Marie
Antoinette is a 2006 historical drama, written and directed by Sofia Coppola,
starring Kirsten Dunst, Jason Schwartzman and Rose Byrne. The film is a highly
loose adaptation of the life of the French queen, and represents the life of
the queen, from the age of 14 when she was promised to the dauphin, the future
king of France, up until the French revolution, when she and her husband were
forced to leave Versailles.
The film is
a highly loose adaptation, and style clearly takes place over substance in this
adaptation. Kirsten Dunst shines as the young and troubled young queen. The film
is a highly humanizing portrait of the young queen’s life, and elements of the
film are intentionally modernized in order to humanize the characters involved,
rather than portraying Marie Antoinette as a selfish and spoilt girl, Coppola
presents her as a deeply flawed young woman, entirely cut off from reality, and
trapped within a world she had no control over. Jason Schwartzman also stars as
Louis XVI. The film also has the distinction of introducing the world to Rose
Byrne, who plays Yolande de Polastron, a beautiful and extravagant duchess, a
favorite of Marie-Antoinette.
The film is
a visually stunning and lavish representation of pre-revolutionary France, and
of the court of Versailles, the production had unprecedented access to the
court of Versailles and its grounds, and it is of huge advantage to the film.
The film is infused with the essence of Versailles, something which could not
be achieved if the sets had been constructed for the film. The film is also
lavishly costumed, and won an Oscar in 2007 for Best Costume Design. The film
often sacrifices historical realism for character development, and the clothes
are used intelligently to give us an idea of who these characters really are as
people, rather than simply putting them on a pedestal. Marie-Antoinette’s
character is developed largely through costume, at the beginning of the film,
her costumes are used to show her naiveté and innocence, she wears dresses in
blue and pink, with little hats and necklaces, her make-up is also highly
subdued at this point, showing that she has not yet reached an age of sexual
maturity, and that she is essentially a little girl. Towards the end of the
film, as Marie-Antoinette becomes more rebellious and free, her style changes
as well. Her make-up becomes darker, more flirtatious, with redder lipstick and
more blush, showing her blossoming into a freer and emancipated woman. Towards
the end of the film her wardrobe changes also, and she begins wearing darker
colors, more daring silhouettes. She also begins to dress in a far freer way;
she begins to wear simple, shepherdess dresses, showing her desire for a more
liberated, less conservative existence.
Supporting
characters are also introduced largely by their wardrobe, Madame Du Barry, a
prostitute and favorite of the king is shown with dark defined make-up, and
modern avant-garde clothing, looking highly unlike the rest of the nobility,
ensuring that she is seen by the audience as an outsider, given that she is not
a true member of the nobility. Costume is also used to show the sheer
extravagance of the royal family, Manolo Blahnik created hundreds of pairs of
shoes for the production, and at one point in the film, we see a pair of modern
Chuck Taylor’s, in pale blue under a table, showing that Marie Antoinette is essentially
still a young teenager, even if she is the Dauphine of France. Also important
in the film are wigs, Marie-Antoinette brought in a fashion for wigs in France,
and in the film Marie-Antoinette beginning to wear wigs is a turning point in
the film, as her extravagance begins to become inappropriate. Her wigs also
show her innocence, that even though she was a grown woman by this point, even
though she was queen of France with responsibilities and children, she was
still immature and childlike, willing to try odd and even downright ridiculous
things.
The film is
a highly humanizing portrait of the doomed queen; Marie-Antoinette
is portrayed as being entirely cut off from reality, Versailles is depicted as
an entirely cut off world, a world in which she was endlessly trailed by
courtiers and servants. Marie-Antoinette is portrayed as a woman who couldn’t
possibly know about the troubles of the working people of France, because she
was entirely cutoff from reality, and as a woman who desperately longed for a
simpler life. She is described as essentially a woman who was in the wrong
place at the wrong time, and who cannot be blamed for the financial woes of
France. Marie-Antoinette is shown to be a woman who cares deeply for her
country, despite not having been born in France, and as a woman who accepts the
position she has been put in despite it not being her fault.
Louis XVI
however is portrayed in a highly unsympathetic light; he is shown to be
pompous, unfriendly and uncaring towards his wife. His inability to consummate
the marriage is of considerable pain to his wife, and yet he makes no attempt
to console her, the film also places the financial ruin of France solely in the
hands of Louis XVI, given that it was him who sent troops to America to fight the
British, a move inspired wholly by ego. The film’s use of music is also superb,
as is traditional for Sofia Coppola films; the film uses a soundtrack of new
age and post punk music, which although anachronistic, really allows us to
empathize with the characters. The use of anachronistic music, which although
being de rigueur today, was relatively unheard of in the early 2000’s, allows
us to see Marie-Antoinette as a young teen, and gives us a way to relate to the
film.
Although being lightweight and frivolous,
Marie Antoinette is a well-produced, visually sumptuous and deftly acted drama;
the film finds a way to allow us to empathize with these historical characters,
by taking them off their pedestals and humanising them greatly. Marie Antoinette is a harrowing and
personal view of the doomed queen, a woman who despite being spoilt and
selfish, is not guilty of either the financial ruin of France or the downfall
of the monarchy, and who has been made to pay for the faults and flaws of the
monarchy as an institution. Sofia Coppola shows that she again is a highly
capable director with a real voice and opinion, and is successfully able to
translate this overly told story to the big screen, giving it a new perspective
and enlightenment. Rating: A
Marie-Antoinette: Am I to be Austrian or the Dauphine of France?
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