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IMDbPro

The Favourite - Intrigen und Irrsinn

Originaltitel: The Favourite
  • 2018
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 59 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,5/10
250.522
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
345
805
Rachel Weisz, Emma Stone, and Olivia Colman in The Favourite - Intrigen und Irrsinn (2018)
In early 18th century England, a troubled Queen Anne (Olivia Colman) occupies the throne and her close friend Lady Sarah (Rachel Weisz) governs the country in her stead. When a new servant Abigail (Emma Stone) arrives, her charm endears her to Sarah and the Queen.
trailer wiedergeben1:48
24 Videos
99+ Fotos
Kostüm, DramaPsychologisches DramaSchwarze KomödieZeitraum: DramaBiographieDramaGeschichteKomödie

Im frühen 18. Jahrhundert England, eine zerbrechliche Königin Anne nimmt den Thron und ihr enger Freund, Lady Sarah, regelt das Land in ihrer Stelle. Kommt ein neuer Diener, Abigail, ihrem C... Alles lesenIm frühen 18. Jahrhundert England, eine zerbrechliche Königin Anne nimmt den Thron und ihr enger Freund, Lady Sarah, regelt das Land in ihrer Stelle. Kommt ein neuer Diener, Abigail, ihrem Charme beliebt macht sie Sarah.Im frühen 18. Jahrhundert England, eine zerbrechliche Königin Anne nimmt den Thron und ihr enger Freund, Lady Sarah, regelt das Land in ihrer Stelle. Kommt ein neuer Diener, Abigail, ihrem Charme beliebt macht sie Sarah.

  • Regie
    • Yorgos Lanthimos
  • Drehbuch
    • Deborah Davis
    • Tony McNamara
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Olivia Colman
    • Emma Stone
    • Rachel Weisz
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,5/10
    250.522
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    345
    805
    • Regie
      • Yorgos Lanthimos
    • Drehbuch
      • Deborah Davis
      • Tony McNamara
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Olivia Colman
      • Emma Stone
      • Rachel Weisz
    • 1.3KBenutzerrezensionen
    • 465Kritische Rezensionen
    • 91Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • 1 Oscar gewonnen
      • 187 Gewinne & 352 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos24

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    The Rise of Emma Stone
    Clip 3:14
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    Which Roles Did Rachel Weisz Turn Down?
    Clip 3:25
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    5 Favorites From 2019 Oscars

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    Topbesetzung64

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    Olivia Colman
    Olivia Colman
    • Queen Anne
    Emma Stone
    Emma Stone
    • Abigail
    Rachel Weisz
    Rachel Weisz
    • Lady Sarah
    Nicholas Hoult
    Nicholas Hoult
    • Harley
    Emma Delves
    • Queen's Maid
    Faye Daveney
    Faye Daveney
    • Sarah's Maid
    Paul Swaine
    • Wanking Man
    Jennifer White
    • Mrs Meg
    Lilly-Rose Stevens
    • Sally
    Denise Mack
    • Kitchen Servant
    James Smith
    James Smith
    • Godolphin
    Mark Gatiss
    Mark Gatiss
    • Lord Marlborough
    Horatio
    • Fastest Duck in the City
    Willem Dalby
    • Central Tory Booker
    Edward Aczel
    • Earl of Stratford
    Carolyn Saint-Pé
    Carolyn Saint-Pé
    • Madam Tournee
    John Locke
    John Locke
    • Eviction Courtier
    Everal A Walsh
    Everal A Walsh
    • Servant, Upstairs
    • (as Everal Walsh)
    • Regie
      • Yorgos Lanthimos
    • Drehbuch
      • Deborah Davis
      • Tony McNamara
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen1.3K

    7,5250.5K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    8SnoopyStyle

    delicioius

    English Queen Anne (Olivia Colman) is fighting a war in France. Lady Sarah (Rachel Weisz) is her favorite courtesan and is the power behind the throne. Her cousin Abigail (Emma Stone) arrives looking for a job after her family had fallen in status. Sarah looks down upon her and sends her to be a maid. She is being whipped when Sarah suddenly needs her to alleviates the Queen's gout pains. Leader of the opposition, Mr. Harley (Nicholas Hoult), is pushing for an immediate peace treaty while Sarah uses her power over the Queen to raise taxes to continue the war led by her husband at the front.

    This is a wonderful competition of female relationships. It is deliciously passive-aggressive. All three performances are amazing. The visual style is impeccable. It is a movie of singular vision and great actors.
    8AlsExGal

    acidic dark comedy/costume drama

    In the court of British Queen Anne (Olivia Colman), Lady Churchill (Rachel Weisz) and her lowly cousin Abigail (Emma Stone) conduct a battle of wits to become the ailing Queen's favorite, ensuring wealth, prestige and power.

