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Marie Antoinette

  • 2006
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 3m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
128K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,259
182
Kirsten Dunst in Marie Antoinette (2006)
Home Video Trailer from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Play trailer1:45
12 Videos
99+ Photos
Coming-of-AgeCostume DramaDocudramaPeriod DramaTeen DramaBiographyDramaHistoryRomance

The retelling of France's iconic but ill-fated queen, Marie Antoinette. From her betrothal and marriage to Louis XVI at 14 to her reign as queen at 19 and to the end of her reign as queen, a... Read allThe retelling of France's iconic but ill-fated queen, Marie Antoinette. From her betrothal and marriage to Louis XVI at 14 to her reign as queen at 19 and to the end of her reign as queen, and ultimately the fall of Versailles.The retelling of France's iconic but ill-fated queen, Marie Antoinette. From her betrothal and marriage to Louis XVI at 14 to her reign as queen at 19 and to the end of her reign as queen, and ultimately the fall of Versailles.

  • Director
    • Sofia Coppola
  • Writer
    • Sofia Coppola
  • Stars
    • Kirsten Dunst
    • Jason Schwartzman
    • Rip Torn
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    128K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,259
    182
    • Director
      • Sofia Coppola
    • Writer
      • Sofia Coppola
    • Stars
      • Kirsten Dunst
      • Jason Schwartzman
      • Rip Torn
    • 741User reviews
    • 179Critic reviews
    • 64Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 19 wins & 24 nominations total

    Videos12

    Marie Antoinette
    Trailer 1:45
    Marie Antoinette
    Marie Antoinette
    Trailer 2:26
    Marie Antoinette
    Marie Antoinette
    Trailer 2:26
    Marie Antoinette
    Marie Antoinette
    Trailer 2:31
    Marie Antoinette
    'Marie Antoinette' | Anniversary Mashup
    Clip 1:12
    'Marie Antoinette' | Anniversary Mashup
    A Guide to the Films of Sofia Coppola
    Clip 2:12
    A Guide to the Films of Sofia Coppola
    Uggie, Toto, & Award-Winning Movie Dogs
    Clip 3:31
    Uggie, Toto, & Award-Winning Movie Dogs

    Photos420

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    Top cast85

    Edit
    Kirsten Dunst
    Kirsten Dunst
    • Marie Antoinette
    Jason Schwartzman
    Jason Schwartzman
    • Louis XVI
    Rip Torn
    Rip Torn
    • Louis XV
    Steve Coogan
    Steve Coogan
    • Ambassador Mercy
    Judy Davis
    Judy Davis
    • Comtesse de Noailles
    Clara Brajtman
    Clara Brajtman
    • Austrian Girlfriend #1
    • (as Clara Brajman)
    Mélodie Berenfeld
    Mélodie Berenfeld
    • Austrian Girlfriend #2
    Asia Argento
    Asia Argento
    • Comtesse du Barry
    Molly Shannon
    Molly Shannon
    • Aunt Victoire
    Sebastian Armesto
    Sebastian Armesto
    • Comte Louis de Provence
    Shirley Henderson
    Shirley Henderson
    • Aunt Sophie
    Al Weaver
    Al Weaver
    • Comte Charles d'Artois
    Marianne Faithfull
    Marianne Faithfull
    • Empress Maria Theresa
    Jean-Christophe Bouvet
    Jean-Christophe Bouvet
    • Duc de Choiseul
    Io Bottoms
    Io Bottoms
    • Lady in Waiting
    Aurore Clément
    Aurore Clément
    • Duchesse de Char
    Céline Sallette
    Céline Sallette
    • Lady in Waiting
    André Oumansky
    André Oumansky
    • Cardinal de la Roche Aymon
    • Director
      • Sofia Coppola
    • Writer
      • Sofia Coppola
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews741

    6.5128.3K
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    Featured reviews

    6einezcrespo

    Pretty sets. Not much else.

    I had high hopes for this one since I love reading biographies. Granted that not everything is accurate nor can be fit into a movie we can only make do with what is presented in this case an overlong rock and roll video that has pretty sets and costumes. Marie Antionette came off a little slow and boring though life in the French Court and it's protocols were very amusing to quote MA in the dressing scene "This is ridiculous." Sofia Coppola could've have focused a little more on MA's loneliness in a lousy marriage and the court intrigues and a little less on the extravagant shopping sprees. What is surprising is the infamous Necklace Affair wasn't even included since most modern historians agree MA was innocent from that scandal. Acting wise Kirsten Dunst pulled off a difficult job of playing a childlike queen upfront but a woman who suffered humiliation behind the scenes however it is Rose Byrne who stole the show (along with the sets, costumes and the yummy cakes) as the Duchesse de Polignac a role she plays with believable aplomb. Asia Argento looked a little old for Madame Du Barry and Mary Nighy is nice as the Princesse Lamballe, another unfortunate victim of the Revolution. Jason Shwartzman plays a rather stiff Louis XVI while Jamie Dorman is hot as Count Axel Fersen. Everyone else like Judy Davis, Shirley Henderson and Molly Shannon had nothing to do but gossip and look silly. Marianne Faithful floored me with her regal Maria Therese. In the end the movie was a little shallow and the rock and roll soundtrack seemed out of place. It was like watching a 80's music video.
    7bm230199

