The first Downton Abbey movie had the King coming to visit, so a story that could have been covered in about ten minutes was extended to two hours. Yawwwn... oh, it's over now?
I expected much the same thing in this movie (and got it to some degree) but this time they actually ran two parallel stories so they didn't have to stretch to the same degree as the first movie.
The first storyline is that the family goes to a villa in France where they do pretty much the same thing they do at home in Downton Abbey, but they do it in France. Tea with the Marquis of something-or-other, and so forth.
The second storyline is, in my view, a lot more interesting. A production company shows up and the people who didn't get to go on the trip get involved with making a movie at the Downton Abbey. The movie starts off as a silent movie but they ultimately decide to make it into a "talkie", and they explore one of the issues that I've previously read about when the switch-over from silent to sound happened -- the main actress in the movie has the most awful, nasal sounding voice and accent imaginable. So how do you make a talkie and work around that?
Now we're into the interesting stuff. Hand-cranking the cameras. Setting up the microphones and cutting a (wax?) platter for the sound. Even an old movie projector with a shutter in front of the lens (just like the one John posted a picture of a while back) to screen the rushes. And of course the solution to the voicing issue with the star actress, which I won't give away here.
So half of the movie is something that I sat through, and the other half is pretty good.
If I was an old lady I'm sure I'd think both halves were wonderful.
I expected much the same thing in this movie (and got it to some degree) but this time they actually ran two parallel stories so they didn't have to stretch to the same degree as the first movie.
The first storyline is that the family goes to a villa in France where they do pretty much the same thing they do at home in Downton Abbey, but they do it in France. Tea with the Marquis of something-or-other, and so forth.
The second storyline is, in my view, a lot more interesting. A production company shows up and the people who didn't get to go on the trip get involved with making a movie at the Downton Abbey. The movie starts off as a silent movie but they ultimately decide to make it into a "talkie", and they explore one of the issues that I've previously read about when the switch-over from silent to sound happened -- the main actress in the movie has the most awful, nasal sounding voice and accent imaginable. So how do you make a talkie and work around that?
Now we're into the interesting stuff. Hand-cranking the cameras. Setting up the microphones and cutting a (wax?) platter for the sound. Even an old movie projector with a shutter in front of the lens (just like the one John posted a picture of a while back) to screen the rushes. And of course the solution to the voicing issue with the star actress, which I won't give away here.
So half of the movie is something that I sat through, and the other half is pretty good.
If I was an old lady I'm sure I'd think both halves were wonderful.
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