Pemberley (Lyme Park, Cheshire)

Pemberley (Lyme Park, Cheshire)
Oh, to be in England...
Showing posts with label Mildred Pierce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mildred Pierce. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Kate Winslet- Actor of the Week

Kate Winslet
Kate Winslet has done so many period pieces she has been nicknamed Corset Kate! And thank goodness she has. Here are a few of the wonderful films she has done in the period genre (and perhaps one modern era film).

Kate Winslet, Sense and Sensibility 1995
Was there ever an actress who inhabited a role like Kate did with Marianne Dashwood?

Marianne: Can he love her? Can the soul be really be satisfied with such polite affections? To love is to burn - to be on fire, like Juliet or Guinevere or Eloise...

Kate Winslet as Ophelia in Hamlet 1996
As the tragic, vulnerable, mad Ophelia in Kenneth Branaugh's Hamlet. Remarkable!

Kate Winslet as Rose in Titanic 1997
As the young Rose Dewitt Bukater in Titanic, she had her true breakout role, for which she will be forever known. I love that outfit by the way!

Rose: You know, my dream has always been to run away and become an artist, Living in a garret poor but free!
Jack: You wouldn't last 2 days. There's no hot water and hardly any caviar.

Kate Winslet as Maddy LeClerc in Quills 2000
I really hated Quills, for the subject matter not for the acting. I don't think I will ever watch this again. But there she is, gorgeously corseted as usual.

Kate Winslet as Young Iris Murdoch in Iris 2001
As the young novelist Iris Murdoch, played opposite Hugh Bonneville as her husband John Bayley, she had a really meaty role and was a little less glamorous than some of her other roles.

Kate Winslet as Sylvia Llewelyn Davies in Finding Neverland 2004
Finding Neverland is a gem of a film. We tend to forget just how wonderful, so if you haven't seen this one in a while, you may want to revisit it. Just bring a big box of Kleenex!

Michael Llewelyn Davies: [about J.M. Barrie] Can we have him for supper?
Sylvia Llewelyn Davies: Have him to stay for supper, Michael. We're not cannibals.

Kate Winslet as Iris Simkins in The Holiday 2006
Alright, I know The Holiday isn't a period piece, but this is my blog and this is one of my favourite films, so there! I just love it, especially this time of year.

Iris: [to Jasper] I don't know, but I think what I've got is something slightly resembling... GUMPTION!

   
Kate Winslet as Hanna Schmitz in The Reader 2008
Kate won a Best Actress Oscar for her role as the intense Hanna Schmitz in The Reader.  Again, the film is fantastic, but I am not in a great hurry to see it again. I just like my films a little happier, I suppose.

Kate Winslet as April Wheeler in Revolutionary Road 2008
I never saw Revolutionary Road. The trailers didn't look appealing, much as I adore Kate and Leo. Anyone want to give me their take on whether or not it's worth seeing?
N.B. Jule left a comment below saying that Revolutionary Road is fabulous, so now I can't wait to see Kate and Leo in this one. Thanks Jule!

Kate Winslet as Mildred Pierce 2011
Showing again how talented she is, Kate totally rocked as Mildred Pierce. A little more severe looking here, she demonstrates her amazing versatility.

Kate Winslet as a young girl
And I couldn't resist this adorable shot of Kate as a youngster. Who knew then how much the world would come to adore this ballsy actress. I for one, can't wait to see what she does in the future.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Mothers in Period Drama for Mother's Day

Mrs. Thornton from Mrs. Gaskell's North and South
Hannah Thornton may not have been the cuddliest mother, but you have to admit she fiercely loved her son. To her flighty daughter Fanny she was more protective than proud, but still a good mother.

Mrs. Bennet from Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice
OK, Mrs. Bennet is a mother who is really trying to do the best for her daughters but she fails as often as she succeeds. And she gives some good cringe-worthy comedic moments in the process!

Mrs. Dashwood from Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility
Poor Mrs. Dashwood. She loves her daughters dearly and fiercely, but again, often unwittingly causes them harm or pain but without the comedy of Mrs. Bennet.

Mrs. Clennam from Charles Dickens' Little Dorrit
Ouch. Mrs. Clennam. What can I say except that here is one of the most spectacularly horrible mothers in 19th century literature. She does redeem herself in the end however (oops....spoiler alert!)

Mildred Pierce
Try as you might Mildred, you really needed to read a parenting book to deal with that witch of a daughter, didn't you?

Marilla Cuthbert from L.M. Montgomery's Anne of Green Gables
Well, even though she wasn't technically Anne's mother, that is really the point of Mother's Day isn't it? Honouring those who mother us, and who was a better mother really, than Marilla? Sigh...

Mrs. Banks from Mary Poppins
Now I think I will end with Mrs. Banks. She tries to balance the job of being a modern woman with being a mother and makes us all feel better by messing up but then redeeming herself at the end. Votes for women and hugs for children!