    A very overly criticised movie

    This movie was a solid 7/10. It wasn't groundbreaking but it was entertaining, Dunst was endearing and of course very visually pleasing. I find it amusing and rather telling how critical most of the reviewers are of the director and think if. Sofia was named Simon they would not be mentioning her so much. I enjoyed it and it taught me some new things about Marie Antoinette.
    8info-73150

    A MODERN PERSPECTIVE ON TWO TRAGIC HISTORICAL FIGURES

    I actually rather enjoyed the film. Beautiful art direction. Kirsten Dunst (luminously) portrays Marie Antoinette; a young soon-to-be queen, full of love and yet terribly flawed, a royal with nothing but her bloodline to offer France. The film offers a female perspective on what it must have been like to be a bargaining chip to maintain peace between 2 powerful countries. In the film, Marie Antoinette is not unlike many privileged and wealthy young people today; easily bored, constantly seeking distractions and amusements, and in desperate need of direction, attention, and affection. She is a young woman who appears to have held no real interest in politics--she simply wants to fulfill her duties as wife and mother. At heart, she is a "country girl" in many regards. She seems happiest in when in the country with nature and with children. It was insightful to see Marie Antoinette portrayed as a woman with foibles and weaknesses--in the framework of most histories of the French Revolution, she is painted as a conniving villainess. This movie offers a more human perspective on this period of time in history, and reminds the viewer that these two monarchs were just teenagers; terribly ill-equipped to manage the responsibility of ruling a country that was already deeply in debt. I appreciate the viewpoint of this film...it's a fresh portrait of the history of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. The contemporary music mixed with classical reminds us that history can and will repeat itself. The films is a cautionary tale against allowing wealth-based leaders to override the needs of a struggling nation. Too much decadence pushed under the noses of the poor will only lead to a revolution.
    7EchoBunny

    Only In Dreams..

    I have seen this film yesterday after a lot of hype up and waiting since in my little town everything comes out a month after the release date. I was looking forward to seeing this movie..a lot. But I must say that the trailers I had seen and the film have a completely different feeling. This isn't a bad film but I think that it well get a lot of criticism for not being historically accurate, not serious enough, being too long, being 'unfinished'... but those are not he bad points of this movie. The style is original and Sofia Coppola succeeds at showing Marie Antoinette's personal side. Her suffering through gossip and humiliation by her husbands lack of 'interest' in her etc. She succeeds in showing Marie Antoinette as a naive girl in the beginning..who hugs her first lady, cries at parting with her dog and announcing that the morning ceremonials are ridiculous. We see Marie Antoinette at the beginning trying to fit in with the strict life at Versailles but further on it's clear that with the gossip following her she stops caring and starts to have fun her own way which leads to her ruin. The negative points of the film is that Sofia Coppola uses the same techniques, the same scenes through out the movie. The trying on of shoes, the hairdressing, the patisserie dishes and the champagne. We see Marie Antoinette frolicking around in the grass too many times. Sofia Coppola apparently tried to show a girl out of touch with reality who lives just to have fun..to escape the wagging tongues of Versailles. But if that was her point the film should've ended long before. This is a biography of Marie Antoinette...even though not a completely serious or historically accurate one...but if Sofia Coppola is trying to show this French queens personality and human side then I can assure you there was more to her than the frilly lace, the satin shoe, the bakery department and the champagne. Marie-Antoinette was a mother who cared about her children and was involved with them..though we hardly we see this in the film except the sequence of her and her daughter on the farm. The relationship and the feelings she had for her husband aren't very clear and his for her aren't very much elucidated. This is a visually beautiful film but I think Sofia Coppola could've delved deeper into this rich personality. In the end you're left with the impression of stepping out from a hazy rose petal fragile dream that from someones tumultuous life. But a dream that's still worth seeing.
    8jmb360

    A sensory delight

    Based on the recent Marie-Antoinette biography by Antonia Fraser, Sofia Coppola's film focuses on the personal qualities of the character of Marie-Antoinette and thus participates in the character's historical rehabilitation. Antoinette is seen as a respectful loyal daughter, a loving mother, a patient wife, who had to withstand a flood of vindictive criticism since the moment she set foot in the French court. This depiction contrasts strongly with many prior representations of the character in film ("The Affair of the Necklace" for example), which show her as superficial, selfish and vain.

