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6/04/2015

Film Excess' 2nd birthday movie masterpiece: The King's Speech (2010) - Hooper's soaring, royal masterpiece about overcoming human frailty



1 Film Excess win:

Best Film 

7 Film Excess nominations:

Best Film (won) 
Best Screenplay: David Seidler (lost to Christopher Nolan for Inception)
Best Lead Actor: Colin Firth (lost to Stephen Dorff for Somewhere)
Best Supporting Actor: Geoffrey Rush (lost to John C. Reilly for The Extra Man) 
Best Supporting Actress: Helena Bonham Carter, also for Alice in Wonderland (lost to Dianne Wiest for Rabbit Hole) 
Best Director: Tom Hooper (lost to Sofia Coppola for Somewhere) 
Best Editing (lost to Somewhere)

+ Best Movie of the Year
+ Best English Movie of the Year
+ Best Historical Movie of the Year


The elegant, simple poster for Tom Hooper's The King's Speech


The Duke of York has had problems of stuttering for as long as he can remember, when George V, his father, dies and his older brother ruins his own future as king, so that the duke, unexpectedly, must stand tall on his own and become king of the vast, British world empire, which is on the verge of World War II.

King's Speech is a grand film with a relatively small plot; one man has to learn how to give a successful speech. It is written by Oscar-winning David Seidler (The King and I (1999)) and directed by Tom Hooper (The Damned United (2009)).
The film lives through its sublime actors' performances: Oscar-winning Colin Firth (Mamma Mia! (2008)), Geoffrey Rush (The Life and Death of Peter Sellers (2004)) and Helena Bonham Carter (The Heart of Me (2002)) are all excellent. From Hooper's direction to Oscar-nominated composer Alexander Desplat's (Argo (2012)) score, King's Speech is peopled by outstanding talents doing first rate work all the way around.
This film is both funny and full of human warmth. A story of human defiance in a historic setting. About stepping out of the shadows of fear and becoming one's own master. - Hooray for The King's Speech, truly a must-see!
Hooper is currently in post production with his next film, the long-awaited transsexual drama The Danish Girl (2015) with Eddie Redmayne in the title role.

Related posts:


Top 10: Best UK movies reviewed by Film Excess to date 

2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED III]
2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II]
2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]
2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess






Watch the trailer for The King's Speech here - a film that truly, magnificently, works

Cost: 15 mil. $
Box office: 414.2 mil. $
= Mega-hit
[The King's Speech has become the most successful British independent film ever made; (although it is actually a UK/US/Australian co-production, it is designated as a mostly British film.) It was especially big in the UK and Australia, (in the UK alone, it grossed 44.4 mil. £!) It grossed 138.7 mil. $ in North America (33 % of the total gross), where it also won 4 out of 12 Oscar nominations: Best Original Screenplay, Director, Actor and Best Film.]

What do you think of The King's Speech?

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