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Die große Liebe der Lady Caroline

Originaltitel: Lady Caroline Lamb
  • 1972
  • PG
  • 2 Std. 3 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,5/10
603
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Die große Liebe der Lady Caroline (1972)
Zeitraum: DramaDramaGeschichteRomanze

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA noblewoman doomed to a loveless marriage falls into a scandalous affair with the dashing Lord Byron.A noblewoman doomed to a loveless marriage falls into a scandalous affair with the dashing Lord Byron.A noblewoman doomed to a loveless marriage falls into a scandalous affair with the dashing Lord Byron.

  • Regie
    • Robert Bolt
  • Drehbuch
    • Robert Bolt
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Sarah Miles
    • Jon Finch
    • Richard Chamberlain
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    5,5/10
    603
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Robert Bolt
    • Drehbuch
      • Robert Bolt
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Sarah Miles
      • Jon Finch
      • Richard Chamberlain
    • 24Benutzerrezensionen
    • 9Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Nominiert für 3 BAFTA Awards
      • 3 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Fotos32

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    Topbesetzung57

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    Sarah Miles
    Sarah Miles
    • Lady Caroline Lamb
    Jon Finch
    Jon Finch
    • William Lamb
    Richard Chamberlain
    Richard Chamberlain
    • Lord Byron
    John Mills
    John Mills
    • Canning
    Margaret Leighton
    Margaret Leighton
    • Lady Melbourne
    Pamela Brown
    Pamela Brown
    • Lady Bessborough
    Silvia Monti
    Silvia Monti
    • Miss Milbanke
    Ralph Richardson
    Ralph Richardson
    • George IV
    Laurence Olivier
    Laurence Olivier
    • Duke of Wellington
    Caterina Boratto
    Caterina Boratto
    • Contessa
    Peter Bull
    Peter Bull
    • Minister
    Charles Carson
    Charles Carson
    • Potter
    Sonia Dresdel
    Sonia Dresdel
    • Lady Pont
    Nicholas Field
    • St. John
    Felicity Gibson
    • Girl in Blue
    Robert Harris
    Robert Harris
    • Apothecary
    Richard Hurndall
    Richard Hurndall
    • Radical
    Paddy Joyce
    Paddy Joyce
    • Irish Housekeeper
    • Regie
      • Robert Bolt
    • Drehbuch
      • Robert Bolt
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen24

    5,5603
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    5bkoganbing

    George And Caro

    Screenwriter Robert Bolt who wrote such great work for David Lean in Ryan's Daughter, Doctor Zhivago, and Lawrence of Arabia and for Fred Zinnemann in A Man For All Seasons, tried his one and only hand at directing in Lady Caroline Lamb. The problem was that screenwriter Bolt was done wrong by director Bolt. Especially let down was Bolt's then wife Sarah Miles.

    Miles who when directed by David Lean in Ryan's Daughter turned in such a spirited performance, was not given the same inspiration for Lady Caroline Lamb. Whatever else Caroline Lamb was she was not dull to be around. Miles does all right, but the rest of the cast just seems to walk through the parts, even the two guys playing the men in her life, Richard Chamberlain as Lord Byron and Jon Finch as William Lamb the future Lord Melbourne and Prime Minister of Great Britain.

    I think these guys and the rest of the cast knew this was a vehicle for Miles the minute they walked on set and performed accordingly. Even Sir Laurence Olivier as the Duke of Wellington is strangely lifeless. Of course after seeing Christopher Plummer as the perfect Wellington in Waterloo, I'm kind of spoiled.

    In real life Melbourne was hardly an injured party. He had a couple of other scandals attached to his name that had nothing to do with Lady Caroline. He never let the grass grow under his feet. Byron was notorious all over Europe for bedding everything in skirts within reach. It's likely he did want to call it a day with Caro, but probably because she was crazier than him.

    Still the escapades of George and Caro titillated all of Georgian Great Britain, but they don't move the audience a bit here.
    KateC49

    It is 40 years old after all...

    I first saw this film on holiday in London c1973 when it was first released. It was showing at the prestigious Odean Cinema in London & I recall at the time this film was such a 'big deal' that the we were given (or bought) a large glossy souvenir program that came with the film. It was treated like we were attending the opera or theater. Look at the line up of big names who were a part of this. Laurence Olivier, John Mills, Ralph Richardson, Margaret Leighton & 'super star' Richard Chamberlain after his 'Dr Kildare' fame.

    Forty years on it all seems rather ordinary and we know that Bolt was rather loose with the historical facts. But I still enjoyed seeing it again remembering that first time I saw it all those years ago. In fact, some of the best work Richard Chamberlain would do was in the 5-6 years he lived in the UK and about the time he made this. And even now I give it an 8/10
    6Bunuel1976

    LADY CAROLINE LAMB (Robert Bolt, 1972) **1/2

    This was one of four high-profile yet maligned films, all dating from the same year, which were slapped with the dreaded BOMB rating by the "Leonard Maltin Movie Guide"; conversely, the more conservative Leslie Halliwell was generally more receptive to their old-fashioned qualities! Anyway, two of these (including the one under review) had been very hard to come by, though both were quite recently shown on Italian TV – and, in fact, came across my copy of LADY CAROLINE LAMB off "You Tube" which I looked for on a whim on the occasion of co-star Richard Chamberlain's birthday! For the record, the other titles I am referring to are THE GREAT WALTZ (which still eludes me), MAN OF LA MANCHA and POPE JOAN (which has only been made available in a trimmed version and which I will be getting to presently in my Easter Epic marathon)…

    I have always enjoyed pictures dealing with historical figures but, around the time this came out, these had acquired a Revisionist outlook which often exposed the less-than-pleasant details of their private lives. Perhaps the first to do this had been Ken Russell via a number of irreverent made-for-TV musical biopics throughout the 1960s but, by the end of the decade, his movie career had taken off in earnest – with THE MUSIC LOVERS, starring the afore-mentioned Chamberlain as Tchaikovsky, hitting the screens in 1971. Here, then, he is libertine poet Lord George Byron – first seen challenging a black man to a boxing match – who became the lover of the titular figure (played by Sarah Miles) while she was married to politician Sir William Lamb (Jon Finch). While we are told that such affairs were common practice, sometimes involving even royalty, they were mostly kept "discreet" – a term which certainly cannot be applied to the one depicted in the film.

