Monday 12 December 2022

MARIE ANTOINETTE 2022 VIDEO: Official Trailer (2022)


Marie Antoinette doesn’t deserve the Bridgerton woke treatment

 

The new series produced by Canal+ and the BBC is bad history and worse entertainment

 



ANNE-ELISABETH MOUTET

1 November 2022 • 8:46pm

Anne-Elisabeth Moutet

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/11/01/marie-antoinette-doesnt-deserve-bridgerton-woke-treatment/

 

It takes something of a special effort to outrage the French with the amount of sex in a British series. But Deborah Davis has managed it with her three-season, 24-part Marie-Antoinette, a Canal+/BBC production that has just hit the French small screens, and thrown the nation into a royal tizzy.

 

Closer to Bridgerton Does Versailles than to Sofia Coppola’s whimsical 2006 biopic of the last Queen of the Ancien Régime, which succeeded with singular grace at retelling history in a contemporary vernacular, the first instalment was dropped on the nation on Hallowe’en night, possibly by a scheduler with a sense of humour. Within 24 hours, it’s been called “obscene”, “vulgar”, “aberrant”, “stupid”, and has sparked demands to reinstate the Gaullist-era script approval by the curators of Versailles before allowing filming at the palace.

 

The French may have guillotined Marie-Antoinette in 1793, but even the French Revolution’s great historians, many of them communists like the legendary Albert Soboul, would shudder at sex lessons performed by King Louis XV’s mistress Madame du Barry on the young Marie-Antoinette, a graphic rape of the princess by her young husband, the future Louis XVI (a diffident character whose vacillations against any violence are part of why he never managed to flee France), and weird scenes including the seduction of his daughter-in-law by King Louis XV, having managed entry into her apartments by carrying her breakfast on a platter, like a Soho House waiter.

 

What’s fascinating is that, in her time, Marie-Antoinette, whose spending had made her a hated figure, was accused of affairs with members of both sexes (including her lady-in-waiting the Princesse de Polignac, who paid for this on the guillotine) as well as blasphemous practices, including taking part in black masses. These accusations, made in anonymous pamphlets known as libelles, were targeted for maximum political damage by adversaries found mostly among Court factions, not in proto-revolutionary circles.

 

But what would be the point of sticking to historical accuracy when you’ve decided to create an “empowered feminist heroine” spouting woke slogans? Which, incidentally, is why Marie Antoinette, the series, fails in France, a country that doesn’t mourn its kings or monarchic regime. We are a country of history buffs, where Stéphane Bern, the emollient presenter of the prime-time lavish historical series Secrets d’Histoire, is regularly received at the Elysée by Emmanuel Macron, and was given an official mission to help preserve French heritage buildings.

 

A number of Paris publishing houses are kept afloat by biographies, archival studies, and historical novels, ranging from the popular to the erudite, some of which have remained in print for more than a century. Graphic novels, television series, and video games use French historical backgrounds that feed on the national passion, and have managed to keep alive a chronological literacy that more contemporary academic historical studies have spurned in recent years.

 

It helps that France has remained the world’s top tourism destination, with record numbers achieved post-Covid. Our love for history is not untainted by a Balzacian sense of our interest: we’re pretty sure that visitors are not coming to Versailles to look for shades of a French Meghan Markle.

 



BBC acquires new ‘Marie Antoinette’ series from makers of ‘Versailles’

 

A new historical TV drama about Marie Antoinette will air on BBC Two and iPlayer in the UK.

https://britishperioddramas.com/news/marie-antoinette-bbc-series-deborah-davis/

 

Produced by the team behind Versailles, the eight-part series is created and written by Oscar-winning screenwriter Deborah Davis, who co-wrote The Favourite.

 

Titled simply Marie Antoinette, the show is currently filming in many prestigious historical French locations, including the Châteaux of Versailles, Vaux-le-Vicomte, Lésigny, Champs, Voisins, and in the emblematic studios of Bry-sur-Marne.

 

The official synopsis reads: “Marie Antoinette was barely 14 years old when she left Austria to marry the Dauphin of France.

 

“Growing from a stubborn young princess navigating the rules of the French court under pressure to continue the Bourbon line, to a true fashion icon, she impressed with her natural charisma, and recreated life in Versailles in her image: free, independent and feminist ahead of time.

 

“Even with rumours underminding her reputation, the notorious figure would defeat the enemies of the Versailles court with courage and dignity.”

 

Three seasons of Versailles aired between 2015 and 2018.

