日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

Make me your Homepage
left corner left corner
China Daily Website

Marie Antoinette

Updated: 2006-10-23 15:34
By Jessica Reaves ()
Marie AntoinetteMarie Antoinette has, in popular history, been accused of frivolity, irreverence and disdain for historical precedent. Sofia Coppola's indulgent, frothy biopic will be charged with precisely these same offenses. What more could a filmmaker ask?

Coppola's third movie, reportedly in the works for many years, has finally landed in the U.S. after a rocky premiere at Cannes, where the French media reaction was, shall we say, mixed. Wags there accused the young filmmaker of taking certain liberties with the facts, not only of the doomed Queen's life but of French history.

It's true that this sugarcoated romp doesn't take itself, or its source material, particularly seriously, but if you're confident your grasp of European history can withstand the assault of two hours of bubbly entertainment, "Marie Antoinette" guarantees you a good time.

Moved by Antonia Fraser's sympathetic 2001 biography of the so-called "teen queen," Coppola began work on a screenplay immediately. The result is a story that meshes beautifully, if unexpectedly, with Coppola's languid, highly stylized brand of filmmaking. "Marie Antoinette" is a throwback to Coppola's beginnings, sharing a sun mote-flecked dreaminess with "The Virgin Suicides."

As in her first two films, Coppola digs deeply here into the suffering brought on by claustrophobia and intense loneliness. We see the same sense of dread that enveloped an entire family in "Suicides" and made its mark on a lonely traveler in "Lost in Translation." Here, its target is an adolescent queen, trapped in a gilded, poisonous cage.

From the movie's first frame to its final, devastating moments, Coppola's direction brings to life a gauzy world marred only occasionally by serious concerns, a world marked by utter innocence, supreme ignorance, or some combination of the two.

Marie Antoinette would have empathized with today's tabloid stars. Her sex life was the subject of hurtful gossip; her every move was scrutinized and choreographed. Literally handed over from Austria to enhance diplomatic ties with France, the 15-year-old is deprived of her closest friends, her beloved dog, even her clothes. Presented to her new subjects in the French court, she smiles even as the lips around her curl in disdain.

Any story about Marie Antoinette must emphasize the queen's youth, and Kirsten Dunst, with her round cheeks and lopsided dimple, plays a convincing teenager, wavering between studied perkiness and abject fear. (One particularly artful shot has the camera pulling back from Dunst's tiny figure framed by one of the palace's vast windows, her loneliness and isolation almost palpable). Just as the title character grows into her new role, Dunst also seems to relax, easing off her high-octane effervescence.

Jason Schwartzman, Coppola's cousin, must have been thrilled to be cast as Louis XVI, who is described in historical accounts as "homely" and "stout." Rip Torn, as an animated Louis XV, seems to be having a fantastic time, as does Asia Argento, who's really challenging herself as the elder King's crude concubine.

Defiantly shunning an unspoken rule of period pieces, Coppola has the actors speaking in their natural voices, which seems odd until, about a third of the way through the movie, it doesn't. After all, nothing is more distracting than actors stumbling over recently acquired accents, and here we're free to concentrate on what's being said and done, rather than whether Schwartzman will be able to muster up an adequately Gallic twist on his next line. And don't go into this expecting chamber music: "I Want Candy," by '80s throwback Bow Wow Wow, blasts as MA and her ladies in waiting scramble joyfully through bolts of exquisite fabrics, boxes of fabulous shoes and trays of delectable sweets. It's typical of the movie's deliberately anachronistic, unstuffy approach to its subject matter, and it all works beautifully. In another scene, Coppola deftly pairs New Order's aptly named "Ceremony" with images of rambunctious youth celebrating an 18th birthday.

Coppola, who has a cultish following in France (at least before this film), was granted unprecedented access to Versailles, and she clearly took full advantage of the privilege. Visually, "Marie Antoinette" is an embarrassment of riches, frame after frame of lush scenery, swirling gowns and unimaginable wealth.

That wealth, of course, came with a price: Everything the future king and his wife do is shrouded in stultifying pageantry; their wedding night is presided over by a roomful of high-ranking members of the court, their private tragedies on display. They're not unlike rare and exotic animals in a zoo. Their awkwardness makes them human, which inspires sympathy, which in turn inspires real sadness at their inevitable fate at the hands of an understandably outraged underclass.

"Marie Antoinette" is not a perfect movie, but it's a very good movie about one of history's most iconic figures. Insouciant but never cavalier, Coppola's latest effort should prove definitively she's a talent in her own right.

 
 
...
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 爱爱视频网站免费 | 91免费精品视频 | 久久五十路 | 91久久久久久 | 99爱爱视频 | 国产网曝门 | 亚洲高清成人 | 迪迦奥特曼中文版 | 国产黄色一级片 | 日韩一区二区三区在线 | av网站大全在线 | 成人免费一区 | 成人黄色三级视频 | 中文字幕在线观看的网站 | 亚洲精品国产一区二区 | 欧美激情视频一区二区三区 | 国产精品自产拍高潮在线观看 | 夜夜操影院 | 成人一级免费视频 | 欧美黄色大片在线观看 | 狠狠干中文字幕 | 可以免费看的毛片 | 国产成人精品久久二区二区91 | 日韩一级片在线观看 | 日韩精品 | 中文字幕第7页 | 免费的三级网站 | 亚洲视频一区在线 | 精品少妇一区二区三区免费观看 | 午夜小视频在线播放 | 精品国产第一页 | 国产精品成人aaaa在线 | 人人看人人做 | 日本黄色高清视频 | 国产精品一区二区视频 | 日韩在线视频看看 | 日韩欧美一级视频 | 性感美女毛片 | 男女国产视频 | 久久久久久免费观看 | 天天爽天天 |