http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/opinion/served-very-well-by-the-stereotypes/story-e6frg6zo-1225982616080
Further comment today. http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/movies/stutterly-marvellous--why-we-clamour-for-the-stammer-story-20110106-19gv4.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lionel_Logue
http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/18247773
Last edited by meister (2011-01-05 19:10:22)
I will watch this film when it is available "On Demand".
fnb - I enjoyed the portrayal of the Sartorial Duke as a bit of a shallow, callow, self obsessed playboy. I think NJS has written somewhere a bit about the times and the characters of each of the Kings - 3 in a year.
From what little I know of history the film seemed to play around with time a bit and compress and rearrange incidents for dramatic effect and narrative drive.
I still have yet to see this film but I saw it was all over the Golden Globe awards last night. It's alright to get excited about jacket and tie clothes in films or period films but there is no real growth without appreciating wardrobes from a lot of other films. Part of the reason many men on the MBs dress poorly is they reinforce their own narrow views and aspirations about style which creates a a form of sartorial senility.
Last edited by fxh (2011-01-25 00:28:06)
Of course the sonofabitch then proceeded - whilst in the Bahamas - to engage in black market currency trading - scarcely disguised. That was of course when not in NYC visiting his tailor.
Who? Leo McKern or Churchill?
The Black Shirt in Britain
The Meanings and Functions of Political Uniform
http://www.philipcoupland.com/article---the-black-shirt-in-britain.php
Some great illustrations here in this paper.
Last edited by fxh (2011-01-28 02:16:16)
There were also Spode's 'Black Shorts' a reference which, by itself alone, should have made the Daily Mirror's Casandra (and Duff Cooper come to that) think again over P G Wodehouse's purpose in broadcasting over the Nazi wireless.
Yes PG seems to have spent a lot of time, successfully in my view, taking the piss out of Mosley and Fruity
I've seen this now: good locations and sets; workmanlike, rather than great, acting (as might be expected, as a minimum, from the actors) but Colin Firth, although he catches Geo VI's voice, bears not the slightest resemblance to the king. One assumes that the naval uniform and decorations that he wore towards the end were correctly researched but most of the costume was pathetic: ill chosen and ill-fitting and Firth's over-sized and ill-sculpted, black felt top hat was appalling - there are still enough good sources of silk toppers to avoid this type of clanger. The exception to the wash-out wardrobe was the wardrobe for Lionel Logue, which I thought captured the probable style of the man in the time.
The NY Times gave the film a corruscating and nasty review and laid into Geo VI too: it increasingly seems to me that some Americans do not miss a beat to strike out at the British. I'd say it's a good film but not a great one and the end, comprising the king's struggle successfully to read out a fairly straight-forward speech written by speech-writers, was tremendously anti-climactic to the point of damp-squibism.
I did say 'some Americans'. It's nice to know that Anglophilia is on the up in God's new country.
Specifically on propaganda point: Book II was published, a little late, on 9th Feb.
Last edited by NJS (2011-02-10 11:23:16)