I'm finally back on track in terms of writing my notes for films: the hours of daylight are getting shorter with a consequent reduction in the time I can spend on gardening leave - everything outside has never looked better.
This week's film is all about gardening, and I even managed to add a quote from Simon Schama to add an extra layer of cultural reliance.
Here are my notes:
This week's film is all about gardening, and I even managed to add a quote from Simon Schama to add an extra layer of cultural reliance.
Here are my notes:
A
Little Chaos
UK 2014 117
minutes
Director: Alan
Rickman
Starring: Kate Winslet, Alan
Rickman, Matthias Schoenaerts, Alan Rickman and Stanley Tucci
“Even before the first
chateau [at Versailles] by Louis Le Vau, the park was made the setting for entertainments
that catered to the king’s hunger for self-aggrandisement. Whether they were ostensibly
performed in honour of military victories, the king’s latest mistress, or both,
they used bodies of water as theatrical platforms on which spectacles that
flattered his omnipotence could be performed.”
Simon Schama
Landscape and Memory
After being appointed
by King Louis XIV (Alan Rickman) on a project in the gardens of Versailles
Andre Le Notre (Matthias Schoenaerts) employs Sabine de Barra (Kate Winslet), a
woman with an unconventional sense of gardening, to help him complete the work.
Allison Deegan is an
actor and wrote an initial version of the screenplay 17 years ago while on
maternity leave. She had admired Alan
Rickman after seeing him on stage in Les
Liaisons Dangereuses and sent an unsolicited copy of the screenplay to him;
he responded favourably and announced that he wanted to direct it. However despite his support his other work
commitments, especially his ongoing role as Snape in the Harry Potter films, meant that the film had to wait. Initially Deegan had written the role of Le
Notre for Rickman, but the extended delay in its production meant that his age
made him more suited for the role of Louis XIV, a character who perhaps echoed
his responsibilities as director of the film.
On its release the film
received generally positive reviews with Tim Robey in The Telegraph commenting:
“If
you see only one film about 17th century landscape gardening this
year, it ought to be A Little Chaos,
a heaving bouquet of a picture.”
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