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IMDbPro

Lady Oscar

  • 1979
  • 2 h 4 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,8/10
724
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Lady Oscar (1979)
The story of Lady Oscar, a female military commander who served during the time of the French Revolution.
Reproduzir trailer2:21
1 vídeo
12 fotos
DramaHistoryRomance

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe story of Lady Oscar, a female military commander who served during the time of the French Revolution.The story of Lady Oscar, a female military commander who served during the time of the French Revolution.The story of Lady Oscar, a female military commander who served during the time of the French Revolution.

  • Direção
    • Jacques Demy
  • Roteiristas
    • Riyoko Ikeda
    • Jacques Demy
    • Patricia Louisianna Knop
  • Artistas
    • Catriona MacColl
    • Barry Stokes
    • Patrick Allen
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,8/10
    724
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Jacques Demy
    • Roteiristas
      • Riyoko Ikeda
      • Jacques Demy
      • Patricia Louisianna Knop
    • Artistas
      • Catriona MacColl
      • Barry Stokes
      • Patrick Allen
    • 17Avaliações de usuários
    • 4Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:21
    Trailer

    Fotos12

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    Elenco principal59

    Editar
    Catriona MacColl
    Catriona MacColl
    • Oscar Françoise de Jarjayes
    Barry Stokes
    Barry Stokes
    • André Grandier
    Patrick Allen
    Patrick Allen
      Nicholas Amer
      Nicholas Amer
      • M. De Chantilly, the pistol duelist
      Jean Boissery
      • Le soldat qui tend le pamphlet
      Armelle Bonnot
      • La suivante de la Reine
      François Brincourt
      Christine Böhm
      • Marie Antoinette
      Jonas Bergström
      Jonas Bergström
      • Hans Axel von Fersen
      Patsy Kensit
      Patsy Kensit
      • Oscar as a child
      Andrew Bagley
      • André as a child
      Terence Budd
      • Louis XVI
      Constance Chapman
      Constance Chapman
      • La nourrice
      Michèle Cahier
      • Une couturière
      Geoffrey Carey
      Geoffrey Carey
      • Un invité du bal noir
      Lyne Chardonnet
      • Une invitée du bal noir
      Cadine Constan
      • Madame de Vallois…
      Thérèse Crémieux
      • Direção
        • Jacques Demy
      • Roteiristas
        • Riyoko Ikeda
        • Jacques Demy
        • Patricia Louisianna Knop
      • Elenco e equipe completos
      • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

      Avaliações de usuários17

      5,8724
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      Avaliações em destaque

      1sami-chan

      The movie is painful

      I've finally had the chance to watch Jaques Demy's movie - Lady Oscar. I waited so long to see it and i put so much enthusiasm on it that i almost can't bear the disappointment. As a big fan of Ryoko Ikeda, of "Berusaiyu no bara" and of the Japanese musical version of it, i have to confess: the movie HURT! The acting is so bad, the story is so cut, no fluidity between scenes ... and the end ... oh, that is really painful!!! Oscar is too cute ... no! better said: "sweet"... but OK. Marie Antoinette too stupid! Fersen .. where is Fersen??? So little appearance that i forgot he existed. Girodelle .. oh! ... disgusting! And was that brown haired girl really Rosalie? I think it was the opposite of her. The only character i can't comment on it, is Andre. He was (especially on the first part of the movie) ... he was Andree. He was human, real and acted well .. Pity he ended so stupid ... Everything in this movie have no meaning ... and some scenes are just ridiculous.
      7utena-1

      Just for fans

      I love the Rose of Versailles (Lady Oscar in West) original comics and was a pleasure to watch this movie. However it's necessary to say it's just for fans. When you previously know the characters and want to get in touch with an alternative point of view, it's OK, but if you take Lady Oscar as a movie about the French Revolution's or a cross dresser heroine, you probably would feel disappointed.