    Indeed, the movie's low estimation in some critics' minds has much to do with its definite camp value: Miles, sporting short-cropped hair, is tomboyish – never more so than, when uninvited to a dinner honouring the Duke of Wellington (Laurence Olivier) due to her scandalous behaviour (with Byron opting to escort another lady), she adopts the garments of the torch-carrying lads ostentatiously accompanying his carriage around at night!; worst of all, however, she attends a costume ball half-naked and in blackface (purporting to be Byron's negro slave!) – it is here that the cracks in their relationship start to show, as she is ignored by her partner and laughed at by her peers! Having mentioned Wellington, it is also unbecoming to watch either the famed general or the celebrated thespian indulge in a one-night stand with Miles; incidentally, things would come to a head between Caroline (often referred to merely as "Caro"!) and Byron at the Duke's party, where she attempts suicide!

    Finch, an able orator in Parliament (a protégé of George Canning, played by John Mills, even if he stands on the opposite side in the House of Representatives), obviously suffers on account of his wife's indiscretions; indeed, he is asked to choose between her and his career by none other than King George IV (Ralph Richardson) – who had once been his own mother's (Margaret Leighton) lover! The elder woman had always resented Miles and, in fact, her coldness results in Caroline going mad at the end. Notable bit players here include Peter Bull, Pamela Brown and Michael Wilding; the production values were certainly the best that money could buy: the late cinematographer Oswald Morris, art director Carmen Dillon and composer Richard Rodney Bennett (who supplies the expected lush score).

    Incidentally, this was award-winning playwright/scriptwriter Bolt's sole directorial foray – which he created and personally nurtured, so to speak, as a vehicle for his real-life wife Miles. A co-production between the U.K. and Italy, it incorporated an irrelevant and fairly embarrassing scene set in the latter country as Miles and Finch go on a trip and decide to take a nightly stroll in a former gladiatorial arena – which is soon infested with wretched souls clamouring for money and grub; what makes it so bad, however, is the fact that the extras were not locals since they speak in broken Italian (even rendering "impiccati" – meaning "hanged" – as "impiegati" – workers)! As I said, then, the print I watched – interrupted every once in a while by the wording "PLAY" and related video information – was not in the best of shape…but the film was nowhere near as unwatchable as I was led to believe; if anything, back in the day, it had managed to score BAFTA nominations for Richardson, Bennett and Dillon!
    alicecbr

    Laurence Olivier as Lord wellington makes the movie!!

    Boy, can women make fools over themselves and over such a cute little boy as Lord Byron!!! Lord Lamb is made to look a lamb indeed, as he continually forgives his neurotic/crazy wife for affairs that other women, including his own mother, have left and right but with discretion!! It reminded me of the hooraw over poor Pres. Clinton and his dalliance with the hooker/I mean aide, and the hypocritical rantings of Newt Gingrich who was doing the same thing all the time,.....but DISCREETLY. My goodness, aren't we just like the English!!! Since I don't really know the history, other than that the Brittannica says that she made a scene at some Lady's party...boy, did she ever!!! cutting her wrists and bleeding all over everybody's ball gowns. The mother, former mistress of George IV is quite intelligent and not half-bad. I loved all the costumes and the histrionics myself. Just to look at all those palatial estates was worth the price of the movie!!

    And of course, Olivier is different in every movie! How I miss him!
    6vampire_hounddog

    A good deal of artistic license is employed in the film but there is some good period detail too

    In early 19th century England, the rather erratic and impulsive Lady Caroline Ponsonby (Sarah Miles) marries William Lamb (Jon Finch) in one such moment of romantic impulse. She soon finds herself restless and depressed in a loveless marriage. Her party going and eccentric behaviour in an open affair with the rakish poet Lord Byron (Richard Chamberlain) soon makes her a social outcast.

    A period drama that pays attention to detail in places and at other times over stylises the Georgian period, while often being shy of facts. Oswald Morris's widescreen camerawork is effective, but the film doesn't hold together as well as it perhaps should.

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    • Wissenswertes
      In reality, Lady Caroline Lamb was addicted to laudanum, which is generally thought to be one of the contributing factors to her premature death. There is no reference to this specific addiction in the movie, although in the first scene Lady Bessborough offers Caroline a tincture of some sort for her nervousness, that tincture which most-likely is laudanum.
    • Patzer
      Members of Parliament do not applaud speeches.
    • Zitate

      ADC to Wellington: [Caroline has just slashed her wrists] Good God, your Grace! She just tried to kill herself!

      Duke of Wellington: Nonsense, me boy. No difficulty about killing yourself, if you really mean to.

    • Verbindungen
      Referenced in The Films of Robert Bolt (1972)
    • Soundtracks
      Lancers
      (uncredited)

      Music by Lacout

      Arranged by Lawrence Ashmore

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 22. November 1972 (Vereinigtes Königreich)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
      • Italien
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Italienisch
      • Latein
      • Deutsch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Lady Caroline Lamb
    • Drehorte
      • Chatsworth House, Edensor, Derbyshire, England, Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Pulsar Productions
      • Vides Cinematografica
      • Tomorrow Entertainment
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      2 Stunden 3 Minuten
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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