Showing posts with label simon schama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label simon schama. Show all posts

Thursday, October 22, 2015

A Little Chaos

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:

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.”

Monday, September 23, 2013

Lincoln

This week we are screening a real historical epic: Lincoln.

Here are my notes:

Lincoln

USA 2012                    150 minutes

Director:                      Steven Spielberg

Starring:                        Daniel Day-Lewis, Tommy Lee Jones, Sally Field, Joseph Gordon-Levett and James Spader

Awards and Nominations

  • Won two Oscars (including Best Actor for Daniel Day-Lewis) plus 10 nominations (including Best Film, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Supporting Actress (Sally Field), Best Supporting Actor (Tommy Lee Jones) and Best Music (John Williams)
  • Won one BAFTA (Best Actor for Daniel Day-Lewis) plus nine nominations (including Best Film, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay)
  • A further 57 wins and 95 nominations
 Steven Spielberg has made more obviously entertaining and more emotionally seductive movies than Lincoln, but this is for him the most brave and, for the audience, most demanding picture in the 40 years since his emergence as a major director.  It's a film about statesmanship, politics, the creation of the world's greatest democracy, and it's concerned with what we can learn from the study and contemplation of history.  Spielberg and his eloquent screenwriter, the playwright Tony Kushner, handle these themes with flair, imagination and vitality, and Daniel Day-Lewis embodies them with an indelible intelligence as the 16th president of the United States.”

Philip French

 In January 1865 Abraham Lincoln is fighting to get the Thirteenth Amendment, which will abolish slavery once and for all, through Congress.  It is the final months of the Civil War and the passage of the Amendment will free all slaves, not just those freed under his 1863 Emancipation Proclamation.

The film is based on Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln by Doris Kearns Goodwin, and Spielberg had been considering a film about Lincoln since 1999 when Goodwin first told him what she was about to write.  Spielberg commissioned an initial script from John Logan with Liam Neeson (who had worked with Spielberg on Schindler’s List) to be cast in the title role.  However the project was delayed and when work began again in 2010 it was announced that Daniel Day Lewis had replaced Neeson and that Tony Kushner had taken over as screenwriter.

Tony Kushner considered Lincoln "the greatest democratic leader in the world" and found the writing assignment daunting because "I have no idea [what made him great]; I don't understand what he did any more than I understand how William Shakespeare wrote Hamlet or Mozart wrote Così fan tutte”.  Kushner struggled with his material and after producing an initial 500 page draft which covered four months of Lincoln’s life he finally decided to concentrate on just the two months during which Lincoln was focussed on the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment.

In a typically perceptive essay on History and Cinema Simon Schama speculates about films with historical subjects:

“If movie history is to get produced as box office with a conscience, it must serve one of two purposes: explain the Origins of Us or act as Augury of What Is to Come.  But this kind of history, whether designed as the genealogy of identity politics or a prudential political-investment service, seldom escapes the contemporary world that it claims to transcend.”

The chronology of the release of Lincoln clarifies its purpose.  It received its world premiere at the New York Film Festival on 8th October 2012: a story of a lawyer who had adopted Illinois as his home state and who was elected president despite his lack of experience at a national level.  On 6th November 2012 Americans re-elected Barack Obama as President:  another lawyer who had chosen Illinois as his home state, who had been criticised when he first campaigned for his lack of experience at a national level, and who had consciously launched his first presidential campaign at the Old Illinois State Capitol in Springfield where Lincoln had made one of his famous speeches.  


Here is the trailer: