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Rhode Island Roads
The online magazine of travel, life, dining, and entertainment for people who love Rhode Island |
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(Worth seeing just for the Bedroom Scene)
By Madelyn Miller
I never liked history. Perhaps if we had been shown movies like the Lady and the Duke instead of having to read boring books, I would have felt differently.
This movie has the best bedroom scene ever. I won’t spoil it for you by telling you about it, but it does not involve sex. So even a high school teacher could show it to her class.
The tale of a beautiful royalist English gentlewoman living perilously in France during the Revolution, and her sometimes affectionate, sometimes tempestuous relationship with Philippe, Duke of Orleans, a cousin King Louis XVI but nonetheless a supporter of revolutionary ideas. The Lady manages to persuade the Duke to rescue an outlaw, but fails to keep him from voting for the King's execution.
The film was inspired by Grace Elliott's memoirs, "JOURNAL OF MY LIFE DURING THE FRENCH REVOLUTION," specifically the passages describing the author's relationship with the Duke, which focus on five crucially important dates in the chronology of the French Revolution.
A Technical Note about "Lady and the Duke": To depict historical Paris accurately, director Rohmer came up with a technique in which real-life characters are inserted into scenic backgrounds specially painted by Jean-Baptiste Marot. But the acting sometimes seems a bit cardboard sometimes and I was never really pulled into the movie.
Genre: Drama
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