la història d'una estrella de telenovel·la, paralítica després d'haver estat colpejada per un taxi, i que es ...

  3. May-Alice Culhane (Mary McDonnell), a soap opera actress, is injured in a Manhattan street accident which leaves her paralyzed from the waist down. Bitter and self-pitying, she returns to her long-empty Louisiana home. There she spends her days and nights lying on a couch, watching TV and drinking wine. She runs through several live-in nurses ...

  4. 11 de dic. de 1992 · I have watched Passion Fish many times and will certainly watch it again. It is one of those movies that seem practically perfect to me, from the lead performances of the ensemble cast down to the lesser characters, such as the numerous people who visit May_Alice and Chantelle during the course of the film.

  5. Crítica Passion Fish (1992) Superación . May-Alice es una actriz que se queda paralítica en un accidente de coche. Tras el suceso decide regresar a Louisiana, donde creció, pero su mal caracter hará insufrible la convivencia con las enferrmeras que la cuidan.

  6. Passion Fish is no different, it's very low-key, though there's still a great deal to be found that can be admired by many - from the performances of Mary McDonnell and Alfre Woodard to the ways Sayles allows their interactions to blossom into something more.

  7. The genesis for Passion Fish (1992) was director/writer John Sayles’ experience as an orderly in various hospitals and nursing homes in the early 1970s. There, he saw the power dynamic between nurses and caregivers and their patients. Years later, when Sayles had injured his back and was waiting in a long line for his X-rays, he once again saw caregivers interacting with their often grumpy ...