Sunday, December 20, 2009

Sherlock Holmes












Audience members responses to Sherlock Holmes were dramatically different, depending on age, language and gender. Ten kids in the audience, aged 10- 15 absolutely loved the movie: excited by the action, loved the pace, got all the jokes and eft burbling with excitement. Those up to 40 years of age talked of the film’s various technical achievements – the overall bleached look of the images, the sooty London décor, the recreations - Piccadilly, the docks, the Tower Bridge - caused considerable discussion.

Sherlock Holmes buffs (some are members of the Sherlock Holmes Society), couldn’t stop talking about the respect the script showed for the original Conan Doyle material.

Many women 65+ said their husbands liked it, or would have liked it but found the action sequences too much, too violent, too long. They found the plot very confusing, esp. the death and the ressurrection. They didn’t get the explanations as to how Holmes figures things out.

I had expected a 100% house, and in conversations after, discovered that many, having seen the Sherlock Holmes trailer (we had run it prior to the three previous screenings), anticipated what the film was going to be like and stayed away. Indeed some said the only reason they came was to support Cinémagique, knowing WB had given us the film.

Here are member verbatim responses:

****


I really enjoyed Sherlock Holmes as did my wife and son. I've read all 56 of the short stories and the four novels so there is no way I would want to miss this film but Barbara and Dave were watching it without all that background...and they loved it too! I think you've got a hit on your hands. David told me at lunch today that he will go back and see it again when it opens and that he will bring many of his friends along. He liked the stylistic way Guy Ritchie handled the characters and the story. Using the slowed down footage to reveal Holmes' thought process as he was about to do something complex showed his ability to think clearly under pressure and revealed Holmes' reasoning powers in a very visual way...Conan Doyle would have approved...an excellent example of how a modern filmmaker can adapt ideas from literature and translate them into something special, something cinematic.

Your guest was a great addition to the evening and I liked how he reflected on the filmmaking process and I also enjoyed the personal touches when he spoke about his interest in saving greyhounds from their post racing life and staying in his local community even though he is starting to get some traction in Hollywood. His family being there to support him was also a nice touch. Seeing him standing there with his daughter emphasized his large stature for sure, but also his humanity.

If I am any judge of Holmes and Hollywood I am guessing there will be a part 2 in the near future. I predict we will see more of your guest in part 2 but he most likely will be working on the side of Holmes and Watson instead of playing the heavy. That's what Doyle would do...

Thanks again for the great evening...did you notice how many films we've seen with Cinemagique this season were front runners with the Golden Globes! Good for you! - John
***
Wonderful evening...à tous points de vue...film, ambiance, belle soirée...merci beaucoup. Louise
***
On the whole, it was just a little too fast, and a little too Hollywood for me to fall into my idea of a Sherlock Holmes-type story, so I would classify it as a 'modernization' although Ritchie created a very believable London of the 1800's. They went to great lengths to give us the clues and to help us follow the story, but I got only the very broad strokes - they could have slowed down the delivery: all those details were given much too quickly for me to follow them properly, but it was such a ride that I had to just let go and enjoy it. This feeling of 'just ride with it' is, I think, a hallmark of an adventure story, not my idea of a Sherlock Holmes film. That said, the things I really appreciated: the sets! both interiors and exteriors were wonderful, the performance of Lord Blackwood (Mark Strong) personified totally implacable evil, the mapping out of the Tai Chi-based fight scenes, and the wonderful interplay between two master actors, Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law. The scene at the shipyard was very unusual, powerful and felt completely authentic. Leslye
***
My grandson loved it and especially meeting the villain. Very sympathique he is! . Best Nicole
***
Je n'ai pas de mots...52 étoiles...merci à tout le génie et l'âme qui habitent cette majestueuse production...un privilège exceptionnel d'avoir pu visionner ce spectacle magistral...au temps de noel 2009...ce film fait maintenant partie de nos souvenirs de cinéma préférés...le talent était au rendez-vous...et a su créer un chef-d'oeuvre Sherlock Holmes authentique. Bravo !
***
john and i have enjoyed the fall so much after discovering your movie club - heard about it in the cinema du parc newsletter as that is our "local" so to speak and am very happy to have discovered it.

anyway, i wanted to thank you for all the work you have done on the season!! Happy holidays and see you in the new year, - julie
***
Sherlock certainly had a lot going on. Loved the cinematography, slow motion-capture choreography, fantasy sets, and editing. Not quite sure about the casting? I am a huge fan of Robert Downey Jr but not in this particular role. Maybe Anthony Hopkins, Hugh Laurie, Rupert Everette would have told a different story, the story I was expecting.

