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The Lady and the Duke (2002)
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Reviews Counted:25
Fresh:21
Rotten:4
Average Rating:7.1/10
Consensus: Visually stunning, The Lady and the Duke uses current technology to elegantly bring the past to life.
Theatrical Release:May 10, 2002 Limited
Box Office: $124,812
Synopsis: This visually breathtaking film from New Wave director Eric Rohmer uses hand-painted sets that depict 18th-century Paris, the English lady's home, and the surrounding countryside with a vivid... This visually breathtaking film from New Wave director Eric Rohmer uses hand-painted sets that depict 18th-century Paris, the English lady's home, and the surrounding countryside with a vivid effect that looks like a realist oil painting brought to life. Set in the mid-1700s during the French Revolution, THE LADY AND THE DUKE tracks the profound friendship between Grace Elliot (Lucy Russell), an English woman who lives in Paris and insists on staying there throughout the war, and The Duke of Orleans (Jean-Claude Dreyfus), the cousin of Louis XVI and Grace's former lover. Russell (FOLLOWING) gives a superb performance as the headstrong, political, beautiful, and daring Grace Elliot, whose real-life memoirs inspired Rohmer to make the film. Dreyfus (DELICATESSEN) plays her perfect counterpart--powerful and unwavering, yet charming, caring, and honest. As each scene of the film magically bleeds into the next, the painterly backdrops make it difficult to discern 3-D objects such as chairs from the trompe l'oiel flat painted sets. Characters enter or exit with shocking life as the camera matches them to the color and texture of the painting. Majestic black horses that pull carriages over the "cobblestone" streets shimmer with velveteen realness. Meanwhile, tension brought on by the war adds strain to the friendship between the lady and the duke, and as the audience endures the fall of the Bastille, the September Massacres, and the finally, the king's execution, they are captivated, entertained, and historically nourished. [More]
Starring: Lucy Russell, Jean-Claude Dreyfus, Francois Marthouret, Leonard Cobiant
Starring: Lucy Russell, Jean-Claude Dreyfus, Francois Marthouret, Leonard Cobiant, Caroline Morin, Charlotte Véry, Alain Libolt, Marie Rivière
Director: Eric Rohmer
Director: Eric Rohmer
Screenwriter: Eric Rohmer
Producer: Françoise Etchegaray
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for The Lady and the Duke
Leave it to Rohmer, now 82, to find a way to bend current technique to the service of a vision of the past that is faithful to both architectural glories and commanding open spaces of the city as it was more than two centuries ago.
Nothing short of a technical marvel and a ravishing movie to look at.
Whenever the subtleties of political morality get a bit overbearing, there's a respite in the painterly streets of Paris, where, we are reminded, the past was another city, strange and resistant to present-day adornments.
An elegant story about an elegant woman, told in an elegant visual style.
Rohmer pulls off a wonderful feat: celebrating the elegance, and artifice, of another era at the same time he brings this tale of social upheaval boldly into the present.
The director has created a fascinating bridge between the media of the French Revolution (paintings) and today (movies, particularly digital).
Watching living actors interact against the lush, studied inertia of the backdrops gives us the impression of history come to life, or statues magically transformed into living creatures.
Seeing the paint actually dry, however, would probably be more fun than most of this overly expository film.
When the painted backdrops in a movie are more alive than its characters, you know you're in trouble.
This fascinating experiment plays as more of a poetic than a strict reality, creating an intriguing species of artifice that gives The Lady and the Duke something of a theatrical air.
Despite its lavish formalism and intellectual austerity, the film manages to keep you at the edge of your seat with its shape-shifting perils, political intrigue and brushes with calamity.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
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| 88% 88% | Inglourious Basterds |
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