 |  |
| table width=100% cellspacing=0 cellpadding=3 border=0
tr
td bgcolor=#FFFFFFdiv class=titlefont color=#333333More Info /font/div/td
/tr
tr
td bgcolor=#FFFFFFtable cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 border=0
tr valign=top
td style=font-size: smaller; class=title#149;/td
td style=font-size: smaller; class=titlea href=/uk/news.phpNews/a/td
/tr
tr valign=top
td style=font-size: smaller; class=title#149;/td
td style=font-size: smaller; class=titlea href=/uk/biography.phpBiography/a/td
/tr
tr valign=top
td style=font-size: smaller; class=title#149;/td
td style=font-size: smaller; class=titlea href=/uk/roles.phpRoles/a/td
/tr
tr valign=top
td style=font-size: smaller; class=title#149;/td
td style=font-size: smaller; class=titlea href=/uk/interviews.phpInterviews/a/td
/tr
tr valign=top
td style=font-size: smaller; class=title#149;/td
td style=font-size: smaller; class=titlea href=/uk/photogallery.phpPhotos/a/td
/tr
tr valign=top
td style=font-size: smaller; class=title#149;/td
td style=font-size: smaller; class=titlea href=http://rowanatkinson.org/videos/index.php?option=com_frontpageItemid=1Videos/a/td
/tr
tr valign=top
td style=font-size: smaller; class=title#149;/td
td style=font-size: smaller; class=titlea href=/uk/links.phpLinks/a/td
/tr
tr valign=top
td style=font-size: smaller; class=title#149;/td
td style=font-size: smaller; class=titlea href=/uk/contactus.phpContact Us /a/td
/tr
/table/td
/tr
/table |
|
 |
|  | | script type=text/javascript!--
google_ad_client = pub-7120633133907657;
google_ad_width = 728;
google_ad_height = 90;
google_ad_format = 728x90_as;
google_ad_type = text;
google_ad_channel =5636112618;
google_color_border = FFFFFF;
google_color_bg = FFFFFF;
google_color_link = 6A8BCC;
google_color_text = 000000;
google_color_url = 626262;
//--/script
script type=text/javascript
src=http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js
/scriptbrbr |
|
|
| Impromptu [1990] | ![Impromptu [1990]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51326GA7EYL._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Director: James Lapine Actors: Judy Davis, Anton Rodgers, Anna Massey, George Corraface, Julian Sands Studio: MGM Entertainment Category: DVD
List Price: £12.99 Buy New: £3.30 You Save: £9.69 (75%)
Buy New/Used from £2.80
Avg. Customer Rating:   (1 reviews) Sales Rank: 21774
Format: Pal Languages: Swedish (Subtitled), Portuguese (Subtitled), Finnish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Dutch (Subtitled), English (Original Language) Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over Media: DVD Running Time: 103 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
EAN: 5050070020274 ASIN: B00015N57E
Release Date: March 1, 2004 Theatrical Release Date: 1990 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review There are Victorian country-house shenanigans aplenty in IImpromptu/I: novelist George Sand (Judy Davis, affected but pretty charming) has eyes for Franz Liszt's young protege Chopin (Hugh Grant, solid as always, but burdened by a silly Polish accent and a script that never lets him stretch out), but various lovers, jealous rivals, and Chopin's own overdeveloped sense of propriety conspire to confound her. IImpromptu/I is witty but overlong--probably 20 minutes of hijinks and repartee, not to mention several completely gratuitous and redundant characters, could have been sliced from the film. p Davis plays Sand as an impetuous, overgrown tomboy, outraging her genteel hosts by wearing pants, chomping cigars, and falling off horses; her coterie of artist-friends assure us, in a series of naked plot devices, that she nonetheless has a heart of gold. It's all good silly fun, and about as feminist as your average Def Leppard video--the other two developed female characters are ugly stereotypes: a featherbrained, feckless social climber (Emma Thompson, who once again proves she's up for anything) and a spiteful, back-stabbing shrew (the ever-capable Bernadette Peters). Director James Lapine clearly belongs to the IDr Quinn: Medicine Woman/I school of historical accuracy, so don't expect to learn anything about the period or the artists themselves. --IMiles Bethany/I
|
| Customer Reviews:
  "You must win him as a man wins a woman." March 11, 2004 21 out of 22 found this review helpful
Poor Mallefille - you really have to pity him. Not only has he become the lover of the woman who employed him to tutor her children (and whose reputation is hard to take for his pathologically jealous nature anyway); only to be dumped again in short order, when she has had enough of him and his fits of jealousy. Not only does he have to watch her exchange witticisms and confidences with a host of other men, many of them belonging to the Parisian art circles where he himself will never be taken seriously (and God knows what else they may be exchanging or have exchanged in the past). Not only is he being bossed around by a woman who has taken a male pen name, insists on dressing in men's clothes, refuses to use a woman's saddle when riding (and what a horsewoman she is!) and prefers an afternoon out hunting to one sipping tea in the company of other ladies of society. No: after having taken all that, and having dared to demand the satisfaction to which he