Why Nicole Kidman's "Grace Of Monaco" Got Booed At Cannes



via BuzzFeed

The fictionalized biopic about Grace Kelly got an icy reception when it opened the festival this week. But there’s a less buzzed-about biopic, which debuted the day after, that deserves far more acclaim.



Tim Roth and Nicole Kidman in Grace of Monaco


Weinstein Company


Grace of Monaco probably isn't the worst film to screen at the Cannes Film Festival, but the opening night movie premiered to the boos that the festival itself is famous for. And that's not surprising. The film, which stars Nicole Kidman as actress turned Princess of Monaco Grace Kelly, is ridiculous and a touch offensive, and Cannes is an event where people's love for cinema goes both ways; the presence of a movie star isn't enough to stop viewers from expressing their displeasure.


Written by Arash Amel and directed by Olivier Dahan (La Vie en Rose), Grace of Monaco is not a biopic, but a "fictional account inspired by true events" that happened to Kelly after she married Prince Rainier III. Invented stories about historical figures can be tricky ("What this book presupposes is... maybe he didn't," as Owen Wilson's character astutely said in The Royal Tenenbaums), since they involve putting a personal interpretation on a real life, saying more about the storyteller than the subject. And the spin that Grace of Monaco gives to its subject is that "princess" was her greatest role.


Unless you have a deep patriotic investment in Monaco, that's a difficult conclusion to swallow, since the film, which will be released in the United States by the Weinstein Company at a not-yet-known date, makes being married to a royal look thankless, lonely, and full of sacrifices, and effectively paints the country as a playground for the wealthy and obnoxious.



Nicole Kidman in Grace of Monaco


Weinstein Company


The movie begins with Grace getting a (nonfictional) offer from Alfred Hitchcock for the lead role in Marnie. Lectured on protocol by lady-in-waiting Madge Tivey-Faucon (Parker Posey), separated from her husband (Tim Roth) by his work, she is depicted as an unhappy housewife on the most glamorous of scales. ("This is not America, Grace!" Rainier snaps, after she expresses a controversial opinion at a party. "People don't just speak their minds!")


Grace considers a return to the screen and to her art in Hitchcock's offer, but then Monaco ends up in a face-off with France over its status as a tax haven, and Grace finds that her desire to act could be used as leverage against her husband. There's an odd foray into espionage and conspiracy as Grace considers and then discards the idea of divorce, and suggests to Rainier in an unintentional laugh line that they could just "buy a nice farmhouse in Montpelier and watch each other grow old." But in the end, her children need her, her husband needs her, and Monaco needs her. So, counseled by her priest (Frank Langella) and a trustworthy aristocrat (Derek Jacobi), she does some princess training and saves the day.


It's regressive and silly, with Grace practicing royal shows of emotion off of flashcards, the final one being the appropriate composure for "Her Serene Highness," but Grace of Monaco is at least sumptuous in its outfits and settings, and there's a weird power to Kidman's breathy, artificial performance. The camera sometimes zooms in so close to her face that we can only see fragments — the tear winding down her cheek, the stunned eyes, like a video installation on the wall of some museum rather than a movie. It fits in the latest of Kidman's adventures in camp, from the overblown Hemingway & Gellhorn to the arty Stoker and the completely nuts Paperboy. These films may not all be good, but they're not boring.




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