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Lady Keyes: Celle qui en savait trop

Original title: Glorious 39
  • 2009
  • R
  • 2h 9m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
5.9K
YOUR RATING
Jeremy Northam, Julie Christie, Romola Garai, Bill Nighy, and David Tennant in Lady Keyes: Celle qui en savait trop (2009)
A historical drama of wartime conspiracy centered on the formidable Keyes family, who try to uphold their traditional British way of life on the eve of World War II, as their eldest daughter Anne (Romola Garai) unravels secret recordings of a pro-Hitler appeasement movement.
Play trailer1:59
2 Videos
99+ Photos
DramaHistoryMysteryThrillerWar

The adopted daughter of a privileged British politician uncovers a family secret in the weeks leading up to World War II.The adopted daughter of a privileged British politician uncovers a family secret in the weeks leading up to World War II.The adopted daughter of a privileged British politician uncovers a family secret in the weeks leading up to World War II.

  • Director
    • Stephen Poliakoff
  • Writer
    • Stephen Poliakoff
  • Stars
    • Romola Garai
    • Eddie Redmayne
    • Juno Temple
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    5.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Stephen Poliakoff
    • Writer
      • Stephen Poliakoff
    • Stars
      • Romola Garai
      • Eddie Redmayne
      • Juno Temple
    • 84User reviews
    • 28Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Glorious 39
    Trailer 1:59
    Glorious 39
    Glorious 39: Featurette
    Featurette 2:35
    Glorious 39: Featurette
    Glorious 39: Featurette
    Featurette 2:35
    Glorious 39: Featurette

    Photos154

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    Top cast37

    Edit
    Romola Garai
    Romola Garai
    • Anne
    Eddie Redmayne
    Eddie Redmayne
    • Ralph
    Juno Temple
    Juno Temple
    • Celia
    Toby Regbo
    Toby Regbo
    • Michael
    Christopher Lee
    Christopher Lee
    • Walter
    Corin Redgrave
    Corin Redgrave
    • Oliver
    Charlie Cox
    Charlie Cox
    • Lawrence
    David Tennant
    David Tennant
    • Hector
    Bill Nighy
    Bill Nighy
    • Alexander
    Jeremy Northam
    Jeremy Northam
    • Balcombe
    Katharine Burford
    • Lucy
    Jenny Agutter
    Jenny Agutter
    • Maud
    Julie Christie
    Julie Christie
    • Aunt Elizabeth
    Hugh Bonneville
    Hugh Bonneville
    • Gilbert
    Asier Newman
    Asier Newman
    • Mick
    Nicholas Blane
    Nicholas Blane
    • Vicar
    Jane Fowler
    Jane Fowler
    • Kathleen
    Sam Kubrick-Finney
    • Young Walter
    • Director
      • Stephen Poliakoff
    • Writer
      • Stephen Poliakoff
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews84

    6.45.9K
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    Featured reviews

    rick_7

    A good old-fashioned thriller (with an abysmal epilogue)

    Summer 1939, and as much of Britain prepares for war, a shady cabal of aristocrats and Government officials plots to mollify Hitler and secure a quick, painless peace. When Anne Keyes (Romola Garai), the adopted daughter of a wealthy family, stumbles across the conspiracy, she finds her life under threat - as one by one her allies turn out to be traitors, or turn up dead. In his first feature for 10 years, writer-director Stephen Poliakoff deals with some weighty themes - fascism, adoption, familial loyalty - while alighting on fascinating aspects of the readying for war, such as pets being killed and heaped onto pyres. "It's like a vision of hell, isn't it?" asks Anne's father (Bill Nighy). "Animals going onto a fire in a quiet English summer." Despite its depth, though, Glorious 39 is really an old-fashioned thriller: engrossing and atmospheric, with a gnawing, ever-present sense of menace and some mightily effective set pieces.

