“A commentary on art and people using others. Many used her. Marguerite is the mirror of the many facets we all have in ourselves. She was naïve and wise all at once. We all lie at times (white lies, cruel exploiting and mocking ones). Suffering is part of human condition, some suffer for love or because of actions of others. There’s a strong message here.”
“Very SUNSET BOULEVARD. The chauffeur/butler was beyond evil, unlike the other hangers-on. Sad that so many people were contributing to her delusion about her voice. The actress Frot was wonderful to watch. The actual Florence Foster Jenkins died at 76 and wasn’t as attractive as the star. Heartbreaking story of a woman who is surrounded by terrible people. The giant eyeball rolling around on the lawn and the peacock also screeching in the background.”
“Luscious to look at and to listen to. A complex, somewhat troubling film. The story of how a gentle, probably naïve lady who is deceived by everyone. A story of illusion and epiphany. Interesting, strange and disturbing.”
“Beautiful, brutal and bizarre. I don’t know what to make of this, but glad I saw it.”
“Moving the story of Florenece Foster Jenkins to Post-WW1 Paris is brilliant as it places it smack in the middle of Dadaism, where everything is upside down, and so her singing is seized upon by the young revolutionary as both Dada-esque and the epitome of bourgeois excesses.”
“Extraordinary. A movie of illusion, truth, money and class.”
“Marguerite Dumont is incredibly close to Margaret Dumont from the Marx Brothers movies, herself the foil of the Marx Brothers humor she never quite understood.”
“A shocking psychological exploration of illusion, delusion, complexity, cruelty and tenderness, using and abusing. Kept waiting for the truth to be revealed, so many twists and turns to keeping the secret. Madelbos’ action at the end a shocker. A study of knowing vs. not wanting to know and the power of the mind to create a reality. As a study of human behavior a beautifully crafted story, beautifully filmed. Great acting! Great casting! Wonderful production settings, sets and costumes. That eye and the peacock’s plaintiff call. Thanks for this film. So much to discuss and think about, such as the hunting scene cutting the trachea out of the deer. There are so many images to discuss.”
“Fabulous picture! Best music ever!”
“Hans Richter said that Dada was not art: it was ‘anti-art.’ Marguerite’s singing is clearly anti-singing. Her rendition of La Marseillaise the epitome of a disenchanted post-war youth.”
“Requires effort from the viewer, but it is well rewarded in the end.”
“An amazing story, poetically and brilliantly realized.” It will be interesting to see what Meryl Streep and Stephen Frears do to the story, but I’m betting even those talents don’t come close.”
“Images of the eye and perception abound, her peering at the audience, the giant eyeball, the photographer’s lens, the swinging chandeliers and eye in the viewfinder. The disconnect between seeing and hearing gives rise to dozens of interpretations. Loved it!”
“Too long.”
“Catherine Frot deserves every award she was given and more, an incredibly moving performance of a totally unique character.”
“Her performance was A+. The directing was A+. This film was so interesting initially and captivating but it seemed to fall down in its own preposterousness when she did briefly sing well on that stage…it collapsed into a whole new faux platform and lost me.”
“This film absolutely bowled me over. Beautiful, disturbing, heartbreaking and thoughtful. One of the most sensitive and complex telling I have ever experienced of an individual and her social group. The scenes where Marguerite is barefoot outside the Opera House in the sanitarium signaled her vulnerability wonderfully.”
“Amazing that, at times and early in the film, we laugh at Marguerite, and by the end her poor singing is incredibly moving and ultimately as eloquent a statement on love as the cinema has seen.”
“Some scenes could have been cut, others shortened.”
“So much to discuss, which means the film is rich with provocative images, incredible direction and marvelous storytelling.”
“Best film I have seen in a long, long time. I’d write more but a second viewing is necessary, the highest praise I can give.”
(Spoiler alert!) “Her final on-key singing for those precious seconds is about the most romantic moment I can remember in film. OK, slightly corny but so romantic.”