

Cielo d'ottobre
Diretto da Joe JohnstonOttobre 1957, Coalwood, cittadina mineraria del West Virginia. Il cielo notturno è solcato dalla scia luminosa dello Sputnik, il primo satellite, lanciato dai Sovietici, in orbita attorno alla Terra. Per il diciassettenne Homer H. Hickam jr. è come una folgorazione: costruire razzi costituirà il passaporto per sfuggire al destino che lo vuole minatore, come tutti a Coalwood. Il ragazzo non si lascerà bloccare né dall'iniziale ostilità del padre, autoritario sovrintendente della miniera, né dai primi insuccessi; con l'aiuto di 3 coetanei e col sostegno della sua professoressa di Chimica e Fisica, parteciperà al concorso scientifico indetto per tutte le scuole della nazione; e vincerà il primo premio anche grazie al padre, che gli procurò i pezzi che gli erano stati rubati durante il concorso. Il suo ultimo razzo lo dedicò alla professoressa Riley, morta di morbo di Hodgkin.
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Cielo d'ottobre Ratings e Recensioni
- Toronto12217 febbraio 2025True story that's well told, sad at times, and at other times makes you smile with joy. A feel good movie for everyone.
- mickerdoo30 ottobre 2025There should be more like this. Incredible story. Deeply staisfying father son dynamic. Perfect casting.
- carmen.s2927 ottobre 2025Perfect movie to watch in October. Very solid story line, that is based on a true story. The movie does a very good job of capturing the essence of the era the plot takes place in. The movie is easy to follow as it runs at a steady pace, with good character development and acting.
- vangh121 settembre 2025As a big Jake Gyllenhaal fan, I was excited to watch his first lead role and a movie that's been on my Watchlist for a long time! I'm really curious what the Jake of today thinks of this role. I consider him one of the top tier actors working today, and I'm not sure I would have been able to predict that based on this performance. It's good, he even nails the big emotional moments in a believable way that older performers sometimes miss, but nonetheless taken as a whole I don't think I would have seen this and thought, "This guy is absolutely going places, he's going to be a heavyweight for decades to come!" The future is hard to predict man. As for the movie, it definitely prefers to play its beats for emotional impact or thematic resonance, rather than realism, but I think there's just enough depth to the characters and the world that they get away with it. The moment that stood out the most to me was Homer, awaiting the elevator's descent into his first shift in the coal mine looking skyward, and at that exact moment and in that exact spot Sputnik goes by. We're shown through the start of the film that Homer isn't especially adept or interested in anything. He's rotten at football, he's not an especially strong student, he has no interest in the coal veins that make up the lifeblood of the town. But then... Sputnik. A flash of inspiration. A genuine passion. That is, until harsh reality intercedes and he's forced to take up work in the mine to support the family, and so as he gazes up at Sputnik one last time, the elevator pulls him down into the darkness exactly where he swore he would never be and where he's blind to the part of the world that actually makes his life feel worth living. It's the type of moment that really strains credulity. For Sputnik to be right in that spot at that moment seems unlikely. But it's such a strong thematic image that you forgive it, because damn it who hasn't made those soul crushing compromises for real world considerations, and why couldn't it go over right then and there? Why not? I think the movie gets away with moments like that because it's not all just big melodramatic swings. At first blush it feels like that may be the case, but I think the movie does just enough to lay a solid groundwork to build on. I REALLY appreciated the lengths the movie went to, to show just how difficult success and the scientific process is. It takes countless iterations, failure after failure, a spirit unabated by a daily 8 mile hike and having to build not only the rockets from scratch again and again, but building the buildings with no experience and "borrowed" materials, it takes help from people with little reason to help you, it takes ignoring the doubters and the bullies and a powerful system made to