I wanted to feel more for the characters, really care about them, love them..I guess I don't think of Sherlock as being so young and athletic! The action was a fun ride but I missed not having more mystery/intrigue and less fast filler. Dawn
***
Aller au cinéma, c'est pour voir ce genre de film qui profite pleinement du grand écran.

Sherlock Holmes est un bagarreur. Il faut bien se tenir occupé! Autrement, il se morfond entre deux enquêtes, imaginant mille et un scénarios et testant toutes sortes de mixtures à une époque où la science devenait de plus en plus importante. Son ami, le docteur Watson, est heureusement là pour l'aider à être un peu plus présentable. Un "straightman", mais qui sait se battre lui aussi!

Holmes est un génie troublé, qui a besoin d'action pour vivre. Chacun de ses déplacements est une invitation a retenir tous ces détails qui lui permettent de résoudre les intrigues. Et des détails, le film en fournit abondamment. Le Londres du milieu du 19e siècle est surpeuplé, et sale de toute cette fumée de charbon. Très propice aux mystères.

Qu'est-ce qu'on cherche quand on va au cinéma? De l'action: DES TONNES! Des cascades? PLEIN! Des effets spéciaux? Vous ne les verrez pas ou très peu tellement ils sont bien réussis. On se croirait à Londres. Du paranormal? C'est la base de l'intrigue, où de jeunes femmes sont tuées pour accomplir un rite. Une histoire d'amour? Deux même, mais bon, c'est secondaire dans ce film. Important pour les suites? On verra. Le décor, les costumes, les explosions, les menaces, l'intrigue, le scénario (c'est une histoire de Sherlock Holmes après tout!), méritent un détour par le cinéma. Tout le film est présenté par une solide équipe de comédiens, autant pour les bons que les méchants et même les policiers. Dans la version anglaise (très British comme langue parlée, avis aux auditeurs moyennement bilingues!), le géant est présenté comme un français. Mais l'est-il? Et survit-il?

Voilà le genre de film que l'on attend des grands studios hollywoodiens. Même dans ses excès.

J'ai pu voir ce film dans le cadre des activités du club Cinémagique, un ciné-club qui présente des nouveautés à chaque semaine au Cinéma du Parc à Montréal. Nous avons eu comme invité le fameux géant du film, Robert Maillet, qui habite au Nouveau- Brunswick. Bien sympathique de finir un film avec un de ses acteurs et d'en apprendre un peu plus sur les capacités de Robert Downey à excéuter ses propres cascades.

Sherlock Holmes? Définitivement, cher Watson. Et en espérant une suite aussi glorieuse.- daniel

(Published on Flickster/Facebook)

I thought the film was well-matched with the intellect of Holmes: complex, quirky and witty. I marvel at the appeal to a wide age range. It takes everyone along with the action at its own pace and the viewer is challenged to keep up. In this way, the intelligence of the audience is not taken for granted. The previous exposure (if any) one may have to Holmes as a character of our imagination built since the publication of the books and release of various films did not matter. This was a new experience for all.

Downey's incarnation is entirely believable to a contemporary audience and plays with any previously established characteristics to reveal him as more outlandish and layered than expected. The film thus exceeded my expectations and I want to see it again and again. I was thoroughly absorbed, entertained and intrigued. The speed of language, and repartee created a rush of excitement from beginning to end. The Holiday Season timing is perfect.