    I enjoyed the other movies directed by Lanthimos that I've seen (Dogtooth, The Lobster, The Killing of a Sacred Deer), but he strikes new ground here, turning in his most accessible movie to date and perhaps his most polished. There are shades of Kubrick in the editing and cinematography, both of which are excellent. The use of natural light and distorted lenses is visually interesting. The costumes are also top notch, as one would expect from a period piece.

    The performances are the main event, with all three women turning in at or near career bests. Colman won the Best Actress Oscar, but her's is the most in line with a supporting turn, as the film is told from the points-of-view of Weisz and Stone. Their increasingly nasty one upmanship is hilarious. Lanthimos throws in some anachronistic touches (the dance scene is very amusing), the dialogue is sharp as a dagger, and the film isn't afraid to go grotesque. Recommended.
    6Prismark10

    Palace intrigue

    If The Favourite had music by Michael Nyman. I would had said that it was directed by Peter Greenaway. I do think Greenaway was a big influence with the style of the film, as well as the Oscar winning Tom Jones that lent it some naughtiness.

    Director Yorgos Lanthimos adds a rich period setting and visual flourishes. He keeps his camera moving and has lot of fisheye views.

    Underneath it all is a power play between three women in 18th Century England. Two of them vie to be Queen Anne's favourite even if this means massaging more than her legs.

    Abigail (Emma Stone) has fallen on hard times. She arrives at Court hoping for employment from her cousin, Lady Sarah (Rachel Weisz.) She is the Queen's trusted adviser, lady in waiting, confidante and even lover.

    Queen Anne (Olivia Colman) is ill. She has gout, she is mentally unstable. She lost 17 children and she has 17 rabbits that she plays with. Governing the country is something she finds difficult especially as Britain is at war with France.

    Abigail wants to ingratiate herself with Queen Anne and climb the greasy pole to secure her position. Over time Abigail and Lady Sarah fight, dirtily to be the Queen's favourite.

    The Favourite is a crude, grimy, seedy, bawdy drama in tone and language. Lanthimos is certainly not interested in showing a wholesome chocolate box portrait of 18th century life.

    This is a sumptuous looking costume drama about fragile cruel people and egos. People who are desperate to get to the top and remain there.

    The film unravels in the second half and gets bogged down. At the end Abigail may not be quiet in control as she thinks, I did think the ending was weak and disappointing.
    7Xstal

    She Who Pulls the Strings...

    You're the puppet master of the Queen of England, it's taken time for you to conjure such a great hand, with your powers and persuasion, you're oratorical vibrations, you fan the flames enough, to fulfil what you've planned. Alas, poor judgement has increased your cousin's standing, now she's the one who's got the monarch writhing and panting, a lesson must be taught, she must be removed from this court, with authority restored and made longstanding.

    Lots of scheming and devious deceitfulness at the court of Queen Anne as two competitive opportunists compete for the sovereign's ear (amongst other things). Great performances and brilliantly directed and presented.
    7Bertaut

    Fans of Yorgos Lanthimos will love it. I'm not sure about everyone else

    The Favourite, the seventh feature from Greek auteur Yorgos Lanthimos, is a film that eschews both convention and expectation. On the other hand, it's also Lanthimos's most accessible by a country mile. A savage morality play, a camp comedy of manners, a Baroque tragedy, an allegorical study of the corruptive nature of power - it's all of these and yet none of them. A film I liked but didn't love, on the one hand, it's too long, the plot too threadbare, and the metaphors and allegories too ill defined. On the other, the acting is flawless, it looks amazing, the first half is very, very funny, and the end is very, very dark, with the last shot one of the most haunting/disturbing images I've seen in a long time.

    Set in England in 1708, the film tells the story of Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough (an icy Rachel Weisz) and one-time scullery maid Abigail Hill (Emma Stone, charting a course from doe-eyed ingénue to vicious Machiavellian intrigant) and their increasingly bitter rivalry for the affections of Queen Anne (an absolutely mesmerising Olivia Colman), and is the first film Lanthimos has directed which neither he nor Efthimis Filippou wrote (the script was originally written by Deborah Davis in 1998 and later refined by Tony McNamara). Although it deals with real historical personages and events, historians probably won't be too thrilled to learn that Lanthimos is relatively uninterested in either historical actuality or socio-political contextualisation (to say nothing of the slam dancing). This is a story about a love triangle, with everything else just the background noise against which that triangle plays out.