feels so justly entitled from her latest object of romantic interest, one feeble Polish composer named Chopin - only to see the guy fainting before the obligatory count has even gotten to "ten" and never raise his pistol at all - what does the wretched woman do? She seizes Chopin's weapon, fires at Mallefille, injures his arm and responds coolly, when he has finally overcome his shock and disbelief and inquires how, after all their time together, she could do such a thing: "It was easy. You're a menace to the future of art."pAs this movie would have it, the above scene (never to be revealed to Chopin, in order not to hurt his pride) brought about the final turning point in one of history's most famous love stories, the romance between prolific French writer George Sand (born 1804 as Amandine Aurore Lucile Dupin and married, in 1822, to Baron Casimir Dudevant, whom she left in 1835) and quintessential Romantic composer and Polish musical prodigy Frederic (Fryderyk) Chopin, six years her junior, who after a life-long struggle with his health succumbed to tuberculosis at the age of 39 years. While taking some liberties with the real course of events, "Impromptu" does portray their relationship up to their departure for Majorca, as well as the story's backdrop in 19th century Paris and rural France, with an admirably light touch and in loving detail; marvelously framed by a score consisting almost exclusively of pieces by Chopin himself. Judy Davis and a deliciously young and fragile Hugh Grant are the perfect embodiment of Sand and her "Chopinet" - she, a feisty no-nonsense woman used to fighting for her place in the world, who can nevertheless lose herself completely in Chopin's music, which she considers divine; he, sickly, uptight and at first severely taken aback by her manner which so contradicts accepted female behavior that he almost doubts she is a woman at all (a remark actually attributed to Chopin and resounding in the movie's interpretation of their initial encounter, after Sand has hidden in his room to hear him play and leaves her hiding place when he stops, pleading with him to continue, only to be rebuked by a seriously upset Chopin: "Rumor has it that you are a woman, so I must ask you to leave my private chambers. ... This is ridiculously improper - and frightening as well!")pAlthough Sand and Chopin were really introduced to each other by their joint friend Franz Liszt and his companion Marie d'Agoult (here portrayed with fervor and panache by Julian Sands and Bernadette Peters), the movie ingeniously places their first meeting onto the country estate of the Duke d'Antan and his wife Claudette, self-declared patroness of the arts (played by an exuberant Emma Thompson, who milks the role for all it's worth and then some), who has assembled the cream of the Parisian arts scene; besides Chopin, Liszt and Marie most notably Sand's former lover, poet Alfred de Musset (Mandy Patinkin) and painter Eugene Delacroix (Ralph Brown). Sand, who is actually not among the invitees, spontaneously proceeds to invite herself when she hears that Chopin will be among the guests, because she has wanted to meet him ever since she first heard him play in the Paris salon of Baroness Laginsky (Elizabeth Spriggs) - thus guaranteeing plenty of tumultuous scenes between herself and de Musset as well as between the latter and Mallefille (Georges Corraface), who (likewise uninvited) appears shortly after her in dogged pursuit of the woman who has recently dumped him; a fact he is patently unwilling to accept. pAlthough initially rejected by Chopin, Sand is not in the least willing to give up on him; and she greedily accepts Marie's advice after their return to Paris: "He is not a man; he's a woman. ... You must win him as a man wins a woman. If anyone can do it, you can." And while Marie's counsel is far less disinterested and well-meaning than George thinks, in the end her new tactics do the trick; albeit only after a series of heated encounters between the two would-be lovers, Chopin and de Musset and Chopin and Marie; and not before Sand has lost her mother (Anna Massey), her most undying champion. Chopin and Sand eventually become friends and - we are told - finally lovers after Mallefille has forever left the battlefield in shame.pAlthough there would be an estrangement between the star-crossed lovers shortly before Chopin's death, he did remain, as Sand wrote in her autobiography, the greatest love of her life; and in turn, the years they spent together are considered by many the most fertile years of his musical career. They both will live forever in their works - and this movie, which unfortunately went virtually undiscovered upon its 1991 release, is a wonderful, gentle reminder of the wealth of creativity and emotion they had to share.
|
|
| br| script type=text/javascript!--
google_ad_client = pub-7120633133907657;
google_ad_width = 728;
google_ad_height = 90;
google_ad_format = 728x90_as;
google_ad_type = text;
google_ad_channel =5636112618;
google_color_border = FFFFFF;
google_color_bg = FFFFFF;
google_color_link = 6A8BCC;
google_color_text = 000000;
google_color_url = 626262;
//--/script
script type=text/javascript
src=http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js
/scriptbrbr |
|
|
|  | |