Robert Maillet was a great ambassador for the movie, again totally unexpected. He had a refreshing manner and charming way of answering questions. You were also an ideal foil for him during the question and answer period with your respect, understanding and knowledge of filmmaking as a collaborative art form. Robert's role in the film was an example of the attention to detail that could have been easily overlooked upon a single screening of the film. The fact that he was flown in for this, heightened the overall reception and allowed us to explore the darker side of the movie from the point of view of the villain of the piece. I noticed that Robert was also on CBC Radio in Montreal while he was here and his infectious enthusiasm, respect for his fellow actors and Director, Guy Ritchie, and obvious pride in his own performance came across even on radio. Somehow his physical size equalled his voice and the interviewer seemed captivated by his honesty and integrity. Thank you and thank you, Warner Brothers! Marlene
***
Sherlock Holmes: Wow! A very interesting interpretation. A genius who needs action to take care of himself. He loves to fight, and every step is an oberver point of view. Clues in everything he sees - not very good for his mental health!

Helped by his straightman Dr. Watson (who sure knows how to fight!), they solve intrigues set up in the mid 19th century dirty London. The city is full of details, and its creepyness adds to the story plot.

What do we want when we go to the cinema? Action? LOTS! Stunts? PLENTY! Special Effects? So good you won't notice them. You will be in this old London. Paranormal? This is the main idea of the story. Love story? Even two, could we say, but I admit it is really secondary. Important for future releases? We'll see. All set design, costumes, explosions, threaths, story line (it is a Sherlock Holmes story after all!) are worth a detour by your favorite theater. The whole movie is sustained by a solid team of actors, as well for the goods, the villains and even the policemen. The English version is really "Old British" for the language. The exception is a French giant (is he really French?), who adds a nice touch to the feature. He's a villain, so he dies. Really?

This is the kind of movie we like from Hollywood studios, even with their excesses. I got to see this movie with the Cinémagique movie club, presenting new features of all kind every week at Cinéma du Parc in Montreal. We had a guest, the giant Robert Maillet, who lives in New Brunswick. It was nice to complete a presentation with one of the actors of the movie, who allowed us to learn a little more about the true stuntman capacities of Robert Downey (yes, he does as much as he can).

Sherlock Holmes? Definitely, Watson. And hoping for a glorious sequel. Daniel
***
First of all thank you for providing the opportunity to see the film. Not sure whether the producers would want these comments:

The work to recreate 19th Century London was extremely effective. I was really impressed. The story line, with its frenetic chase was a little less appealing; it reminded me more of Raiders of the Lost Ark than Sherlock Holmes.

The portrayal of Holmes was not consistent with the Holmes of Conan Doyle. Holmes is described as an intellectual who might have known everything about martial arts, but would much prefer to think about them rather than develop the practical skills. He was also a misogynist, who might have been fascinated by the brain of a smart woman but would not have fallen in love with her. The scruffy look of Holmes was also odd. The drawings published with the original editions showed a very well dressed individual.

Much of the books (and earlier depictions) depend on the relationship between the severely gifted Holmes and the well grounded and not so swift Watson(elementary, my dear Watson). A close partnership, yes, but not between the almost equals portrayed in the movie. The relationship between House and Wilson in the popular medical drama series is closer!

One might argue that the portrayal in the movie uses artistic license. However one would hope that any interpretation is consistent with the ‘facts’ provided by Conan Doyle. This is not. Martin
***
Sherlock Holmes dusted and revisited !

Guy Ritchie's Sherlock Holmes is like nothing you ever saw or imagined. The reconstruction of London at the time of the action is probably more accurate than ever portrayed before. Slums are slums, streets are dirty and dangerous, and most dwellers on the unkempt side. The rich are super rich, the poor, super poor

Sherlock,as portrayed by Ritchie and brought to life by Robert Downey Jr. is multifaceted. He is a Martial Arts expert, (Downey is himself an adept) with a superior intellect, divining abilities, wry sense of humour, a scientific curiosity that borders on dangerous and with a tendency to be on the slob side rather than neat and with a trying sense of friendship that would make any normal person decide he is not worth befriending. In short he is very different than ever seen before.

Jude Law's Watson, sidekick and mystery solving partner, is his preyed upon friend and colleague who comes through even in the most trying of circumstances. The chemistry between the two actors is good and believable as we witness them They battle against the evil plot of Lord Blackwood who confounds Scotland Yard. They will of course solve the mystery and save their country. Both are put through very difficult situations made even more impressive with the use of special effects and a sound track that accentuates the sombre, the evil , the tense, and the comic.