      The work was not as good as it would be; some actors and actresses were not well chosen; main events were forgotten; and Oscar's personal drama lost force. But as I said, I liked it a little, because any Lady Oscar's product would attract me.
      8susanna-21

      Intriguing, but not as good as the anime

      To correct some inaccuracies in the above review, the anime "Rose of Versailles" came before "Lady Oscar," not afterward, and it was not targeted towards children. "Lady Oscar" is primarily based on the manga "Rose of Versailles" by Riyoko Ikeda, although it contains several plot differences from either anime or manga. The so-called "historical clichés" and the feminism the above reviewer cites are part of Ikeda's story and have nothing to do with the director of "Lady Oscar." I found the movie slightly disappointing in its variations from the anime and manga, but overall I liked it. It was nice to see the story of Lady Oscar presented in English, and I enjoyed seeing European actors filling the roles. Oscar's character differs greatly from her personality in the anime, but I found her much more personable in "Lady Oscar." I was disappointed, however, in the portrayal of Marie Antoinette as she was wholly flaky and unlikeable in "Lady Oscar" and lacked all the redeeming qualities she possessed in the anime. Also, the film overlooks the close nature of her relationship with Oscar as portrayed in Ikeda's manga.
      7Bunuel1976

      LADY Oscar (Jacques Demy, 1979) ***

      As had been the case with Christian-Jaque's THE BLACK TULIP (1964), this is another French swashbuckler whom I first became aware of via the Japanese animated series I used to catch on Italian TV as a kid. Conversely, the film version of LADY Oscar proved to be more satisfying than that of THE BLACK TULIP, which is surprising given that the former is a maligned film within its distinguished director's canon. Having said that, along with his modernistic remake of Jean Cocteau's OPRHEE' (1950) entitled PARKING (1985), LADY Oscar had always been the one title I was most eager to catch from Demy's lean and near-invisible post-1973 period. It is ironic therefore that I have managed that feat before having acquainted myself with Demy's best-known and finest achievements of the early 1960s – which is all the more remarkable when one considers that LADY Oscar was a bastard international production: a Franco-Japanese joint venture shot in English with a cast of equally mixed nationalities and whose tangled worldwide distribution rights have made it impossible for even the British Film Institute to secure a screening in their renowned National Film Theatre in London for a 'complete' Jacques Demy retrospective in November 2007! Therefore, all the more power to Yamato Video, the Italian DVD production company who specializes in releasing vintage Japanese anime series (that were all the rage on Italian TV as I was growing up in the 1980s and early 1990s) for succeeding where others have failed; a gallery of trailers from their catalogue is available as a supplement on the LADY Oscar disc and watching it was "a blast from the past" for me as the saying goes!

      Anyhow, back to the film at hand: the fairy-tale qualities of the historical narrative are ideal hunting grounds for Demy, who had already brought DONKEY SKIN (1970) and THE PIED PIPER (1972) to the screen – although, in this case, he drew inspiration from a Japanese comic strip rather than a local legend (albeit set in his native land). Needless to say, the film is a feast for the eyes when it comes to sets (some of the exteriors were actually shot on the Versailles Palace grounds) and costumes but, even if the work of Demy here seems not be counted among his finest achievements, a couple of elegantly sweeping camera movements (the clandestine meeting in the abandoned château between Queen Marie Antoinette and her Swedish lover) and well-mounted sequences (the vigorous fist-fight in the tavern) are certainly noteworthy; the same applies to the musical contribution of Demy's regular composer Michel Legrand. If there are distinct flaws, it's that the film moves at rather too deliberate a pace (with a running time of just over two hours) and has a needlessly unhappy ending.

      In spite of the title, the narrative incorporates three parallel story lines that give a more sweeping picture of the tumultuous times it depicts (starting out in 1755 with the birth of Oscar and culminating in the storming of the Bastille that led directly to the French Revolution of 1789): Oscar's father had long wanted a male heir to follow him into his military career and when his wife dies in giving birth to yet another female, he determines to make a man of his newborn child regardless; while Oscar is eventually recruited as personal guard to Marie Antoinette, we follow the amorous exploits of the latter as well as the rise of one female peasant into aristocracy through devious schemes and callous behavior to her true peers (perhaps in emulation of the notorious Madame Dubarry whose name is mentioned at one point). In view of its origins as light-hearted kiddie fare, there is a surprisingly subversive undercurrent of sexual ambiguity in Oscar's imposed masculinity (and the fact that this starts a cross-dressing fad among the upper classes), the repressed feelings for her shown by the stable boy she grew up with, the full-blown kiss on the lips Oscar gives during her own supposed engagement party to a giggling young lady she's dancing with, etc.