So Happy Mother's Day to you all, whether you are a mother, have a mother or are remembering a mother today. And feel free to comment below with your favourite mother from a period drama. There are lots more!

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Mildred Pierce (2011) - Tearjerking Melodrama or just Bad Parenting? Guest Blog Entry by Big Sister

Mildred Pierce 2011 HBO series starring Kate Winslet
5 part HBO Miniseries starring Kate Winslet, Guy Pearce, Evan Rachel Wood;  written and directed by Todd Haynes
Hey, everyone, this is Jenny's Big Sister writing - I was asked by Jenny to cover this "period drama" not because of any special expertise or fondness for this material, but because she doesn't have HBO at her house and I do.  Not that I mind being asked my opinion (I can usually be counted on to give my opinion quite freely) - so I set up the DVR for last Sunday night.  However, family schedules being what they are (my kids and I have a standing Sunday night date to watch "The Amazing Race"), I didn't get to watch it until Tuesday evening.  And even then, I ended up watching it immediately following an episode of "Supernanny" ... which was more pertinent than I could have imagined!  So here goes ...
Kate Winslet as Mildred Pierce
“Mildred Pierce” is based on the Depression-era novel by James M. Cain (written in 1941).  It was made into a classic film melodrama  in 1945 starring Joan Crawford, but has not been presented since then.  When Todd Haynes, the director of the HBO production, read the original James M. Cain novel, he realized that the themes of economic hard times and class would be of relevance in today’s economic reality.  The original film version was made in the time of the Production Code (Hay’s Code) which governed morality in film from 1934 – the early 1960’s;  thus, the 1945 version was structured more like a traditional murder mystery/film noir with less of an emphasis on the sexuality.  In the current version it’s very “HBO” – so send the kids to bed and hunker down for the no-holds-barred version of Mildred Pierce!  

Poster for the original 1945 version of Mildred Pierce starring Joan Crawford
(Before I go any farther, I have a confession:  I haven't read the novel, and I haven't seen the classic Joan Crawford film.  Which, considering that I was an English Literature major with a minor in Cinema Studies is fairly shameful ... however, I did watch these episodes, so that's what I'll talk about.  And living in Toronto, Canada we even had a restaurant here called Mildred Pierce - haven't been there either!  Clearly I have some catching up to do ... )

Kate Winslet as Mildred waitressing
1931.  Glendale, California.  Kate Winslet plays the title character, Mildred Pierce, whose unemployed husband Bert (Bryan F. O'Byrne) is cheating on her.  In the first scene, we see the end of their marriage when she reveals that she’s well aware of his mistress and throws him out of the house.  This leaves her with two daughters to provide for in the early years of the Great Depression.  Mildred is determined that her two daughters don’t suffer the economic effects of the Depression, and sets to work – first, baking pies and cakes; then, working as a waitress, and finally opening her own restaurant.  I found myself admiring Mildred’s drive and business acumen, but at the same time I wanted to shake her for not keeping a tighter rein on her daughter, Veda (played as a young girl by Morgan Turner).  As Mildred begins to find her way as a single mother (or “grass widow” as her neighbour Helen (Melissa Leo) puts it – and I had to look up a definition of that term ... basically, a loose woman who receives the company of different men), and breadwinner.  This challenge of providing for herself and her daughters really puts Mildred’s idea of herself and her middle class existence to the test.  At first, she sees herself as being “above” certain types of work, but eventually she has to swallow her pride in order to make a living during tough economic times.  However, she apparently has instilled in her daughters (especially Veda) a real sense of class hierarchy which, in Veda, comes off as nasty brattiness - hence, the Supernanny reference from earlier on.  I kept wishing that Mildred (or Supernanny!) would just put Veda on the "naughty chair" and regain control of the situation.  Since this is the driver of the (melo)drama, however, we are forced to watch the results of poor parenting on a "bad seed" child!  Yikes!

Guy Pearce as Monty Beregon
This notion of class is one that is often explored in British historical dramas (even not-so-historical dramas), but is seldom addressed as vividly in American dramas as it is portrayed in Mildred Pierce.  Because I don’t want to give too much away with spoilers, I’ll just say that – in typical melodramatic fashion – the sensuality that Mildred explores through her actions in Episode 2 when she takes up with the playboy Monty Beregon (Guy Pearce), is punished through tragedy before the end of the episode.

Evan Rachael Wood as the adult Veda
In the later episodes, the adult Veda will be portrayed by Evan Rachel Wood - I can't wait to see the fireworks between her and Kate Winslet as Veda and Mildred work out their very dysfunctional mother/daughter relationship.  Happy viewing, everyone.


Mildred Pierce (Movie Tie-in Edition) (Vintage Crime/Black Lizard)Mildred Pierce (Keepcase)

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