Rachel McAdams is Sherlock's dangerous love interest and some of their scenes together are downright funny. Mark Strong plays a villain true to colors. The villains are really bigger than life! Robert Maillet Bouctouche New Brunswick, born wrestler turned actor is impressive.

If the plot is thin, the villains, villainous, the dialogue is at times difficult to understand. It is as if they mumble. The action is continuous, it is a film that is action packed with impressive special effects and gives a new look and probably more accurate look at Sherlock than ever seen before. I wonder what Sir Conan Doyle would say. He probably would have a good time and so will you ! Nicole
***

This is a refreshing new look at the most famous of all fictional detectives, Sherlock Holmes. Nowadays the market is flooded with mystery stories. We tend to forget that crime fiction of the Western world only became an accepted style of writing in the 19th century. In the early days there were no police or private detectives trying to figure out how, why and by whom crimes were committed. Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes, who first appeared in publication in 1887, is often described as the first consulting detective. His methods of observation, deductive reasoning and forensic skills influenced police methods and criminology all over the world.

Robert Downey is certainly a different actor than Jeremy Brett, THE Sherlock Holmes of British films. He is rather rougher around the edges than we are used to. But Downey’s portrayal accents some aspects of Holmes’ character that we haven’t seen as much previously, his prowess in bare-knuckle boxing for instance. Downey is very observant and has the audience as well as fellow actors cringing as he keeps tasting items to deduce what they are. Jude Law as Watson makes a more appealing lady’s man than previous actors I thought. Irene Adler, the one woman who could match Holmes’ skills, is only featured in one of the original Sherlock Holmes adventures (A Scandal in Bohemia). But she (Rachel McAdams) plays a large part in this film and one suspects she will be turning up in subsequent movies. I certainly hope so. I would also enjoy seeing a revival of Dredger (Robert Maillet), the giant villain. Bad guy Mark Strong, playing Lord Blackwood, is wonderfully sinister. I did not find it hard to follow the plot and action

There is some wonderful camerawork in this film. The special effects are very well done. The shipyard and inferno scenes are spectacular. I loved the upside down angle on the chase of Holmes going after Dredger. The slow motion filming is effective, a good contrast to fast action scenes.

It is fun noticing the bits of dialogue which refer to other movie characters, such as Dr Who. My British friend recognized phrases from a childrens’radio show, which director Guy Ritchie must have also grown up listening to.

Some members of the Bimetallic Question, Montreal’s Sherlock Holmes Society, were upset about this film’s departure from traditional British Sherlock Holmes movies. Others saw it as a breath of fresh air. I think this movie does a good job of introducing Sherlock Holmes to a new generation. Nancy

***





Friday, December 18, 2009

Bonnes fêtes! Happy Holidays!




















Mavens:

Scrutinizing this marvelous collage of movies we've screened, done by our own Paul Higgins, brings back glorious memories of another year, lost in the dark. Happy holidays to all from everybody at Cinémagique and Cinéma du Parc. We'll be back on January 18th, all things being equal. Thanks for all your support!

Cinéphiles:

Toute l'équipe du Cinémagique et du Cinéma du Parc vous souhaite de joyeuses fêtes de fin d’année ainsi que de très nombreux cadeaux sous votre sapin ! On vous retrouvera des le 18 janvier prochain avec quelques petites merveilles decouvertes! Merci de votre fidelite !!

peter

Mmes et Messieurs, M. Robert Maillet

Robert Maillet, a truly exceptional guest, is the villain of Sherlock Holmes. Here are a few factoids you may not know about him:

  • He was born October 26, 1969, in Sainte-Marie-de-Kent, NB, and still lives there;
  • he works as a machine operator in Bouctouche;
  • he was into volleyball in high school, since his school didn't have a football or basketball team.
  • he and his wife live with 7 or 8 rescued racing greyhounds;
  • They have a new daughter, a 4 year old they recently adopted from Ethiopia;
  • his next movie will be The Big Bang, with Antonio Banderas & Sam Elliott.

