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La vie tumultueuse de Lady Caroline Lamb

Original title: Lady Caroline Lamb
  • 1972
  • PG
  • 2h 3m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
604
YOUR RATING
La vie tumultueuse de Lady Caroline Lamb (1972)
Period DramaDramaHistoryRomance

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.A noblewoman doomed to a loveless marriage falls into a scandalous affair with the dashing Lord Byron.

  • Director
    • Robert Bolt
  • Writer
    • Robert Bolt
  • Stars
    • Sarah Miles
    • Jon Finch
    • Richard Chamberlain
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    604
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Bolt
    • Writer
      • Robert Bolt
    • Stars
      • Sarah Miles
      • Jon Finch
      • Richard Chamberlain
    • 24User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 3 BAFTA Awards
      • 3 nominations total

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    Top cast57

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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
    • Director
      • Robert Bolt
    • Writer
      • Robert Bolt
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    5.5604
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    Featured reviews

    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.
    gregcouture

    One of the best curtain lines ever!

    After enduring Robert Bolt's rather turgid retelling of Lady Caroline Lamb's ill-fated love and finding myself, once again, unable to warm to his real-life wife (at the time), the rather tiresome Sarah Miles, the whole enterprise was redeemed by that fabulously funny curtain line. When told that Lady Caroline has died of a broken heart, one of her chief female detractors faces the camera (through the lace curtains of a window, I seem to recall) and hisses, (Alas! I'm not quoting verbatim, since I haven't seen this since its theatrical release, but here goes...) "She would!, wouldn't she?!?" I laughed all the way out to the parking lot. Not available on video, apparently, and if they do unearth this bit of cinematic costume jewellry (not really a precious gem, mind you), let us hope that it will be on DVD where the Panavision/widescreen ratio will be preserved.
    7mark-rojinsky

    A sherry-trifle of a biopic from '71-72

    A sherry-trifle of a biopic and period drama from '71-72, Lady Caroline Lamb captures the pneuma of 1972 - that greyest of hippie years so well. The early-'70s were pioneering years and 1972 was the year that saw the release of Andrey Tarkovsky's Solaris, Bill Douglas' My Ain Folk, Jack Couffer's The Darwin Adventure and Charlton Heston's Antony & Cleopatra. The scenes filmed in Italy at twilight at a palazzo and Roman amphitheatre are very evocative and have a sense of enchantment and stillness as do some of the interior shots featuring Lady Caroline and Richard Chamberlain's Lord Byron, while the score composed by English composer Richard Rodney Bennett is quite superb . Maudlin and melodramatic - Sarah Miles in appearance in some scenes prefigures the punk style of the mid-'70s - she sports a shock of grey/pinkish spiky hair. Jon Finch 'Frenzy' (1972) is good as the liberal Lord Melbourne while Sir Laurence Olivier's flair performance as the Duke of Wellington is splendid:- he sports a royal blue silk sash, Regency-Era wavy chestnut hair and a hooked putty false nose and is every inch the classical figure from the Age of Reason. Sir Ralph Richardson ( an actor born in 1902) as King George IV is both lyrical and amusing.
    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.
    8MOscarbradley

    Really rather splendid

    Robert Bolt won two Oscars back to back, (for "Doctor Zhivago" and "A Man for All Seasons"), as well as penning that most literate of epics "Lawrence of Arabia". Indeed for a time he seemed to be David Lean's writer of choice until his script for Lean's elephantine "Ryan's Daughter" and that films critical failure, severed those ties. In 1972 Bolt not only wrote, but also directed, "Lady Caroline Lamb". It wasn't really a success and, as may be expected, is a very literate-minded costumer but also, as may be expected, is highly intelligent and very nicely played.

    It is, of course, an account, for the most part, of the title character's scandalous and disastrous affair with the mad, bad and dangerous to know Lord Byron, seen here as some kind of 19th century rock star. As Lady Caroline, Sarah Miles is quite splendid, (she was, of course, Mrs Bolt), I've always felt Miles was a much better actress than she was ever given credit for, though her tremulous style wasn't to everyone's taste. As Byron, a somewhat surprising Richard Chamberlain acquits himself somewhat surprisingly well, while Jon Finch is more than adequate as Lady Caroline's husband. The supporting cast are made up mostly of the great and the good of the British acting establishment, (a superb Margaret Leighton, John Mills, Laurence Olivier as Wellington, Ralph Richardson in an excellent cameo as King George IV, Michael Wilding), and the production overall is extremely handsome to look at. (It's obvious, on the whole, no expense was spared). Indeed, as historical dramas go, this one is a cut above the rest with Bolt displaying a keen sense of the cinematic in several scenes. Hardly ever revived, it's worth seeking out.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      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.
    • Goofs
      Members of Parliament do not applaud speeches.
    • Quotes

      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.

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

      Music by Lacout

      Arranged by Lawrence Ashmore

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 12, 1991 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Italy
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
      • Latin
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Lady Caroline Lamb
    • Filming locations
      • Chatsworth House, Edensor, Derbyshire, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Pulsar Productions
      • Vides Cinematografica
      • Tomorrow Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 2h 3m(123 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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