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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
27 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Splendid! Luxurious! A Treasure!,
By SunshineonLeith "sunshineonleith" (Edinburgh: Scotland) - See all my reviews
This review is from: De Lovely [DVD] (DVD)
An enchanting musical about the great composer Cole Porter played by Kevin Kline.The songs are delivered by Natalie Cole: Elvis Costello; Robbie Williams and Sheryl Crow. We are taken from Paris to Venice to Broadway and then to Hollywood and this film was made in the United Kindom. An audio commentary by the director Irwin Winkler and Kevin Kline and other special features are included. The music and songs of Cole Porter include Let's do it: Night and Day, Its All Right With Me, What a Swell Party this is, among many others. We look back on Cole's life and where he may have got his inspiration for his wonderful songs which sound just as wonderful today. This is the Cole Porter story told in a wonderful cinematic way never boring and filled with fun musical entertainment to tell his story. Kline at his best I thought he may have won an oscar for his fine performance. This is a DVD which you will watch again and again its a musical after all.
25 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not quite anything goes,
By Kurt Messick "FrKurt Messick" (London, SW1) - See all my reviews (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: De Lovely [DVD] (DVD)
'Delovely' is an interesting portrait of Cole Porter and his wife, Linda, played out against a backdrop of Cole's songs from various musicals. The film is framed in a tryptych manner -- the first act is the Paris/Venice time; the second act takes place in New York; the third act in Hollywood. In between are minor scenes fleshing out the life of the Porters. Cole Porter was born in the late 1800s, and came to prominence in the same post-war, roaring 20s ages that also saw people such as Irving Berlin and Noel Coward. He met the desirable and socially-connected divorcee Linda Taylor in Paris; their marriage seemed from the outside rather idyllic, but there was a secret. This was a marriage of love, to be sure, but not lust. Cole Porter was gay, not really even bisexual, but gay. While this came as no surprise to Linda, over time Cole's attachments to his other loves threatened the integrity of their relationship in Linda's eyes. Cole Porter tried to be faithful to three things -- to his wife, Linda; to his music; and to his own identity. These did not always fit well together. Even though faithfulness to Linda meant emotional and relationship attachment rather than sexual fidelity, even here, Cole's attachments to some of his lovers would become strong enough to warrant Linda wanting a change; unfortunately for her, Cole was able to find a gay life no matter where they moved. Linda's ultimate reconciliation to this came from her recognition that Cole's life, like his music, couldn't be restrained. Cole's ultimate regret was that he couldn't find the perfect someone, that his love was always meaningful but not always satisfying. Kevin Kline's protrayal of the conflicted Cole Porter is a very good one; Ashley Judd's Linda is very sensitive and stunningly portrayed. Jonathan Pryce is the shadowy director, who pieces together the life of the Porters in a montage in front of an aged Cole, not quite in flashback, but in time-sequence inspiration. We as the audience watching with Cole are introduced to major figures in his life, including some of his lovers (but only peripherally), and many of his friends, but most figures remain undeveloped save for Cole and Linda. The sets, the scene sequence changes from 'actual' to 'stage', and the scene-shift tone of character are all very effective. Cole Porter's running commentary on his own life helps provide an historical framework as well as an emotional one; the narrative is carried by both the relationship interactions and the songs -- Cole Porter put so much of his own life into the songs. He claims at various points that they were all written for Linda; Linda, ever the realist in the shell of an idealist, knows better, and says so. While much of the story, the sets, the costume and even the credits are done in a style of the 1920s and 1930s (Art Deco is a prominent, recurring theme), the music did not take on this style. More in the tone of 'Red, Hot, and Blue', the Cole Porter-themed tribute album of the late 80s, the songs were often modern renderings of old standards, but modern stars such as Elvis Costello, Alanyis Morrisette, and Sheryl Crow. There are a good number of pieces performed by Kevin Klein and Ashley Judd themselves, Klein performing them as the less-than-stellar-singer Porter himself might have done them. While the music being performed in more modern arrangement jars a little bit with the more time-bound theme of the film, it is still effective in the sense that Porter's music is timeless in many ways. The movie drags a bit at times, but it covers the long stretch of Cole Porter's career, and his marriage with Linda from beginning to end. Romance with a decided twist, this is a somewhat sad film, in that despite the obvious love around the characters in the film, no one is finally satisfied with such love. And still, it is de-lovely.
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An underrated, undiscovered masterpiece,
This review is from: De Lovely [DVD] (DVD)
Why this film hasn't been acclaimed worldwide, I don't know.It has a fantastic sense of style with performances that are faultless. Kline and Judd are so perfectly matched and believable that you become convinced you're watching the real people. But it's the music that wins you over - and the way in which it is woven into the story so that you suddenly see every song in a whole new way as it becomes an illustration of Porter's own life, weaknesses, passions or longing. The entire basis of the film is that Porter (Kline in wonderful prosthetics) sees his life flash before him in the final moments of his life. This is 'orchestrated' by 'Gabe' (Gabriel) who acts as the director of the 'show' that Kline is watching in its final rehearsal. he is thus able to comment on his own life as it is acted out before him. Truly wonderful and definitely not to be missed.
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