In Sherlock Holmes:
  • He plays the villain Dredger who takes on the famed detective in fight scenes.
  • his SH dialogue is all in French
  • he accidentally whacked Rob't Downey on the chin, during a fight scene, stunning Downey, but not knocking him out.
  • when he recovered, Downey sent a bottle of champagne and a card to Maillet that night "to lift my spirits. He knew I felt bad"
***
  • Il joue le rôle du vilain Dredger qui s'en prend au fameux détective dans des scènes de combat.
  • Son dialogue SH est entièrement français.
  • Pendant une scène de bagarre, il envoit accidentellement un solide crochet au menton de Rob’t Downey, ce qui a eu pour effet de l’engourdir quelque peu mais ne l’assomme pas;
  • Lorsqu'il s'est rétabli, Downey a fait parvenir à Maillet une bouteille de champagne avec une carte « pour me relever le moral, sachant que je me sentais coupable».
In 300, the all-bluescreen graphic part-fantasy, part-war epic:
  • he plays the Uber Immortal, a savage, gigantic member of the Imperial Guard, unleashed upon the Spartans;
  • Il joue Uber Immortal, un énorme et monstrueux personnage barbare de la Garde Impériale, libéré des ses chaînes par les Spartiates.













As Kurgan, the Acadian Giant:
  • he has wrestled Hacksaw Duggan at halftime of a CFL game in Mtl.,
  • Il avoue que la lutte « est comme du théâtre », quoique plus dangereux. L’industrie du cinéma prend mieux soin de ses acteurs lorsque vient le temps des cascades et de leurs chutes

Here are Kurgan's patented moves:
  • Chokeslam, (or in Japanese, a "nodowa otoshi"), the wrestler grasps the opponent's neck, lifts him up, and slams them to the mat.
  • Kurrgan Shuffle (Bear hug into a side slam
  • Paralyzer (Clawhold)
  • Big boot
  • Spinning spinebuster

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Broken Embraces/Etreintes brisées/Abrazos Rotos


We who sit in darkened theatres, unrepentant at having abandoned Kansas in favour of Oz, understand the hypnotic powers movies wield over us. They are our lifeblood, our dream life, our profession of faith, our ambitions, our prejudices, manipulating our perceptions of reality, suspending our disbelief, altering/affirming our life views. No wonder great movie makers turn their lenses back on movies themselves to understand just how movies work. Consider these movies-on-movies masterworks: Wilder (Sunset Blvd. - 1950), Cukor (A Star is Born - 1954), Fellini 8 ½ 1963), Godard (Le Mépris - 1963), Woody Allen (The Purple Rose of Cairo - 1985), Tornatore (Cinema Paradiso - 1989), Coen Bros. (Barton Fink, 1991), Altman (The Player - 1992), David Lynch (Mulholland Drive - 2001), Spike Jonze (Adaptation - 2002).

Now along comes master stylist Pedro Almodóvar, with his own gorgeous seductive movie about what it means to live in/for movies (Broken Embraces/Etreintes brisées/Abrazos Rotos). A blind director (imagine that!) turns to screenwriting. Homage allusions abound: Hitchcock, Nicholas Ray, Carol Reed, Bernard Herrmann, Henry Hathaway, Rossellini. Almodavar even quotes himself, most notably Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.

So mavens, be alert. Spot-the-reference questions may follow the screening.
***
Nous qui sommes assis dans la noirceur des salles de cinéma, non repentants d’avoir délaissé Kansas pour Oz, comprenons bien les pouvoirs hypnotiques qu’exercent sur nous le cinéma. Ils font partie de notre vie, de nos rêves, notre profession de foi, nos ambitions, préjudices, manipulant notre perception de la réalité, notre incrédulité, tout en altérant et/ou en affirmant nos idées sur la vie. On comprend maintenant pourquoi les réalisateurs examinent à nouveau les films eux-mêmes afin de mieux comprendre comment le cinéma fonctionne. Voyez donc ces chef-d’œuvres : Wilder (Sunset Blvd – 1950) Cukor (A Star is Born – 1954), Fellini 8 ½ - 1963), Godard (Le Mépris – 1963), Woody Allen (The Purple Rose of Cairo – 1985), Tornatore (Cinema Paradiso – 1989), Coen Bros. (Barton Fink, 1991), Altman (The Player – 1992), David Lynch (Mulholland Drive – 2001), Spike Jonze (Adaptation – 2002).