    And it is most definitely a Yorgos Lanthimos film, with his peculiar Weltanschauung omnipresent. The emotionless and monotone delivery of dialogue has been scaled back considerably from The Lobster: Eine unkonventionelle Liebesgeschichte (2015) and The Killing of a Sacred Deer (2017), but everything else you'd expect is here - the pseudo-omniscient judgemental glare; the dark absurdist humour; the formal rigidity; the emotional isolation of the characters; the surrealism; the games of psychological one-upmanship; the alienation of the audience; the thematic centrality of shifting power relations; the lack of distinction between poignancy and joviality; the use of self-contained and closed off pocket universes where characters must play by rules differing from those of the outside world; intimate familial conflict (except in bigger rooms than in his previous films); and a disorienting score. Similarly, whilst The Lobster was a savage dystopian-set allegory for discipline and conformity, The Favourite is a merciless satire of decadence and pettiness, taking in such additional themes as class, gender, love, lust, duty, loyalty, partisan politics, patriarchal hegemony, and women behaving just as appallingly as men.

    As one would expect from Lanthimos, the film is aesthetically flawless, with many of the compositions having the appearance of a fête galante painting, so meticulously integrated are Sandy Powell's costume design, Fiona Crombie's production design, and Robbie Ryan's cinematography. Powell's costumes are historically inaccurate, but thematically revealing, with the situation of the characters at any given moment directly influencing the design, especially in relation to Abigail as she climbs the social ladder. In a more general sense, the black-and-white colour scheme of much of the wardrobe contrasts magnificently with Crombie's predominantly brown production design, with the actors effortlessly standing out from the backgrounds.

    Of Ryan's photography, perhaps the most impressive feat is that, despite the many scenes tracking characters through rooms, up stairs, and out doorways, there's not a single Steadicam shot anywhere in the film. He also makes copious use of 6mm fish-eye lenses, which distort the spaces the characters occupy whilst also showing much more of the environment than a normal lens, creating the sense of characters lost within an overload of background visual detail. Combined with the whip pans seen throughout the film, the cumulative effect is a world rendered strange, a place of distortion and unnatural compositions. As with most of Lanthimos' work, the film also uses natural light, which makes for some stunning candle-lit night-time compositions, partially recalling the paintings of someone like Jean-Antoine Watteau or, even moreso, Georges de La Tour.

    In terms of acting, there really are no words to describe just how good Colman is. Utterly inhabiting the character, she is able to elicit empathy mere moments after behaving thoroughly shamefully, communicating a sense of both tragic inevitability and a childlike refusal to accept reality. The character could easily have been a grotesque villain or a pitiful broken shell, but Colman finds a nobler middle ground, straddling both interpretations without fully committing to either, moving from one to the other seamlessly throughout the film. Yes, she can be a horrible person with appalling manners and questionable hygiene, but she is also deeply lonely, a survivor who has lost 17 children in childbirth, a woman whose health has made her old before her time, a tragic figure too naïve to see how badly she is being manipulated by Sarah and Abigail. Rather than trying to downplay the contradictory facets of the character, Colman leans into them, illuminating Anne's humanity amongst her least appealing characteristics, and finding both wit and pathos in a character whose mercurial nature and excessive neediness could easily have rendered her the film's antagonist. It truly is one of the finest on-screen performances in a long time.

    The film's most salient theme, one could argue its very raison d'être, is the dynamic of gender politics. For starters, it's headlined by three actresses (something which is still rare enough as to be notable), whilst the men are portrayed as petty, vainglorious idiots. Men, in general, are background players, existing only to be mocked, exploited, and duped - with their ridiculous wigs and heavy makeup, they exist only to support the women. However, what's especially interesting about the film's depiction of gender is that the world of women is anything but a utopia. Yes, it's relatively free of toxic masculinity and the male gaze, but in most other aspects, there's no real difference between the matriarchy and the patriarchy. Sure, the women are much smarter than the men who surround them, but they are no less greedy or cruel. At the film's post-première press conference at the Venice Film Festival, Lanthimos explained, "what we tried to do is portray women as human beings. Because of the prevalent male gaze in cinema, women are portrayed as housewives, girlfriends...Our small contribution is we're just trying to show them as complex and wonderful and horrific as they are, like other human beings." Similarly, when asked by the Hollywood Reporter if a film about females treating each other badly might be considered a setback in a post #MeToo era, Colman explained, "How can it set women back to prove that women fart and vomit and hate and love and do all the things men do? All human beings are the same. We're all multifaceted, many-layered, disgusting and gorgeous and powerful and weak and filthy and brilliant. That's what's nice. It doesn't make women an old-fashioned thing of delicacy."

