Odile Dicks-Mireaux explains how the costumes she designed for Georges help to tell the story of his progression throughout the film. “He wears black virtually all the way. Maupassant writes very clearly about starching, and we spend a lot of time and effort on the shirts. This period is a very transitional period between the boiled shirt and the pleated shirt so we’ve done a combination of the two. We’ve engineered this ingenious way of making sure we can always have the stiff cuffs. I’ve gone for very high collars on Robert because he suits them really well and it makes them all stand up correctly. If you look at the British royal family they seem to wear a slightly broader look. You look at the French drawings and they seem to have a much tighter, narrower look – a bit like Christian Dior suits: that very pinched, nice, narrow, elegant, long lined leg. He had a journey and then right at the end of the journey he sort of dips and goes a little bit more bourgeois and slightly pompous. He thought he might have a moustache at the end.”
“We asked actors that we really wanted to work with, people that we have admired for a long time, explains Donnellan of their casting choices. “Kristin Scott Thomas we know of old. Uma Thurman, Christina Ricci and Robert Pattinson we have always admired. There’s also Colm Meaney, a wonderful Irish actor who plays Rousset and Phillip Glenister. They are all actors we love.”
Ormerod and Donnellan were thrilled to be working with such a diverse cast. Donnellan describes the moment that the actors turned up for rehearsals. “It was absolutely fantastic to see them arriving one after another. They are all incredibly professional and great fun with wicked senses of humour in their own different ways; Uma, Kristin and Christina are all very different people. We had a ball, an absolutely wonderful time because the material was so fantastic, the roles and screenplay are fantastic. Everybody felt like they were being stretched, especially us because it was our first movie. Kristin, Christina, Uma and Robert would all agree that they were doing things they hadn’t done before, which was what made it so thrilling.”
Talking about Georges’ costumes
Dicks-Mireaux explains how the costumes she designed for Georges help to tell the story of his progression throughout the film. “He wears black virtually all the way. Maupassant writes very clearly about starching, and we spend a lot of time and effort on the shirts. This period is a very transitional period between the boiled shirt and the pleated shirt so we’ve done a combination of the two. We’ve engineered this ingenious way of making sure we can always have the stiff cuffs. I’ve gone for very high collars on Robert because he suits them really well and it makes them all stand up correctly. If you look at the British royal family they seem to wear a slightly broader look. You look at the French drawings and they seem to have a much tighter, narrower look – a bit like Christian Dior suits: that very pinched, nice, narrow, elegant, long lined leg. He had a journey and then right at the end of the journey he sort of dips and goes a little bit more bourgeois and slightly pompous. He thought he might have a moustache at the end.”
Georges ‘Bel Ami’ Duroy
The central character of Georges was a complex and captivating subject for Rachel Bennette, as she explains. “Georges is a difficult character, that’s what makes him so fascinating. He’s quite enigmatic in certain respects and he’s not a typical character in many ways. He’s very reactive as opposed to the active protagonist that you’re used to. So it was a question of trying to get the measure of him.”
“He never works and he still gets it all. That’s what’s so maddening about Georges Duroy,” Donnellan concurs. “He gets the lot with no effort and it’s something we have to live with. Georges has a talent to get to the top and he’s a businessman with one commodity to sell. Another thrilling thing about Georges is his emptiness; people can project anything into him which is another reason why he’s so successful.”
Bennette concludes: “I find Georges really compelling, even if I don’t always like him. There’s something about his audacity, and his daring, and his absolute refusal to be told his place. And there is something quite appealing about that: essentially it is a kind of mad courage that he has.”
You can read the full production notes document with full synopsis, production details etc here
Opens: 2012 Cast: Uma Thurman, Robert Pattinson, Christina Ricci, Kristin Scott Thomas Director: Declan Donnellan, Nick Ormerod
Analysis: Though it shares the same name as Europe’s most prestigious hardcore gay porn studio, this is an adaptation of French author Guy de Maupassant’s much beloved 1885 novel about a young former soldier who screws his way up the social ladder of Parisian high society.
Recent trailers show a period faithful film that’s pretty to look at but oddly inert in emotion, a not unexpected sign considering the author’s legendarily efficient and involving prose is very difficult to translate on screen. As a classic French tale, if this English-language adaptation proves anything less than adequate it will likely get torn apart by European critics.
Cosmopolis
Opens: 2012 Cast: Robert Pattinson, Paul Giamatti, Jay Baruchel, Juliette Binoche, Kevin Durand Director: David Cronenberg
Analysis: After reinventing himself with 2005’s “A History of Violence”, David Cronenberg’s second coming has kept up its strong track record with both “Eastern Promises” and this year’s “A Dangerous Method” scoring very good notices.