Maintenant arrive le maître styliste Pedro Almodóvar, avec son fantastique et séduisant film sur la signification de la passion de vivre pour le cinéma (Broken Embraces/Etreintes brisées/Abrazos Rotos). Un réalisateur aveugle (imaginez!) qui écrit et réalise des films. Les hommages abondent : Hitchcock, Nicholas Ray, Carol Reed, Bernard Herrmann, Henry Hathaway, Rossellini, même Almodovar se cite lui-même, plus spécifiquement Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.

Cinéphiles, soyez à l’écoute. Une période de questions pourrait suivre après la projection.



Recherches :

- the trailer is here on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YWw9n0ekYCw

- the best movies-on-movies list I found: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/MRC/moviesaboutmovies.html

Afra adds her thoughts:

..even if Broken Embraces is second rate, Almodovar is a good storyteller moving fast through a convoluted plot with subplots and points of view which mix up melodrama, humour and an happy ending - his forte. Within the genre 'movie on movies', his cinephilia of passionate love, tragic ends and death has his unmistakable style but isn't there too much nostalgia of his own past? It seems to me a 'regard' in images and words of the time when it all began 'Women on the verge..', the film that gave him success and a brand-name. I liked the idea of a blind director which in my mind is a good metaphor of the artist, the art of creation and all the 'highs' and misfortunes of life - his major theme.

The artist is a dreamer and his work arises more from the power of imagination than visual sight. In the same vein, aren't all the 'highs' of life [lust, strong emotions, desires, jealousy, vengeance] - and what Almodovar does best- more a product of our imagination than of what we see or what is really there?... and I liked the ending: a middle-age director and his youthful self passionately re-running/making women.. - nostalgia of a time past gone which myself look back with nostalgia.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

The Young Victoria


Rupert Friend Emily Blunt Jean Marc Vallée

We welcome Jean Marc Vallée, director of The Young Victoria, to Cinémagique Monday evening.

His first film, Liste Noire (starring Michel Côté) was the box office smash of Quebec for months on end when it first opened - a tale of a hooker, whose client black list includes the who's who of Quebec City politics.

And then there was C.R.A.Z.Y., that delectable irrepressible family saga of five sons (again starring Michel Côté), spanning three decades.

Young Victoria is our first movie from Alliance, Canada's biggest, most important distributor. This is where we, your friendly Cinemagique audience have a key role to play. We want to show Alliance that we're their large and vigorous audience, that we can help launch their finest films. So we want Young Victoria to have the most successful launch imaginable. To that end, bring in your cinephile buddies (especially those interested in joining). Young Victoria is a wonderful film and deserves all the support we can offer it.

***
Anyone who complains Hollywood doesn't make love stories like they used to, will revel in the lavishly produced 'The Young Victoria,' a biopic of Victoria, our longest-reigning queen, who in her bedtime ways, turns out to have been quite unvictorian.

In Canada, she's a national holiday, a college at U of T, a hospital in Montréal, the namesake of two provincial capitals, one province and one Qc town best known for its hockey sticks. Several Ontario towns are named after her nine offspring. No wonder malevolent Jacobin talk of abolishing our Royals, just because the present lot is underimpressive and underperforming, doesn't sit well.

OK, granted, they're congenial idiots - stoical, laconic, stiff-upper-lip; they have poor personal habits and make public spectacles of themselves. But c'mon, royal hanky-pank has been going on since Guinevere's fling with Lancelot. Who cannot adore their philandering foibles and appetites: dorky Edward VIII giving up his throne to bed bland Mrs. Simpson from Baltimore Maryland; the present Charles getting off on sucking the toes of Camilla, who it turns out is nothing less than a descendant of Edward VII's mistress. Who for example sired young Prince Harry, for example? It certainly wasn't Prince JugEars

Royals and Movie Stars are but gossamer confections of mind, concocted to inspire us, like benevolent aunties: Dame Helen Mirren (who has played a total of six queens including QE I & II, Queen Charlotte to Crazy King George (Nigel Hawthorne); Dame Judi Dench (the red-headed virgin, QE I, Victoria, Lady Macbeth) Cate Blanchett (QE I – twice!), Genevieve Bujold (the unfortunately decapitated Anne Boleyn). And now Emily Blunt as Queen Victoria. They are magical moms reigning supreme on supermarket magazine racks the world over. We are but supporting players in their grand dramas.

