3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- More than a Trifle..., 27 February 2007
Author:
David H. Schleicher from New Jersey, USA
From its beguiling star Kirsten Dunst to the maddeningly beautiful
locales to the visual sumptuousness and "taste" (you almost feel as if
you could eat some of the scenery and clothes) of the costumes and art
design, Sofia Coppola's "Marie Antoinette" is an entrancing and lavish
period piece of the highest order.
Many of the early scenes of the Austrian and French woodlands and the
palatial splendor of Versailles are cloaked in an almost "otherworldly"
austerity, evoking the spirit of Stanley Kubrick's ultimate
costume-drama, "Barry Lyndon." Later, when our heroine finds some inner
piece at the countryside estate she is given as a gift after the birth
of her first child, Coppola immerses the viewer in the transcendent
splendor of natural sounds and beautiful images that channels the fluid
mise-en-scene composition of the best work of Terrence Malick. All of
this is tied together by Coppola's now signature dreamily listless
camera play that makes her unlike any other director working today.
In the lead role, Kristen Dunst is mesmerizing. She's always been a
better actress than she's been given credit for. She's only previously
been allowed to really stretch her acting muscle when she took on the
role of Marion Davies in the excellent "Cat's Meow" and as the
emotionally unstable teen in the misguided "Crazy/Beautiful." Here,
without much dialouge, and present in just about every scene, she
speaks volumes with her eyes and body language. Coppola only briefly
channeled into Dunst's innate talents in "The Virgin Suicides" and
wonderfully fulfills the promise of a fruitful director/actor
collaboration that those with a keen eye could divine from their first
experiment together.
Of course, those who measure a biopic by its historical accuracies will
cry blasphemy at some of the treatment here, most notably the use of
new-wave pop music in equal measure with a classical score. Also, the
drama of the French Revolution is glossed over spare for the final ten
minutes, almost as it it were a side-note in history. The vapidness and
decadence of the French Court is Coppola's focus, as is the alienation
of a people from their government, family members from each other, and
most importantly a young woman from herself. Though this classic theme
of alienation (which permeates many of the great films from Coppola's
father's contemporaries) seems to be treated here with a softer touch
that on the surface paints it as a trifle...the haunting closing scenes
of Dunst leaving Versailles behind forever are not without their
emotional resonance.
If Coppola delivers us a big hit with her next project, or not too far
thereafter...then I suspect in about ten or fifteen years, "Marie
Antoinette" will be looked upon far more fondly than it has been thus
far. Rightfully its costume design took home an Oscar. If the movie
gods smile down upon us, Coppola will have a long fruitful career, and
this film will surely be more than just a foot note of her early days.
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3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

More than a Trifle..., 27 February 2007
Author: David H. Schleicher from New Jersey, USA
From its beguiling star Kirsten Dunst to the maddeningly beautiful locales to the visual sumptuousness and "taste" (you almost feel as if you could eat some of the scenery and clothes) of the costumes and art design, Sofia Coppola's "Marie Antoinette" is an entrancing and lavish period piece of the highest order.
Many of the early scenes of the Austrian and French woodlands and the palatial splendor of Versailles are cloaked in an almost "otherworldly" austerity, evoking the spirit of Stanley Kubrick's ultimate costume-drama, "Barry Lyndon." Later, when our heroine finds some inner piece at the countryside estate she is given as a gift after the birth of her first child, Coppola immerses the viewer in the transcendent splendor of natural sounds and beautiful images that channels the fluid mise-en-scene composition of the best work of Terrence Malick. All of this is tied together by Coppola's now signature dreamily listless camera play that makes her unlike any other director working today.
In the lead role, Kristen Dunst is mesmerizing. She's always been a better actress than she's been given credit for. She's only previously been allowed to really stretch her acting muscle when she took on the role of Marion Davies in the excellent "Cat's Meow" and as the emotionally unstable teen in the misguided "Crazy/Beautiful." Here, without much dialouge, and present in just about every scene, she speaks volumes with her eyes and body language. Coppola only briefly channeled into Dunst's innate talents in "The Virgin Suicides" and wonderfully fulfills the promise of a fruitful director/actor collaboration that those with a keen eye could divine from their first experiment together.
Of course, those who measure a biopic by its historical accuracies will cry blasphemy at some of the treatment here, most notably the use of new-wave pop music in equal measure with a classical score. Also, the drama of the French Revolution is glossed over spare for the final ten minutes, almost as it it were a side-note in history. The vapidness and decadence of the French Court is Coppola's focus, as is the alienation of a people from their government, family members from each other, and most importantly a young woman from herself. Though this classic theme of alienation (which permeates many of the great films from Coppola's father's contemporaries) seems to be treated here with a softer touch that on the surface paints it as a trifle...the haunting closing scenes of Dunst leaving Versailles behind forever are not without their emotional resonance.
If Coppola delivers us a big hit with her next project, or not too far thereafter...then I suspect in about ten or fifteen years, "Marie Antoinette" will be looked upon far more fondly than it has been thus far. Rightfully its costume design took home an Oscar. If the movie gods smile down upon us, Coppola will have a long fruitful career, and this film will surely be more than just a foot note of her early days.
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