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The Beyond (1981 film) Beyond the Years; Blades of Blood; Blind (2014 film) Blind (2011 film) Blind (2019 film) Blind (2007 film) Blind Alibi; Blind Beast; Blind Company; Blind Corner; Blind Date (1984 film) Blind Detective; The Blind Man Who Did Not Want to See Titanic; Blind Man's Bluff (1936 film) Blind Massage; Blind Musician; Blind Rage (film)
Darby Templeton is a young blind girl. Her elder sister Joan falls in love with Yorke Ferris, a work-shy rogue, but instead she marries his uncle, Sir Ralph. Yorke is found shot and Sir Ralph is suspected, but Darby, with her acute sense of hearing, finds clues which exonerate him.
A Patch of Blue is a 1965 American drama film directed by Guy Green about the friendship between an educated black man (played by Sidney Poitier) and an illiterate, blind, white 18-year-old girl (played by Elizabeth Hartman in her film debut), and the problems that plague their friendship in a racially divided America.
The film focuses on Anne Sullivan's struggle to draw the young Helen Keller, a blind and prelingually deaf girl, out of her world of darkness and silence during the 1880s. Helen has been unable to communicate with her family except through physical temper tantrums since an illness took her eyesight and hearing from her at the age of 19 months old.
Blind (2016 film) Blind Dating; Blind Fury; Blink (1993 film) The Book of Eli; Bright Victory; Butterflies Are Free; C. Come as You Are (2019 film) D. Destiny (1944 film)
The film is based on a book by Nicholas Monsarrat that nearly had Helen Keller's co-workers suing for libel due to perceived parallels between Helen's story and Esther's. [3] In particular, the book seemed to slur the character of Anne Sullivan 's husband, writer-publicist John Macy, who was close to Keller's age.
Marie's Story (French: Marie Heurtin) is a 2014 French biographical film directed by Jean-Pierre Améris and written by Améris and Philippe Blasband. It is based on the true story of Marie Heurtin (1885–1921), a girl who was born deafblind in late 19th century France.
The film opened in second place at the U.S. box office with $12.4 million. [3] As of August 10, 2011, the film has a domestic gross of $31,418,697 with a foreign gross of $25,545,945 totaling an international gross of $56,964,642. In the United Kingdom, it grossed $1,398,958 in its opening weekend at #2.