The Happy Prince

by

Četvrtak, 6. decembar 2018. 21:30 (orijentaciono) Velika sala – Film počinje nakon svečanog otvaranja koje počinje u 21:00

Srećni princ

Igrani film

Režija: Rupert Everett

Uloge: Rupert Everett, Colin Firth, Emily Watson

Nemačka, UK, Belgija, Italija

Trajanje: 105 min.

Berlinale, Sundance

Bavarian Film Awards – Najbolja produkcija

Neispričana priča o poslednjim danima u tragičnim vremenima Oskara Vajlda, osobe koja svoju propast posmatra sa ironičnom distancom i slaže se sa poteškoćama koje nosi njegov život bez vezivanja i sa humorom.

The Happy Prince

Feature film

Director: Rupert Everett

Cast: Rupert Everett, Colin Firth, Emily Watson

Germany, UK, Belgium, Italy

Duration: 105 min

Berlinale, Sundance

Bavarian Film Awards – Best Production

The untold story of the last days in the tragic times of Oscar Wilde, a person who observes his own failure with ironic distance and regards the difficulties that beset his life with detachment and humor.

Rupert Everett

Rupert James Hector Everett was born in Burnham Deepdale, Norfolk, to Sara (Maclean) and Anthony Michael Everett, a Major in the British Army, who later worked in business. He is of mostly English, Scottish, and Irish ancestry. Everett grew up in privileged circumstances, but the wry, sometimes arrogant, intellectual was a rebel from the very beginning. At the age of seven, he was placed into the care of Benedictine monks at Ampleforth College where he trained classically on the piano. He was expelled from the Central School of Speech and Drama in London for clashing with his teachers and instead apprenticed himself at the avant-garde Glasgow Citizen’s Theatre in Scotland, performing in such productions as ‘Don Juan’ and ‘Heartbreak House’. In 1984 Everett successfully filmed a lead role in Another Country (1984), which he had performed earlier on stage and shot to international attention, becoming one of England’s hottest new star. But again the wickedly sharp and suave rebel doused his own fire by clashing with the press and even with his own fans. In 1989 Everett openly declared his own homosexuality — an announcement that could have mortally wounded his film career. Instead, over time, it seems to have had the opposite effect. His career revitalized as Julia Roberts’ gay confidante in My Best Friend’s Wedding (1997), and he has continued to impress notably in the classics area with Shakespeare in Love (1998) (as Christopher Marlowe), An Ideal Husband (1999) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1999) (as Oberon). Lately he has enhanced both films with his royal portrayals in To Kill a King (2003) and Stage Beauty (2004), and television with his effortlessly suave Sherlock Holmes in Sherlock Holmes and the Case of the Silk Stocking (2004). His predilection for smug and smarmy villains of late such as the cartoonish Dr. Claw in Inspector Gadget (1999) has extended into voice animation with his “unprincely” Prince Charming character in Shrek 2 (2004). In making his landmark decision to “come out”, Rupert becomes a living testament disproving the theory that a truly talented and successful romantic leading man cannot survive the career-killing stigma of being openly gay.