Like Saints and Martyrs, Monarchs and Movies Stars are but fantasies we choose to believe in. Remember - ELVIS, even decades after death, still reigns as King!! Prince is still a prince of a fella. San Franciso now has more queens than London ever will. And Madonna, who once used be a virgin mother, has changed her sexual mores. So be it. Long Live our QUEENS!!!!

Research

The Young Victoria has a terrific website, full of info & cvs about the cast and crew, interviews with the cast. http://www.theyoungvictoria.co.uk/

Monarchist may know the backstory of Young Victoria which provides the spine of the movie narrative, but I didn't. You might want to brush up on the relationship between Lord Melbourne & Rob’t Peel here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Lamb,_2nd_Viscount_Melbourne

And here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Peel

Here's a Wikipedia article on the villain of the piece:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_John_Conroy

*****
Quiconque se plaint qu'Hollywood ne produit plus de belles histoires d'amour comme dans le temps, sera ravi par The Young Victoria, un bio pic de la reine Victoria, dont le règne fut le plus long de la monarchie britannique et qui, par ses manières parfois hors norme, s'est révélée quelque peu non victorienne.

Au Canada, son nom représente un congé national, un collège de l'université de Toronto, un grand hôpital montréalais, le nom de capitales provinciales, une province et une ville au Québec où l'on fabrique des bâtons de hockey…. Plusieurs villes de l'Ontario affichent également son nom suite à la naissance de chacun de ses neufs enfants. L'on comprend mieux pourquoi les discussions jacobines malveillantes à l'effet de détruire cette royauté, parce qu'étant peu impressionnante et peu performante, ne font pas bonne figure.

D'accord, ils sont de sympathiques idiots imperturbables et insensibles, démontrant peu de bonnes manières et qui s'offrent dérisoirement en public. Allez donc! Les entourloupettes amoureuses existent depuis le temps des amours entre Guenièvre et Sire Lancelot. Qui ne raffole pas devant leurs élans d'ardeur et leurs fougues donjuanesques: Édouard VIII abdiquant le trône pour se marier à madame Simpson de Baltimore, Maryland; notre Charles se retrouvant entre les draps de Camilla, qui s'avère n'être qu'une descendante de la maîtresse d'Édouard VII ! Par exemple, qui a engendré le jeune prince Harry ? On peut douter que ce soit notre prince JugEars !

Les personnages de la royauté de même que les vedettes de cinéma ne sont que de fins caractères élaborés dans le but de nous inspirer, telles de bienveillantes tantines : Dame Helen Mirren (qui a incarné six reines, incluant la Reine Élizabeth I et II, la Reine Charlotte à Crazy King George (Nigel Hawthorne); Dame Judi Dench (la vierge rouquine, la Reine Élizabeth I, la Reine Victoria, Lady Macbeth); Cate Blanchet (deux fois la Reine Elizabeth I), Geneviève Bujold (Anne Boleyn, mère d'Élizabeth I, malheureusement décapitée). Et maintenant, Emily Blunt dans le rôle de la Reine Victoria. Elles sont nos magiques mamans qui règnent en suprématie sur les présentoirs de journaux des supermarchés dans le monde.

Tels les saints et martyrs, les monarques et les vedettes de cinéma sont indestructibles. Rappelez-vous Elvis, des décennies après sa mort, qui demeure le King qui règne toujours. Prince est toujours le prince d'un pote. Il y a maintenant plus de reines à San Francisco que jamais à Londres. Et que dire de Madonna qui fut une femme chaste et pure et qui a maintenant révisé ses valeurs sur la sexualité. Longue vie à nos REINES !!!

Recherches


La monarchie doit sûrement connaître tout de la vraie histoire de Young Victoria, ce qui est la base de la narration du film, mais je n’ai pas réussi. Pour en savoir plus plus sur la relation entre Lord Melbourne et Robert Peel :

http://en.wikipedia.org/wuju/william_lamb,_2nd_viscount_melbourne

Et encore ceci :

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Peel

Et ceci sur une partie plus croquante de l'histoire:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_John_Conroy

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