confine you within it. It's fucking HARD to progress. It's fucking HARD to breakout and succeed. And this movie doesn't gloss over that at all, it really holds a lens up to it. It doesn't just give us a plucky montage, we have multiple extended sequences of exactly what it takes, with significant setbacks, and that makes the emotional moments feel satisfying rather than saccharine. I was also really impressed by Chris Cooper as Homer's dad, John. Again, at a surface level he seems like a really flat and stereotypical "angry dad who doesn't understand his kid" but there's a little bit of depth there and it makes all the difference. They do a really effective job of not only showing, but addressing, the way in which John is a genuinely caring and thoughtful person (to pretty much everyone except Homer.) It's made clear that the coalmine isn't just a job to John. Unlike pretty much everybody else in town, who thinks of it as the only unfortunate option, John sees it as his calling, sees it as important and far reaching work, and sees it as something he is very adept it. In multiple ways the coal mining trade is John's identity. And so to have his youngest son belittle it, and mock it, and abandon it creates a pervasive sense of embarrassment and an acute identity crisis. And in that case, the simplest solution is to lash out at the most obvious source (Homer) and obstruct the things he feels have pulled Homer away from him. There's just enough nuance to the relationship, dynamics, arguments, and struggles between these two that it does feel like more than your straight forward "I don't want to be like you, Dad" conflict. Lastly, the thing I thought was really depicted in an entertaining and engaging way was the way in which Homer's hope becomes a communal hope. As I mentioned before, the movie makes it pretty clear that coal mining in Coalwood is a dying industry and nobody but nobody is doing it for the love of the game. And so when the goofy son of the mine manager decides to look up to the stars instead of down into the mine, of course there's your usual jokes, insults, and chides but soon enough as the boys start to actually figure this thing out, pretty much the whole town can't help but get on board, because they're reminded that this hope Homer has that he won't let settle or die is the same one each of them had at some point, except theirs wasn't lasting, and maybe his still could be. Overall it definitely doesn't play as a super heavy, mind opening, paradigm shifting movie. But I think there's no doubt it has a little more to it then first meets the eye, like a real good coal vein under the surface I guess. It's always nice when a feel good piece can do more than just placate the viewer's desire for a happy ending.
- Jon Allen31 dicembre 2025Great movie.Terrific acting and very well directed.
- Eithan24 febbraio 2025Classic.
Cielo d'ottobre Trivia
Cielo d'ottobre è stato rilasciato il 19 febbraio 1999.
Cielo d'ottobre era diretto da Joe Johnston.
Cielo d'ottobre ha una durata di 1h 47min.
Cielo d'ottobre è stato prodotto da Larry Franco, Charles Gordon.
Ottobre 1957, Coalwood, cittadina mineraria del West Virginia. Il cielo notturno è solcato dalla scia luminosa dello Sputnik, il primo satellite, lanciato dai Sovietici, in orbita attorno alla Terra. Per il diciassettenne Homer H. Hickam jr. è come una folgorazione: costruire razzi costituirà il passaporto per sfuggire al destino che lo vuole minatore, come tutti a Coalwood. Il ragazzo non si lascerà bloccare né dall'iniziale ostilità del padre, autoritario sovrintendente della miniera, né dai primi insuccessi; con l'aiuto di 3 coetanei e col sostegno della sua professoressa di Chimica e Fisica, parteciperà al concorso scientifico indetto per tutte le scuole della nazione; e vincerà il primo premio anche grazie al padre, che gli procurò i pezzi che gli erano stati rubati durante il concorso. Il suo ultimo razzo lo dedicò alla professoressa Riley, morta di morbo di Hodgkin.
I personaggi principali di Cielo d'ottobre sono Homer Hickam (Jake Gyllenhaal), John Hickam (Chris Cooper), Quentin Wilson (Chris Owen).
Cielo d'ottobre è votato T.
Cielo d'ottobre è un film Dramma, Famiglia, Biography.
Cielo d'ottobre ha una valutazione di 8.8 su 10 dal pubblico.
Cielo d'ottobre aveva un budget di 25 Mln USD.
Cielo d'ottobre ha guadagnato 34,7 Mln USD al botteghino.





















