Tulip Fever is a 2017 historical romantic drama film
directed by Justin Chadwick and written by Deborah Moggach and Tom Stoppard,
adapted from Moggach's novel of the same name. It stars Alicia Vikander, Dane
DeHaan, Jack O'Connell, Zach Galifianakis, Judi Dench, Christoph Waltz,
Holliday Grainger, Matthew Morrison and Cara Delevingne. The plot follows a
17th-century painter in Amsterdam who falls in love with a married woman whose
portrait he has been commissioned to paint.
Filmed in the summer of 2014, Tulip Fever was delayed
numerous times before finally being released in the United States on September
1, 2017 by The Weinstein Company. It grossed $8 million worldwide against its
$25 million budget.
The film was originally planned to be made in 2004 on a $48
million budget, with Jude Law, Keira Knightley and Jim Broadbent as lead
actors, John Madden as director and Steven Spielberg producing through
DreamWorks. However, the production was halted days before it was scheduled to
start filming as a result of changes in tax rules affecting film production in
the UK.
On July 8, 2013, the Daily Mail's Baz Bamigboye reported
that Justin Chadwick would direct the film with Alicia Vikander attached to
star in the role of Sophia and that Matthias Schoenaerts was being sought for
the male lead. Bamigboye reported that Chadwick together with producers Alison
Owen and Harvey Weinstein, decided to cast Vikander for the film.
In 2014, Alison Owen partnered with Weinstein to restart the
film after re-acquiring the rights to the film from Paramount Pictures. In
October 2013, Dane DeHaan was in talks to join the cast. In February 2014,
Christoph Waltz joined the cast.[12] In April 2014, Holliday Grainger, Cara
Delevingne, and Jack O’Connell joined the cast. In June 2014, Judi Dench was
cast as the abbess of St. Ursula, who takes in orphaned children. That same
month Tom Hollander, Cressida Bonas, and David Harewood joined the cast. In
August 2014, Matthew Morrison joined.[20] Deborah Moggach, author of the novel,
also appears in the film. Harvey Weinstein offered Harry Styles the role of
Mattheus, but the singer turned it down due to scheduling conflicts, and
Matthew Morrison was cast instead.
The crew of Tulip Fever included cinematographer Eigil
Bryld, production designer Simon Elliott, costume designer Michael O’Connor,
hair and make-up designer Daniel Phillips and editor Rick Russell. Tom Stoppard
adapted the screenplay for the film. The London-based Welsh portrait artist
Jamie Routley did the original portraits that are seen in the film.Danny Elfman
composed the film's score.
Filming took place at Cobham Hall in Gravesend, Kent where
production transformed a wing at the school into a 17th-century Amsterdam
Gracht. The waterway was also constructed from scratch, complete with barges
and donkeys crossing humpback bridges. Additionally, the school's courtyard was
used as the brewery yard in the story.[26] Other filming locations include
Norwich Cathedral,[19] Holkham (in Norfolk),Tilbury (in Essex), Kentwell Hall
(in Suffolk), and at Pinewood Studios on various dates throughout June and July
in 2014.[28] Filming also took place in Haddenham, Buckinghamshire.
Set in the Netherlands in the 17th century, during the
period of the tulip mania, Sophia, an orphan, is betrothed to the elderly
Cornelis. In return for the marriage, her sisters are able to travel to New
Amsterdam (New York) in the new world, where they have an aunt awaiting them.
Three years later, Sophia is unhappy in the marriage, since
Cornelis seems to be concerned only with conceiving an heir, to no avail thus
far. Cornelis believes this to have something to do with a mistake he made in
the past, with his previous wife: she miscarried their first child and when
Cornelis asked the doctor to save the second child over the wife, he feels that
God punished him by taking both his wife and his child away.
Cornelis decides to hire a painter, so that he could at
least be remembered as having had a beautiful young wife, should he have no
heir to continue his legacy. Sophia agrees, but as soon as the young painter
Jan arrives to paint the couple, he and Sophia fall in love. Jan sends a note
to Sophia, asking her to send him a vase with tulips. She shows up at his door
with the tulips, and they consummate their love.
