I had this same sense of injustice in my mind as I watched Marie Antoinette. Antoinette did not choose her course. She is sent off from her home so that Austria and France can have an alliance through her marriage to Louis XVI (Jason Schwartzman). When she arrives, you can sense her loneliness. She walks up the aisle of the court like an enthusiastic teenager because she is one! Her new courtiers seem appalled by her. Does she have to smile so much? She greets everyone with enthusiasm, which is quickly quenched by the constant gossip and disapproving looks. This is a society based on backbiting and social climbing. You get up by pushing others down, and Antoinette never fully accepts this rule, which gives her more appeal and eventually leads to her downfall.
Dunst plays the role beautifully; she is little more than a child. Her husband doesn't seem too set on making the aforementioned heir, but instead of just sitting around for him to change his mind, she has fun. She claps at the opera (scandalous; applause wasn't allowed!) and spends money on shoes, clothing, and jewelry of all colors. That she does this is totally understandable. Why shouldn't she shop when her husband denies her night after night? Jason Schwartzman plays a great dauphin-and-later-king. He is timid and boring as can be. Antoinette and he later develop a comradery, which is more of a friendship. The two are friendly and affectionate to one another, but it had the chemistry of a Julia Roberts and Rupert Everett in My Best Friend's Wedding.
This is not a movie where a bunch of stuff happens. Stuff does happen, but it is watching Antoinette develop into her queen-self, which is the joy of this movie. She never becomes the sexless queen like Queen Elizabeth (think Cate Blanchett in the last moments of 1998's Elizabeth), but she does develop a royal demeanor without losing her femininity. At the end, when the French storm the Bastille, Antoinette refuses to leave her King's side, proving her strength and endurance.
A word in the soundtrack: yes, Yes, YES, Yes! I love the soundtrack. When the newly crowned King and his Queen walk down the stairs to the Cure's Plainsong, I actually shed a tear. It was so great to hear some of these songs come back to life.
All in all, Marie Antoinette is a masterpiece, which rates as one of my favorite period pieces, along with the Colin Firth Pride and Prejudiceand The Affair of the Necklace.
Published by Lindsey Dunn
My whole life, I have been overweight and didn't understand why. In 2011, I discovered the Medifast program and Take Shape for Life. I lost 43 pounds and started living. Now I'm a health coach and want to... View profile
- Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette: The Noisy Journal of a Dying WorldA review of Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette
- Sophia Coppola's Marie Antoinette: Great Cast, Wonderful Costumes. What Else?Sophia Coppola's new film Marie Antoinette has a great cast, wonderful costumes, and the Palace of Versailles... so will you actually get your money's worth at this film? Read and find out.
- Celebrity Profile: Hayden Christensen of Star WarsAlthough known for his place in the Star Wars chapters, Hayden Christensen has seen success long before his role of Anakin Skywalker.
Fall Movie Previews: Little Children, The Departed and OthersPart two of my BIG four part series called Jetlag Democracy's BIG Fall Movie Preview.- Is Kirsten Dunst in Rehab or Not?I'm about as confused as most of you probably are at this point, a well respected news source, Reuters, claims that celebrity websites are stating that Kirsten Dunst has checked herself into rehab for "undisclosed rea...
- Marie Antoinette Movie Review: A Dreamy Confection
- Coppola Muses Historical in the Misunderstood Film Marie Antoinette
- Marie Antoinette: Visual Excellence
- Marie Antoinette: A Film by Sofia Coppola
- My Review on the Movie Marie Antoinette
- Sofia Coppola's The Virgin Suicides
- Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette: The First Feature-Length Music Video?