    As regards criticisms, although I personally wouldn't class them as flaws, some people will probably dislike the same things that many have disliked in Lanthimos's previous work - cold formal rigidity, perverse sense of humour, and irredeemable characters being irredeemably horrible to one another. There will be those who find the obviously intentional anachronisms too much, whilst others will take umbrage with the disregard for historical authenticity. For me, whilst I admire Lanthimos for trying to bring something new to his oeuvre, especially when compared to Sacred Deer (which just repeated the beats of The Lobster), I felt the film was oftentimes trying to work its way through an identity crisis, unsure of exactly what kind of tone to settle on. I had similar feelings about the allegories that run throughout, and are never what you would call fully fleshed out. Obviously, it's a treatise on power and the ridiculous opulence of royalty, but that's not exactly an untapped issue in cinema. Additionally, one of my biggest problems with Sacred Deer was how utterly pointless it felt, and although I got a lot more out of The Favourite, I had something of the same reaction to it. It could also be argued that the characters are a little two dimensional, and filmgoers who need a protagonist to latch onto, someone to root for, will be left rudderless.

    Superior to Alpen (2011) and Sacred Deer, but not a patch on Dogtooth (2009) or The Lobster, The Favourite will probably attract a sizable unprepared audience because of awards buzz, positive reviews, and excellent trailer. Undoubtedly, for a lot of people, this will be their first exposure to Lanthimos, and I can only imagine what people expecting a Merchant Ivory costume drama will make of it all. Neither morally enlightening nor historically respectful, The Favourite offers a bleak assessment of humanity's core drives; not Lanthimos's bleakest, but a hell of a lot more nihilistic than an average multiplex goer will be used to. The characters within the film live in a milieu of egotism, narcissism, sexual cruelty, psychological bullying, greed, and hunger for power. There's barely a hint of sentimentality, and very little that could be called morally righteous. I would have liked it to have more meat on its bones, but at the same time, one cannot deny that it presents something of a faithful looking-glass, as Lanthimos continues to corner the market in pointing out not just humanity's worst foibles, but its most egregious eccentricities and lamentable character defects.

    The Surprising Films That Inspired 'The Favourite'

    The Surprising Films That Inspired 'The Favourite'

    Emma Stone, Olivia Colman, and Rachel Weisz share the unexpected movies that inspired The Favourite.
    Check out our interviews
    Editorial Image
    1:35

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    Zeitraum: Drama
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    Biographie
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
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    Geschichte
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman - Die Legende von Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Komödie

    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Most of the costumes and wigs were made from scratch. The budget was very tight, so renting them was not feasible. The early 18th century is rarely depicted on film, so few costume houses had much appropriate stock available. Clothes and wigs were custom built, then deconstructed and re-used in other scenes.
    • Patzer
      In the film, Robert Harley is a young man. In real life, he was 47-49 years old during this period. His youthful portrayal is probably inspired by William Pitt the Younger, who became Prime Minister at 24 in 1783.
    • Zitate

      Lady Sarah: Abigail has done this. She does not love you.

      Queen Anne: Because how could anyone? She wants nothing from me. Unlike you.

      Lady Sarah: She wants nothing from you. And yet somehow she is a lady. With 2000 a year, and Harley sits on your knee most nights.

      Queen Anne: I wish you could love me as she does!

      Lady Sarah: You wish me to lie to you? "Oh you look like an angel fallen from heaven, your majesty." No. Sometimes, you look like a badger. And you can rely on me to tell you.

      Queen Anne: Why?

      Lady Sarah: Because I will not lie! That is love!

    • Crazy Credits
      "Fastest Duck in the City : Horatio"
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Early Oscar Contenders You NEED to See (2018)
    • Soundtracks
      Concerto Grosso, Op. 6, No. 7 in B - Flat Major, I. Largo
      Composed by George Frideric Handel

      Performed by Alexander Titov & Orchestra

      Classical Music Studio, St Petersburg

      Courtesy of Cugate Ltd.

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    FAQ22

    • How long is The Favourite?Powered by Alexa
    • Is Lady Marlborough's first dance historically accurate? It seems to me more like a swing than a baroque dance.
    • Why did the Queen slap Lady Sarah?

    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 24. Januar 2019 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Irland
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Site
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • The Favourite
    • Drehorte
      • Hampton Court Palace, East Molesey, Surrey, England, Vereinigtes Königreich(Tudor kitchens)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Fox Searchlight Pictures
      • Film4
      • Waypoint Entertainment
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 15.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 34.366.783 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 422.410 $
      • 25. Nov. 2018
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 95.918.706 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 59 Min.(119 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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