 

Fabrice de la Patellière, Head of Drama CANAL+ commented: “The story of Marie Antoinette is timeless, and her life continues to intrigue and capture the imagination of contemporary viewers. The scripts for this series are compelling, and we have the ideal partners to bring the work of Deborah Davis to life. This is set to be a high-end, decadant drama with epic scale.”

 

François de Brugada, CEO of Banijay Studios France added: “Marie Antoinette is one of the most iconic figures in French history, and her fearless, fascinating life; with Deborah Davis leading the writing team, will make an undeniably powerful television series. We are ready to enchant viewers with stunning scenery from beautiful locations across France, and illustrate this audacious, controversial character who changed the history of our nation.”

 

Marie Antoinette will be played by Emilia Schüle (Ku’damm 56/63).

 

The cast also includes Jack Archer (The Bay) as Provence, Jasmine Blackborow (Shadow and Bone) as Lamballe, Louis Cunningham as Louis XVI, Crystal Shepherd-Cross (Versailles) as Adelaide, Caroline Piette as Victoire, Nathan Willcocks (Versailles) as Mercy, and Roxane Duran (Riviera) as Josephine.

 

A movie about Marie Antoinette was previously released in 2006, starring Kirsten Dunst.

 

The new Marie Antoinette series is set to premiere in the UK on BBC Two and on BBC iPlayer in 2022.

 

Sue Deeks, Head of Programme Acquisition, BBC, commented: “Marie Antoinette possesses an enduring fascination and Deborah Davis has a very singular vision for her story – we are truly delighted to be bringing this ambitious project to BBC Two and iPlayer.”

 

Deborah Davis will be joined on the writing team by Louise Ironside (The Split), Avril E. Russell (All on a Summer’s Day), and Chloë Moss (Run Sister Run).

 


Marie Antoinette is an upcoming French-British historical drama television series created and written by Deborah Davis, writer of The Favourite. It is based on the life of the last queen of France before the French Revolution who was 14 years old when she became Dauphine of France upon her marriage to the heir apparent, Louis-Auguste. The first season of the series is scheduled to premiere in 2022 and will consist of eight episodes. German actress Emilia Schüle will play the titular role.

 

Episodes

No.        Title       Directed by        Written by          Viewers

(millions)

1             "The Slap"           Pete Travis         TBA        TBA

2             "Rival Queens"  Pete Travis         TBA        TBA

3             "Pick a Princess"              Pete Travis         TBA        TBA

4             "Queen of France"          Pete Travis         TBA        TBA

5             "Rebel queen"   Geoffrey Enthoven          TBA        TBA

6             "Deus ex Machina"         Geoffrey Enthoven          TBA        TBA

7             "The Ostrich Bitch"         Geoffrey Enthoven          TBA        TBA

8             "Queen of Hearts"          Geoffrey Enthoven          TBA        TBA

 

Production

Development

After the final season of Versailles aired, it was announced Canal+ had commissioned Deborah Davis to write an eight-part series centred on Marie Antoinette. Alongside Banijay Studios and CAPA Drama the French production company planned to create an English language series with the aim to distribute to a wide international audience in a similar fashion to Versailles.[5] In October 2021, it was announced that the BBC had pre-bought the series and the British broadcaster would be part of the production and distribution process.Vogue and Variety reported the series is being created by an all female writing team and would offer a "feminist take" on Marie Antoinette's life.

 

Casting

Casting was announced in September 2021 with Schüle attached to play the lead role.[8] She will be joined by an international cast including Louis Cunningham, Jack Archer, Jasmine Blackborow, Gaia Weiss, James Purefoy, Marthe Keller, Roxane Duran, Crystal Shepherd-Cross, Caroline Piette, Oscar Lesage, Liah O'Prey, Jonas Bloquet, Nathan Willcocks, Paul Bandey, Laura Benson and Yoli Fuller.

 

Filming

In September 2021 it was announced filming had begun. Variety and Deadline reported that alongside the studios of Bry-Sur-Marne, filming would take place at locations that include the Châteaux of Versailles, Vaux-le-Vicomte, Palace of Fontainebleau, Lésigny, Champs and Voisins.

 

Release

Marie Antoinette premiered on the French network Canal+ in October 2022. The following month the series was distributed through BBC First in Australia and released on streamers Foxtel and Binge. Banijay also announced PBS had pre-bought the series with a planned Spring 2023 release. The American premiere was later confirmed to be March 19th 2023.

 

The series will be making its UK debut on BBC Two & iPlayer on 29 December 2022.


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