    The film does have its faults, floundering in the final 15 and closing with an atrocious scene that serves no purpose, beyond fulfilling a perceived desire for a happy ending and satiating Poliakoff's need to hammer the audience over the head with poorly-conceived pseudo-irony. In common with his 1991 film Close My Eyes, it also has moments of stiltedness and artificiality that snap you out of the story. But for all that, I don't understand the hammering it's been given by most critics. Its Hitchcockian elements - the stomach-tightening tension piquing during a slew of well thought-out suspense scenes - are marvellously handled, and the film is also notable for Garai's expressive, layered turn, which catches the eye in a cast that includes Nighy, Julie Christie, Jeremy Northam, David Tennant and Jenny Agutter. And Christopher Lee, but I don't like him.
    6alda-delicado

    A bit strange

    I always enjoy watching BBC films, always very well acted and usually an interesting story that makes you think. This one promised quite a lot: a great cast including Jeremy Northam, Bill Nighy and Romola Garay, a plot in the first year of the second world War, it seemed like a recipe for a great movie. Unfortunately may parts of the story seemed to weird to be true and in the end I didn't understand if the girl was simply crazy. Dead bodies all around her, people talking about secrets and dropping dead afterwards without a lot of explanations, her being locked up in a room and drugged, characters that appear without explanation and stare just as if it was a horror film and in the end nothing is quite clarified... Just totally mystifying...
    paul2001sw-1

    Self-parody

    Stephen Polliakoff's work has shown some consistent concerns: two of them are a nostalgic view of the aristocratic past, and an interest in the aftermath of Nazism. These two come together in 'Glorious 39', which one may describe as a '39 Steps' kind of thriller; and in its middle portion, it's briefly gripping, albeit in a style that seems a deliberate pastiche of an earlier style of film. But overall, it's a rum beast, almost a parody of Polliakoff's earlier work. There are lines of incongruous or anachronistic dialogue, and much of the acting is exceedingly flat. Polliakof often casts Bill Nighy, and seems to order him to underact; in my opinion, all of Nighy's performances for this director are awful. The child acting is also exceedingly wooden. Ramola Garai in the lead role is OK, but she really gets almost no help; yet from the overall feel of the piece, it's hard to avoid concluding that this is intentional. The plot is incoherent and hackneyed: the good guys all want to fight the Nazis, the nasty people don't; even the use of an adopted child as the lead character seems to be a cheap way of having a cake and eating it, as it allows the director to revel in the aristocratic excess while simultaneously suggesting there was something terrible about it. The concluding scene, meanwhile, makes something out of nothing, a crescendo of music hiding the fact that there's no real drama in the ending. It's a shame, as for a number of years, Polliakoff's work was consistently interesting; but this is a mess.
    7Blockhead22

    Taut Thriller With a Few Flaws

    I had the privilege of attending the world premiere of this film at the Toronto International Film Festival last night. It tells the story of the aristocratic Keyes family in the days leading up to the outbreak of WWII. The father played superbly by Bill Nighy is an influential MP and an all round "good egg" of a dad to his three children. The oldest daughter Ann, played by Romola Garai is an adopted child but seems to fit in perfectly with her younger siblings and is the life and soul of the family. The film starts as a classic English period piece with lavish settings in Norfolk and London involving picnics and parties. However, as war gets closer, dramatic and strange events involving the family and friends slowly change the mood of the film. Other reviewers have made comparisons to Hitchcock's films and I have to agree with them. I enjoyed the film but there were definitely a few situations that did not ring true. The ending was particularly clumsy and there were some strange scenes that just didn't seem to fit. At 130 minutes it was probably 20 minutes too long. There were good performances by Julie Christie as a batty aunt and Jeremy Northam as a sinister government official. A good watch if you like British mysteries
    8gradyharp

    England's Own Drama in WW II

    Though there have been books and other films that deal with the dissidence between the aristocrats and the general populace of England around the topic of WW II, this beautifully executed 'historical thriller' brings many aspects of those discrepancies of opinion to light in a manner not unlike the similar thought processes in Germany at the same time: the gentry of Germany turned a blind eye to the events surrounding them (The Final Solution) in order to believe in what they chose to believe as a promise for stabilization and world importance as a genteel country. Writer/Director Stephen Poliakoff has based his examination of this problem on focusing on the life of one particular character whose fate was the standard of the dispossessed.