      Catriona MacColl looks just ravishing in the title role, both when dressed in her military outfit and also when she occasionally gives in to her womanhood (including a brief topless bit); this was her first film and arguably her best role since only another appearance for Demy and three in Lucio Fulci horror films – including CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD (1980) for which she even recorded an exclusive audio commentary for its R2 DVD! – really stick out from the rest of her filmography. Another beguiling presence in the film is undoubtedly that of Christine Bohm who plays Marie Antoinette; unlike MacColl (despite their being the same age), LADY Oscar proved to be her last film as she tragically died at 25 in an accident that same year. As for the male cast, the most prominent are Barry Stokes (as Oscar's stable boy companion and true love) and Martin Potter (as her jaded, titled but short-lived fiancé); incidentally, while they both had their artistic triumphs for major directors – in Juan Antonio Bardem's THE CORRUPTION OF CHRIS MILLER (1973) and Federico Fellini's FELLINI - SATYRICON (1969) – they each also worked for cultish British exploitation film-maker Norman J. Warren in, respectively, PREY (1978) and SATAN'S SLAVE (1976)!!

      P.S. My amiably lazy feline pet goes by the name of "Lady Oscar": I had originally dubbed it Oskar – in tribute to one of my favorite foreign films THE TIN DRUM (1979) because, like its protagonist, my cat seems to have stopped growing of its own accord (while that of my aunt, which is of a similar breed and only a year or so older, has become quite huge!); my mother, unaware of this connection, insists on calling her "Lady" because, first of all, it's a female and, frankly, really does act royally and has the genuine impression that we're there to wait on it!!
      tedg

      Barry Lyndon's Callgirl

      The sad truth is that Jaques Demy is a horrible filmmaker. The much celebrated "Umbrella's of Cherbourg" was dreadful. Absolutely dreadful, but pretty in a stagy way. There isn't much you can say when you encounter something pretty but hollow. Of course it happens all the time to me, that I find movies with no soul. like girls trained to be empty.

      But there is something notable when something is so very pretty as this is, and so very empty at the same time.

      The provenance of this is at least interesting: a Japanese comic book. And if you wish to sit through it, you'll see copious references to "Barry Lyndon," on which this is clearly modeled. Now the magic of that was its carefully spaced vacuums. It had engineered emptiness, something that only a master could do.

      This. This is just empty.

      Ted's Evaluation -- 1 of 3: You can find something better to do with this part of your life.

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      Enredo

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      Você sabia?

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      • Curiosidades
        The major sponsor of the film was the Japanese cosmetics company Shiseido. Catriona MacColl (Oscar) promoted a red lipstick for the spring cosmetic line that year.
      • Erros de gravação
        In the ballroom scene we see a string quartet and a harpsichordist. However, we hear the soundtrack of a string orchestra.
      • Conexões
        Featured in O Universo de Jacques Demy (1995)

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      Perguntas frequentes13

      • How long is Lady Oscar?Fornecido pela Alexa

      Detalhes

      Editar
      • Data de lançamento
        • 3 de março de 1979 (Japão)
      • Países de origem
        • Japão
        • França
      • Idiomas
        • Inglês
        • Alemão
      • Também conhecido como
        • Lady Óscar
      • Locações de filme
        • Jossigny, Seine-et-Marne, França(castle scenes)
      • Empresas de produção
        • Kitty Films
        • Shiseido
        • Nippon Television Network (NTV)
      • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

      Especificações técnicas

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      • Tempo de duração
        2 horas 4 minutos
      • Mixagem de som
        • Mono
      • Proporção
        • 2.35 : 1

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