Die Geschichte der Kurtisane und Tänzerin Emma Hamilton, ihrer Beziehungen zu Sir William Hamilton und Admiral Horatio Nelson, sowie von ihrem Aufstieg und Fall während der Napoleonischen Kr... Alles lesenDie Geschichte der Kurtisane und Tänzerin Emma Hamilton, ihrer Beziehungen zu Sir William Hamilton und Admiral Horatio Nelson, sowie von ihrem Aufstieg und Fall während der Napoleonischen Kriege.Die Geschichte der Kurtisane und Tänzerin Emma Hamilton, ihrer Beziehungen zu Sir William Hamilton und Admiral Horatio Nelson, sowie von ihrem Aufstieg und Fall während der Napoleonischen Kriege.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- 1 Oscar gewonnen
- 4 Gewinne & 3 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Crowd member in Calais
- (Nicht genannt)
- Orderly
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Where does Laurence Olivier come in? We all rented this movie to see the married couple up on the screen together, right? He plays a highly respected soldier, introduced to Vivien through her husband. He's also married, but he's drawn to the beautiful lady nonetheless. This classic celebrates forbidden love, all with the comfort of knowing that the pair who can't have each other onscreen can go home together off screen. They're both very beautiful people, and although Larry has a slight impediment in this movie, it's still a treat to see pretty people falling in love. All tied together with a very pretty, sad, and romantic theme by Miklos Rozsa, this is a classic not to be missed - especially if you like Scarlett O'Hara and wish she'd made more movies.
At any rate, my main interest in seeing this film was that I learned it was Winston Churchill's favorite movie during World War II, dealing as it does with the British admiralty and the threat of war and domination. As Lady Hamilton, Vivien Leigh narrates the story and since it is told from her viewpoint, she manages to dominate with her beauty and acting prowess. How she rises from abject poverty to become Lord Nelson's mistress makes up the bulk of the story--which sometimes seems a bit unbelievable. However, since both stars were at the time married to others, one can easily see that these roles suited both of them to perfection. Surely, if anyone could identify with these characters, they could!
Slow moving in spots, handsomely photographed in black and white, it is interesting to note how very British Leigh actually was when not assuming a more American way of talking (as in 'GWTW') -- proof indeed that she was a good actress. Of all of her films after "Gone with the Wind", I prefer her in 'Waterloo Bridge' (with Robert Taylor). Following that, I would choose this one.
Some of the ships are obvious models--but other than that, the production is a handsome one. Worth seeing for the two stars alone.
Vivien Leigh is in almost every frame, and completely dominates the film. The story is all about Lady Hamilton and her unhappy marriage, her love for Nelson, and the consequences of leaving her stodgy husband to live adulterously and with the man she loved. (He was already famous before Trafalger, this was the "Monicagate" of its day) It's a fine soap opera, centered around a performance that can only be called luminous.
The camera doesn't just love Leigh, it gets down on its knees and worships her. Even in GWTW she never looked so unbelievably beautiful, and she's also completely charming and sensitive. The great Sir Laurence Olivier doesn't have a chance, he barely registers. He's handicapped by a serious lack of screen time and a dreadful red pony-tail wig, but the director seems to have decided to give him short shrift so he can squeeze in a few more exquisite close-ups of Leigh being enchanting. And she is, oh is she ever...
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- WissenswertesReportedly Sir Winston Churchill's favorite movie. He claimed to have seen it 83 times.
- PatzerThe UK had no formal registrations of births prior to 1837. The only records were those of baptisms at parish churches.
- Zitate
Emma: What are those bells?
Lord Horatio Nelson: Have you forgotten what night this is? Last of 1799; eight bells for the old year, and eight for the new. Happy New Year, darling.
Emma: Happy New Year.
Lord Horatio Nelson: The dawn of a new century.
Emma: 1800. How strange it sounds.
Lord Horatio Nelson: What a century it's been: Marlborough rode to war, and Washington crossed the Delaware. Louis XVI, and Marie Antoinette. The last of the Stuarts. Peter the Great. Voltaire. Clive of India. Bonaparte...
Emma: ...Nelson.
- VerbindungenEdited into Robur - Der Herr der sieben Kontinente (1961)
- SoundtracksFor He's a Jolly Good Fellow
(Traditional)(uncredited)
[Sung by the croud at Nelson's return to England after his Tour of Europe]
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