    The year is 1939 and the aristocratic family of Sir Alexander Keyes (Bill Nighy) and his wife Maud (Jenny Agutter) are living what seems to be an idyllic life with their children Ralph (Eddie Redmayne), Celia (Juno Temple) and the eldest, Anne (Romula Garai) who we soon discover was adopted before the Keyes discovered they could bear children on their own. Anne is a beautiful creative actress who seems to make the family proud. The family is visited by an old friend Hector (David Tennant) who at dinner is very vocal about the fact that Hitler is a threat to England and that England must stop Hitler before he destroys them instead of pursuing a course of appeasement of Hitler that would prevent disturbance of their elegant way of life on the island of England. It is obvious that Sir Alexander is more concerned with his duties as a member of parliament and his maintenance of his family history and wealth, and his responses to Hector as well as to the mysterious Balcombe (Jeremy Northam) from the Foreign Office and the young Lawrence (Charlie Cox), a new member of the Foreign Office who is courting Anne, suggest subterfuge.

    The family is visited by the very proper Aunt Elizabeth (Julie Christie) and while the entire family is on picnic, an infant transiently disappears while under Anne's care. From this point the story takes a dark turn: Anne continues filming in London with her close friend, actor Gilbert (Hugh Bonneville), and Anne discovers some phonograph records in the basement of the Keyes home, records that contain not fox trots but instead 'conversations' from meetings. Suspicions about evil derring-do arise when the family learns that Hector has committed suicide soon followed by the suicide of Gilbert and eventually the bizarre discovery of Lawrence's body among the pet animals ordered to be put to death to make the people of England more ready for abrupt changes. War with Germany begins and changes the atmosphere and results in changes in the Keyes family: Anne is imprisoned by the family because 'she is really not one of us' and unravels the harrowing mystery of the Keyes' family involvement in the dark events of the present and the past.

    The mood of England of 1939 is beautifully captured by cinematographer Danny Cohen and the musical score by Adrian Johnston illustrates the dichotomy of the free-spirited Anne and the dark underpinnings of the Keyes family. Romola Garai is excellent in her treacherous role as are the other stars. Small roles by Toby Regbo, Christopher Lee, Corin Redgrave and others make this a cast rich in some of the finest British actors of the day. GLORIOUS 39 ('Glorious' is the nickname given Anne) is an enlightening film that addresses many significant issues too infrequently addressed by works of history.

    Grady Harp

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Final theatrical movie of Corin Redgrave (Oliver).
    • Goofs
      (at around 1h) During the screening of the movie scene with Gilbert and Anne, they are showing a camera angle and close-up of Gilbert that wasn't actually recorded at location.
    • Quotes

      Elizabeth: This little war makes everything uncertain...

    • Connections
      Featured in Breakfast: Episode dated 12 August 2011 (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      Goody Goody
      (Johnny Mercer, Matty Malneck)

      © 1935 The Johnny Mercer Foundation (ASCAP) and Chappell & Co. Inc (ASCAP)

      All rights on behalf of the The Johnny Mercer Foundation

      Administered by WB Music Corp. All rights reserved

      Performed by Andy Kirk and his Twelve Clouds of Joy

      Courtesy of GRP Records

      Licensed by kind permission of Universal Music Operation Ltd.

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 20, 2009 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Glorious 39
    • Filming locations
      • Castle Acre Priory, Swaffham, Norfolk, England, UK(extensive ruins)
    • Production companies
      • BBC Film
      • UK Film Council
      • Screen East Content Investment Fund
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • £3,700,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $182,253
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 9 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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