The Crown Prince (2006)
Facts
| Directed by | Robert Dornhelm |
| Cast | Max von Thun, Vittoria Puccini, Omar Sharif, Klaus Maria Brandauer and Christian Clavier |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 2005 |
| DVD Release | November 6, 2007 |
| Running Time | 182 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 741952647799 |
| Buy this item | $24.99 at Amazon.com As of Aug 23 16:10 EDT (details) 2 DVD, Koch International, Usually ships in 24 hours, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 38 new from $15.68, 12 used from $14.15 |
About The Crown Prince
The true story of a royal rebel and his tragic love stars Academy Award Nominee Omar Sharif who leads a stellar cast in the ambitious mini-series tale of Crown Prince Rudolf. The Crown Prince is a mystery and a conspiracy revolving around thwarted hopes and unfulfilled love. After entering into a marriage of convenience the young heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne begins a fateful affair with the Baroness Mary Vetsera. She along with the other women who influenced his life inspired this sweeping saga of epic proportions and tragic consequences.System Requirements:Running time: 181 Mins Genre: DRAMA Rating: NR UPC: 741952647799 Manufacturer No: KOC-DV6477 Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Historical, yet trampled again |
What happened to Rudolph's relationship with Hungary, his relationship with his Grandmother?? No, they could have made something special and again they failed. April 28, 2008
| Loved it! |
| Lovely to Look At; Three-and-a-half Stars! |
If your cup of tea is costume drama and you are not too picky about history, "The Crown Prince" will deliver 180 minutes of gorgeosity; and the attention to scenic detail will also explain such minutia as why the Vienna State Opera House has that rather ungainly projected arched facade: It was for carriages to drive under to deliver their elegant charges to the great front doors. One never knows what one might learn from an elegantly produced movie set in such beautiful locations as Vienna and Prague. March 13, 2008
| WHAT A WASTED OPPORTUNITY |
| Mere beside-the-point eyecandy |
This production is insuperably saccharine, ponderously slow and plagued by amateurish acting (and badly glued moustaches to match). Don't be fooled by the gratuitous moment of nudity barely 15 minutes in: this is nothing but a very expensive episode of Beverly Hills 90210. The involvement of historian Brigitte Hamann must have been a token affair, for you can't even trust all the factual details to be right. Opportunities to show the real life drama are missed at every turn. The fateful conversation in which the emperor tells his son he doesn't think him fit to succeed actually took place, but wasn't nearly as quiet or civilized a meeting as shown here. In fact, Rudolf's shouting could be heard in the anteroom, and Franz Joseph was so overcome with emotion that he fell into a swoon. The makers have romanticized even the double suicide itself. The servants outside hear two gunshots in quick succession, as if the act were carried out as intended. In actual fact, after shooting Mary, Rudolf fell prone to second thoughts, and it was not until after a night of heavy drinking that he eventually shot himself the next morning. One of his letters of goodbye intimated that he no longer wanted to, but was left with no choice, as he had now become a murderer.
Silliness is not entirely avoided. Rudolf and Prussian crown prince Wilhelm are constantly visiting brothels, apparently for the sole purpose of engaging in heavy-handed politico-historical debate. Sandra Ceccarelli exerts herself to look like a tormented Elizabeth but merely succeeds in making you think she needs to visit a dentist. To make sure the viewer knows what is going on, characters are explaining the obvious to each other over and over again with great insistence.
How much better could this have been if the makers had refrained from sugercoating the real story. How much more alive would it have been had something of Rudolf's relation with his sisters been shown, and his infatuation with `mad' King Ludwig II of Bavaria. How much more might have been conveyed of the stifling ceremony of the Viennese court - even the 50s "Sisi"-movies succeed in getting that right. How much more of the weirdness of it all might have been captured had something of the bizarre aftermath been included (Mary's corpse was whisked away from Mayerling in a coach, in the dead of night, all dressed up and tied to a broomstick to make her sit upright and seem alive to overly curious passers-by. Two nights after Rudolf's burial superstitious Elizabeth descended into the Kapuzinergruft and tried to conjure up the spirit of her dead son. When at another séance she was told that he dwelled in a place `worse than hell', she was devastated.)
None of that. All we get is eye-candy. Most of the film was shot at the appropriate historical locations, and the costume department has visibly outdone itself to squander its share of the 11mln euros available. Enough to feast the eye on. The casting director has made sure this goes for the lead characters too; Jeremy Irons look-alike Max von Thun certainly is a lot easier on the eye than the real Rudolf was, and in order not to disguise the fact he has to make do without the beard that Rudolf always wore (he needed it to camouflage the nervous twitching of his face). In all, this is a missed opportunity and frankly a waste of your time.
January 19, 2008
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