Plot
Multiple storylined drama set in 1932, showing the lives of upstairs guest and downstairs servants at a party in a country house in England.
Release Year: 2001
Rating: 7.3/10 (43,200 voted)
Critic's Score: 90/100
Director:
Robert Altman
Stars: Maggie Smith, Ryan Phillippe, Michael Gambon
Storyline Set in the 1930's the story takes place in an old fashioned English country house where a family has invited many of their friends up for a weekend shooting party. The story centers around the McCordle family, particularly the man of the house, William McCordle. Getting on in years William has become benefactor to many of his relatives and friends. As the weekend goes on and secrets are revealed, it seems everyone, above stairs and below, wants a piece of William and his money, but how far will they go to get it?
Writers: Robert Altman, Bob Balaban
Cast: Maggie Smith
-
Constance Trentham
Michael Gambon
-
William McCordle
Kristin Scott Thomas
-
Sylvia McCordle
Camilla Rutherford
-
Isobel McCordle
Charles Dance
-
Lord Raymond Stockbridge
Geraldine Somerville
-
Louisa Stockbridge
Tom Hollander
-
Anthony Meredith
Natasha Wightman
-
Lavinia Meredith
Jeremy Northam
-
Ivor Novello
Bob Balaban
-
Morris Weissman
James Wilby
-
Freddie Nesbitt
Claudie Blakley
-
Mabel Nesbitt
Laurence Fox
-
Rupert Standish
Trent Ford
-
Jeremy Blond
Ryan Phillippe
-
Henry Denton
Taglines:
Tea At Four. Dinner At Eight. Murder At Midnight.
Release Date: 4 January 2002
Filming Locations: Hall Barn, Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, England, UK
Box Office Details
Budget: $15,000,000
(estimated)
Opening Weekend: $395,162
(USA)
(30 December 2001)
(9 Screens)
Gross: $87,745,500
(Worldwide)
(2001)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia: Ryan Phillippe was cast at the 11th hour replacing an actor who withdrawn.
Goofs:
Continuity:
Lady Trentham is holding the paper open as Denton leaves after having coffee spilled on him. In the next shot, the paper is closed and she opens it again.
Quotes: Morris Weissman:
You're providing a lot of entertainment for nothing. Ivor Novello:
Morris... I'm used to it.
User Review
Right said Bob!
Rating:
Robert Altman's long, fragmented and very hit-or-miss career reaches
another
of his periodic highs with this clever and beautifully realised
dissection
of the English class system and skit on the classic Agatha Christie
whonunnit.
Altman's preferences for kaleidoscopic social observation has sometimes
failed in the past due to the weight of its own ambition: multi-plotted
and
multi-charactered snapshots of time and place held together by loose ties
or
a general thematic framework. Sometimes it pays off spectacularly
(Nashville); sometimes it flatters to deceive (Short Cuts).
It works well here due to the necessary discipline of the single location
and the greater opportunities for interaction among the characters this
affords. Add to that an exemplary cast of (mostly) British character
actors
and a knowing script by Julian Fellowes that gives Altman's keenly
observant
camera plenty of time to make its own points.
Rightly, Altman is less concerned with the murder mystery, which is
almost
an aside, than with the opportunity given by a shooting party at a 1930s
stately mansion to observe the English aristocracy and their servants in
social interaction.
Never happier than when involved in a bit of human anthropology, Altman
lightly dissects the complexities and hierarchies which go on both above
and
below stairs; in which many subtle and unsubtle rituals are played out
among
groups of people who clearly dislike each other but are forced through
circumstance, need or employment to observe the fundamental social
practices
required.
1932 is also a time of intruding change into the nature of the old
English
ruling classes, slowly disintegrating in this between-wars period and, in
this case, largely reliant on the wealth of one particularly reluctant
patron to keep them in furs and flunkies. In on this act comes the (to
them)
faintly odious whiff of 20th century new money, represented by Hollywood
and
popular culture. These intruders are kept in their place, but the message
is
clear - change is coming, and coming fast.
The muted colours and autumnal setting continue this theme of a world in
terminal decline and of a group of characters keenly conscious of place
and
tradition yet also wearied and exhausted by it. Only at the very end,
when
fundamental change has occurred and many characters are left to face up
to
very different destinies do we see a bit of sunshine creeping in,
heralding
the dawn of a new era.
The cast are all excellent, with special mention deserving of Maggie
Smith's
effortless scene stealing as a bitchy but broke old Countess; the ever
reliable Jeremy Northam as matinee idol Ivor Novello, well aware of his
place in the great scheme of things and young Kelly Macdonald in the
pivotal
role of Smith's harassed maid who's inquisitiveness rattles a whole load
of
family skeletons.
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