    The visuals and auditory elements, which evoke a powerful image of 18th-century Versailles, are the movie's forte. And their effects linger in one's mind (or at least they did in mine) long after one's exit from the theater. As a budding art historian, I was stunned by the intensely lush visual spectacle the film has to offer: the pomp and circumstance of ritualized and regimented 18th-century Versailles. The semi-private world that Antoinette builds for herself to escape Versailles's codified, quasi-totalitarian atmosphere, is evoked through a sequence of fast-moving images of champagne-guzzling, beautifully-decorated cake-eating, and Manolo Blahnik shoe buying. Thus Antoinette's fantasy world is likened to a world recognizable to you, me and Carrie Bradshaw. Some people may scoff at this 21st century world transposed to an earlier time. But as the center of the world in 18th-century Europe, Marie-Antoinette's "secret Versailles" would certainly have been as "hip" as this, and Coppola has found effective means through sound and image by which to make this hipness accessible.

    The story zooms in on the character of Marie-Antoinette, played by a ravishing Kirsten Dunst, who arrives at Versailles at the tender age of 14, to become queen of France a mere 5 years later. Coppola emphasizes the loneliness of Antoinette throughout the film: most important is her alienation from the French court by the fact that she is a foreigner (something that made her a scapegoat for all of France's problems during the 1780's). Her powerlessness to "fit in" is emphasized also through her sexual alienation from her socially-awkward husband (played by Jason Schwartzmann), her mother's chidings that she has not yet produced an heir to the French throne (and thereby has not secured Austria's political place in Europe), and the bitchy gossip that goes on behind her back at court.

    Marie-Antoinette is depicted as an intensely personable, friendly and playful person. Coppola fashions a Marie-Antoinette who is a dutiful daughter, a patient wife to Louis (who eventually overcomes his shyness and becomes a loving and protective husband and father), and a caring and tender mother. She is shown as both bold and humble, two qualities which had quasi-miraculous effects on both the court and the angry mob, as is shown in some of the film's most touching moments.

    Equipped with these "essential" personal qualities, the charges traditionally made against Marie-Antoinette fade completely. It is precisely Antoinette's ill-fated attempt at fitting into French court society that causes her escape into a world of idle futility and libertinage. Her escape into the world of "playing shepherdess" in her pleasure-house of Le Hameau is shown not as a silly escape from responsibility but as the simple human need to be surrounded by the natural world. This place appears to us as it does to Antoinette: as a refuge from the backbiting, totalitarian regime of Versailles. Even the legendary "let them eat cake" statement allegedly made by Marie-Antoinette is discarded as fiction.

    There is almost no place in the film for the 18th-century reality as it existed outside the bubble-like world of Versailles. This is not the movie's purpose. The end of the film is a bit abrupt: the last image shows the royal family heading to Paris to be imprisoned in the building of the Conciergerie. There is no mention of the guillotine anywhere, which again can seem surprising, but which shows that Coppola deliberately tried to eschew stereotypes and do something different. And it is all to her credit.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The French government granted special permission for the crew to film in the Palace of Versailles.
    • Goofs
      When Marie Antoinette is first presented to the French royal family, Aunt Victoire is holding a pekingese. This breed was unknown in Europe until a hundred years later when British forces successfully invaded China in the Second Opium War and five pekingese belonging to the Chinese Emperor's aunt, who had committed suicide as the British troops advanced on the Forbidden City while the rest of the Imperial family fled, were brought back to Britain, where one was presented to Queen Victoria, who named it Looty.
    • Quotes

      Marie-Antoinette: [to her first-born, a daughter] Poor little girl. You are not what was desired, but you are no less dear to me. A boy would have be the Son of France. But you, Marie Thérèse, shall be mine.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The Prestige/Flicka/Marie Antoinette/Flags of Our Fathers/A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Natural's Not In It
      Written by Dave Allen, Hugo Burnham, Andy Gill (as Andrew Gill) & Jon King

      Performed by Gang of Four

      Courtesy of Warner Bros. Records Inc.

      By arrangement with Warner Music Group Film & TV Licensing

      and Courtesy of EMI Records Ltd.

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    FAQ22

    • How long is Marie Antoinette?Powered by Alexa
    • Why did Sofia Coppola choose to base the film specifically on Antonia Fraser's book?
    • Why was Marie Antoinette the only one who wanted to clap at the opera? (and why the second time we see her clapping, no one else would?)

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 24, 2006 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • France
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • American Zoetrope (United States)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Latin
      • French
    • Also known as
      • María Antonieta, la reina adolescente
    • Filming locations
      • Chateau de Versailles, Versailles, Yvelines, France
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Pricel
      • Tohokushinsha Film Corporation (TFC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $40,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $15,962,471
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,361,050
      • Oct 22, 2006
    • Gross worldwide
      • $60,917,189
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 3m(123 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • SDDS
      • Dolby Digital

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