Now comes this high-concept adaptation of Don DeLillo’s popular novel in which “Twilight” star Robert Pattinson plays a financial whiz who risks his immense fortune by betting against the yen on one particularly chaotic day.
Much of the action is set inside a limousine with Pattinson’s character transported from one location to another so expect a fairly tight little piece akin to “Phone Booth” – a deliberate comparison considering Colin Farrell was originally cast in the lead role.
Pattinson has yet to really tackle a film not primarily aimed at women, and it’ll be an interesting experiment to see if both critics and Cronenberg fans can get over their issues with a “Twilight” star being in this and judge it fairly.
Translation via Robsten.Ru In Spring 2012 there will be screening of the dramatic picture Bel Ami based on the novel of Guy de Mopassant. This novel is referred to the French literature classics. It was filmed many times, one of which was porno. Although everyone knows this story already, this premiere is being waited with impatience because the main character is played by handsome twilight’s Robert Pattinson.
The creators of the film Bel Ami decided not to rewrite clasics and made quite precise adaptation. The main character Georges Duroy – the ex military – vegetates in poverty in midst of luxury Paris. But one day he meets his old fellow Sharles Forrestier who became a journalist. And the new life starts. George can do almost nothing, but he is very attractive and his mind is resourceful. On having new appointments he understands: there is the invisible power in the high society that can help to grow up.This power are wives of rich and powerful men.
In the beginning he has love affair with his friend’s wife.Then with the lady from high society Clotilda de Morels. Then with her daughter. And it’s her who calls him “bel ami”. George’s life became the line of mistresses, lie, machinations and calculated marriages.
The director of Bel Ami is englishman Declan Donnellan. Russia knows him thanks to his numerous performances in Moscow artistic academic theatre (MHAT) and in Pushkin’s theatre and even in Bolshoy theatre. Declan managed to combine outstanding cast for this film. “Bel ami” Georges Duroy is Robert Pattinson, who is free finally from his vampire saga. He has in movie love affairs with wonderful actresses Uma Thurman, Christina Ricci, Kristin Scott Thomas and so on. Everything was filmed in London and Budapest. But the action is meant to be in Paris.
As Robert Pattinson said by himself, he played amoral Georges with great pleasure because he used to learn French and the novel Bel Ami is one of his favourite books.
Philip Glenister talks Robert Pattinson and Bel Ami in an interview with London Evening Standard
You recently filmed Bel Ami with Uma Thurman and Kristin Scott Thomas, what’s your part?
Philip Glenister: I play a Parisian sub-editor married to Uma Thurman (or ‘The Thermanator’ as she was known on set – she has a very powerful presence and she’s taller than me), then that ugly geezer Robert Pattinson turns up and shags everything that moves. Apart from me, thank goodness
Bel Ami
Great Britain
By Declan Donnellan, Nick Ormerod (feature debut)
With Robert Pattinson, Uma Thurman, Kristin Scott Thomas, Christina Ricci
World premiere / out of competition
Bel Ami, the period drama starring Twilight heart throb Robert Pattinson with Uma Thurman will have its world premiere out of competition at the Berlin international film festival.
The drama, the feature debut of Brit directors Declan Donnellan and Nick Ormerod, is based on a novel by French writer Guy de Maupassant and is the story of a young man’s rise to power in Paris. Christina Ricci, Kristin Scott Thomas and Colm Meaney also star.
The full Berlin line-up will be announced in the coming weeks. The 62nd Berlinale runs Feb.9-19.
Glasgow Film Festival 2012 has announced next month’s programme of premieres, special guests and unique events – with its preceding short film and youth festivals meaning that film-lovers can look forward to a packed month of attractions.
The main festival runs from 16th to 26th February in 16 venues across the city. Meanwhile the Glasgow Youth Film Festival takes place from 5th to 15th February, and the Glasgow Short Film Festival takes place over the weekend from the 9th to the 12th.
Among the many films receiving their first British screening at Glasgow are the eagerly awaited Irvine Welsh’s Ecstasy, romantic comedy The Decoy Bride co-starring David Tennant and Kelly Macdonald, acclaimed American independent drama In the Family, period drama Bel Ami starring Robert Pattinson, award-winner Cloudburst with Olympia Dukakis and Brenda Fricker, controversial documentariesBetter this World and How to Die in Oregon and animated featureWrinkles (Arrugas).
Glasgow Film Fest Co-Director mentions Bel Ami
Away from Scotland, are there any other big films in the programme?
We’ve got Black Gold, starring Mark Strong, Cameron Crowe’s We Bought a Zoo and Bel Ami starring Robert Pattinson. Michael Winterbottom’s Trishna is there, Dexter Fletcher’s Wild Bill and the Werner Herzog documentaryInto the Abyss. Sadly Werner won’t be here as he’ll be in the jungles of Guatemala at the time.
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