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13,73 US$

Missguided x Playboy Sombrero de cubo reversible con estampado de conejitos y logotipo de conejito rosa, protección solar para festivales

19 Reseñas
Color:Blanco
Descripción
Dibujos animados
Pago Seguro
Envío A United States
Envío gratuito (Pedido ≥ 65,00 US$).Envío estándar Llega entre Jun 23 - Jun 29;
Política de Devolución
Devoluciones fáciles en un plazo de 30 días a través de nuestra empresa de transporte autorizada.

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Reseñas (19)
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4.9
m***4
2026/06/03
Some films are so emotionally overwhelming that they don’t just tell you a story—they grab you by the ribs and refuse to let go. Scott Hicks’s Shine (1996) is exactly that kind of film. Based on the true story of Australian pianist David Helfgott, it traces one man’s descent into mental illness and his painstaking, triumphant re-emergence into life. With a career-defining performance from Geoffrey Rush, a heartbreaking turn from Armin Mueller-Stahl, and a musical soul that never stops beating, Shine remains one of the most devastatingly beautiful biopics ever made. It is not a film about perfection. It is a film about survival. The story opens in the 1950s. Young David Helfgott (Alex Rafalowicz) is a child prodigy growing up in a cramped Australian household ruled by his father, Peter (Mueller-Stahl). Peter is a Holocaust survivor—brilliant, loving, and utterly tyrannical. He pushes David to win competitions but forbids him from leaving home to study abroad. His mantra is simple: fami
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