Discover
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Montse Triola
Executive Producer -
Albert Serra
Editor -
Branko Neškov
Sound Re-Recording Mixer -
Sebastián Vogler
Production Design -
Jordi Ribas
Sound Recordist -
Ève Corrêa-Guedes
Sound Editor -
Claire Bonnefoy
Producer -
Ivan Neskov
Dialogue Editor
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CinemaSerf 4/19/2023 4:58:45 PM
I was wondering, as I watched this, just how the last few days of Queen Elizabeth II - herself reigning for almost as long - might have looked in comparison with this depiction of the last few days of the acclaimed 'Sun King". Somehow, I doubt she would have been surrounded by quite such a grouping of acolytes and sycophants. Such a collection of quacks and hangers-on riddled with an obsequiousness that would have made "Obadiah Slope" blush. The King has taken to his bed, at the age of 76, suffering from acute pains in his leg. Perched, rather uncomfortably, and adorned with a wig that would not have looked out of place on a lion, we spend the next few days watching this once great, stylish, flamboyant and shrewd man edge towards his meeting with his maker. Jean-Pierre Léaud doesn't really have a great deal to do here - occasionally sip some wine, or eat a biscuit, or take a short stroll around his couch. For the most part he lies there, breathing heavily, allowing the establishment around him to gradually unravel. His long-term lover Mme. de Maintenon (Irène Silvagni) is his principal source of comfort, Marc Susini his valet - a far grander role than the title suggests, tries to keep him contented and a collection of doctors all busy themselves about him - largely without the faintest idea of what is actually wrong much less how to treat their ailing monarch. If you are looking for something with pace, then this is certainly not for you. What Albert Serra delivers here is almost like a fly-on-the-wall documentary depicting the decline not just of the man, but of everything his life has stood for. The costumes look great and film relies on a lighting regime that is entirely plausible - if a little lacking in lux at times. The audio could maybe have been doing with a bit of a boost, but the serene effort from Léaud and the scenario itself provides adequate compensation as we, quite literally, watch the end of an era. On balance, I reckon the late Queen probably had a more private, and medically more competent, time of it....
Jean-Pierre Léaud
Louis XIVJosé Wallenstein
Médecin 5Patrick d'Assumçao
Fagon, le médecinBernard Belin
Mareschal, le chirurgienMarc Susini
Blouin, le valet de chambreFilipe Duarte
NobleLluís Serrat
Ministre 3Vicenç Altaió
Le Brun