Meanwhile, Sophia's friend, the housemaid Maria, is in a
courtship with the neighborhood fishmonger, Willem. Willem is speculating in
the tulip market, and is doing quite well - expecting to be independently
prosperous and able to marry Maria, he even sells his business to another
fishmonger. One day, Sophia borrows Maria's cloak and heads to a rendezvous
with Jan. Willem, seeing Sophia in the cloak, mistakes her for Maria, and
follows her to her rendezvous. Crushed by what he thinks is Maria's
unfaithfulness, he goes to a pub to drown his sorrows. There a prostitute robs
him of the large sum of money he has built up on the tulip market. When he
tries to retrieve the money, he is beaten up and forcibly inducted into the
navy for causing a ruckus.
Jan plots to escape to the new world with Sophia, after
having success of his own in the tulip speculation market. He hears that the
nuns at St. Ursula (the convent Sophia came from) raise tulips in their
gardens. Jan attempts to steal some of the bulbs, but is knocked out by the
abbess of St. Ursula. When he regains consciousness, he apologises and the
abbess gives him the bulbs Willem had bought before he was thrown into the
navy.
Maria realizes that she is pregnant with Willem's child.
With Willem gone, the baby will be born out of wedlock. Maria explains her
condition to Sophia and threatens to reveal Sophia's affair to Cornelis, if
Cornelis were to find out about her pregnancy. Sophia conspires with Maria and
decides to pass off the pregnancy as her own. When the baby is born, Sophia
will pretend to die in childbirth, so she can leave to be with Jan, and Maria
will get to raise the child as her own with Cornelis.
After Maria gives birth to a daughter and Sophia pretends to
die, Cornelis is griefstricken at the loss of his wife. Sophia, under her
shroud, weeps as she realizes that she has deeply hurt Cornelis with her
deceit, but eventually realizes that it is too late to undo what she has done.
Ashamed of herself, Sophia runs away and Jan is unable to find her.
Willem, returning after his stint in the navy, goes to see
Maria at Cornelis's house. Maria is furious at him at first, but they soon
reconcile. Cornelis overhears their loud quarreling and the reveal of the
conspiracy between Maria, Sophia, and Jan. Cornelis makes his peace with the
truth, and departs for the Indies, where he finds love and makes a family, but
only after first leaving the house to Maria, Willem, and the baby girl he loved
as his own.
Eight years later, the abbess of St. Ursula visits Jan and views
his artwork of Sophia. She praises him for his talent, and commissions him to
paint a mural in the church. When Jan looks down from painting the mural, he
sees Sophia, who has joined the convent, and they share tender smiles.
A tulip, known as "the Viceroy" (viseroij),
displayed in the 1637 Dutch catalog Verzameling van een Meenigte Tulipaanen.
Its bulb was offered for sale between 3,000 and 4,200 guilders (florins)
depending on size (aase). A skilled craftsworker at the time earned about 300
guilders a year.
Anonymous 17th-century watercolor of the Semper Augustus,
famous for being the most expensive tulip sold during tulip mania.
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In Europe, formal futures markets appeared in the Dutch
Republic during the 17th century. Among the most notable centered on the tulip
market, at the height of tulip mania. At the peak of tulip mania, in February
1637, some single tulip bulbs sold for more than 10 times the annual income of
a skilled craftsworker. Research is difficult because of the limited economic
data from the 1630s, much of which come from biased and speculative sources.
Some modern economists have proposed rational explanations, rather than a
speculative mania, for the rise and fall in prices. For example, other flowers,
such as the hyacinth, also had high initial prices at the time of their
introduction, which immediately fell. The high asset prices may also have been
driven by expectations of a parliamentary decree that contracts could be voided
for a small cost, thus lowering the risk to buyers.
A standardized price index for tulip bulb contracts, created
by Earl Thompson. Thompson had no price data between February 9 and May 1, thus
the shape of the decline is unknown. The tulip market is known to have
collapsed abruptly in February.
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