
Language:
English
Cast: Kirsten Dunst (Marie Antoinette), Jason Schwartzman (King
Louis XVI), Rip Torn (King Louis XV), Judy Davis (Comtesse de Noailles),
Asia Argento (Madame du Barry), Marianne Faithfull (Empress Maria
Teresa), Danny Huston (Joseph), Molly Shannon (Aunt Victoire), Steve
Coogan (Count Mercy D’Argenteau), Rose Byrne (Duchesse de Polignac) and
Shirley Henderson (Aunt Sophie).
Producer: Sofia Coppola and Ross Katz
Director: Sofia Coppola
Writing credits: Sofia Coppola based on the book by Antonia
Fraser
Edited by: Sarah Flack
Director of Photography: Lance Acord
Costumes Designer: Milena Canonero
Release Date: October 13th at the New York Film festival,
Nationwide October 20, 2006
Production House: Columbia Pictures
Running Time: 123 minutes
Rating: PG -13

Reviews
History
it is not but more a mix of French decadence meeting the ‘pop’
lifestyle. Sofie Coppola’s “Marie Antoinette” is dedicated to the
‘problem of leisure’. More of a character than Louis XVI is the elegance
of Versailles where the movie was taken and the opulent sets and
costumes.
Kristen Dunst, who is reported to have felt aloof and lonely throughout
the making of the film ably, brings in those emotions into her role as
the young Queen. Extravagant, spoilt and a typical teenager with too
much Kristen glides to the film with all the grace of a royal. Although
a representation of the extravagance and excess of the autocratic
monarchs as their subjects starved the film also brings out the pathos
in that life of excess.
The young queen lives with a marriage unconsummated for seven years. As
an Austrian she is the outsider and is constantly mocked and scolded
regardless of her position. The weak king, played by Jason Schwartzman
is never there and time weighs heavily for Marie. There begins a life of
decadent gowns, rich cakes, impulsive trips and a private hideaway as
the queen indulges her desires even as the country festers with
revolution.
The whirl of French fashion and the high life, the snootiness of the
aristocracy, the childishness of the royals are whipped into delicious
melt-in-the –mouth delicacy that needs to be experienced with an open
mind. Don’t go looking for historical accuracy and you’ll find a movie
that shows us that the over-indulgent lifestyles are not so far from
those of the hard-partying yuppies of today. The gap between the haves
and the have-nots and the fact that no life is problem free is the most
obvious message one gets. However trivial it sounds it is hard work to
constantly indulge yourself!
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