"The book is a film that takes place in the mind of the reader." ~ Paulo Coelho

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Movie Review: Royal Wedding (1951)

Good evening to everyone!

As you have seen I haven't been blogging as recently as I usually do, and that is because I have been really busy. And I will continue to be busy for a couple of months, so while I will be popping in to review things from time to time, my usual schedule won't be back in place until May. Anyway, as tradition on this blog, I do a post on the 19th of every month and for tonight I will be reviewing the first Fred Astaire movie that I saw!

My guarantee: On ALL of my reviews there are NO spoilers unless I give you warning.


Royal Wedding (1951):
A brother and sister dancing duo are going to preform in London around the time of the royal wedding. The sister, Ellen, has people admiring and falling in love with her all the time and meets a Lord who has the same problem. The brother, Tom, always makes fun of marriage, but in London he finds a dancer, Anne, whom he finds himself falling for. Ellen and Tom are determined to stay the team that they have always been, but will their hearts lead them elsewhere?
'"If you think nice things then doors open for you."
"Is that your message for the day."'

Genre: Comedy, Romance, (Musical? I actually really don't know what to call this. There is singing and dancing, but I wouldn't really consider it a musical? I don't know, I'll explain my strange brain and sorting system one day. Every movie back then had music, but it was almost always explained it by saying that they are performers.)
Length: approx. 93 minutes.
Costumes: 8, nothing in appropriate. The styles are fun to see.
My favorite:
Script: 10, no bad words!
"Let's walk a minute, get some nice clean fog."
Crew:
Directed by: Stanley Donen.
Written by: Alan Jay Lerner.
Starring:
Fred Astaire as Tom Bowen.
Jane Powell as Ellen Bowen.
Peter Lawford as Lord John Brindale.
Sarah Churchill as Anne Ashmond.
Keenan Wynn as Irving Klinger & Edgar Klinger. (He does such a good job at playing two roles!)
"This is a pretty box of pickles!"
Sadly, this was the best picture that I could find of him!
Albert Sharpe as James Ashmond.
Cinematography: 10. Okay, can we just talk about something for a minute? The fact that they had no CGI back then, but that they were able to make Fred Astaire do some insanely awesome things while he is dancing? Wowza! Really incredible. And they have good choreography in all of the dances.
Cinematography by: Robert Planck.
Music: 8, there are a ton of fun dance scenes with good music. A few of them are not my favorites (like "How Could You Believe Me When I Said I Love You When You Know I've Been a Liar All My Life" [yes, that is the name of the song]), but I love the music for "Sunday Jumps" and whenever I hear "I Left My Hat in Haiti" I have to sing along.
This is from the one with the really long name. 
Music by: Burton Lane & Albert Sendrey.
Quotes: 8, "She's quiet, but also deep. At least I hope she's deep or else she's wasting her time being quiet."
Content: 8, there is some drinking, smoking, a suggestive thing, and a separated married couple.
[highlight for spoilers but they are shown as a possibility as getting together.]
Originality: 9, this is a cute little movie, and while I've seen lots of movies with dancing duos, this is the only one that I can think of who is a sibling team!
Good For: Fred Astaire fans, dancers, families.
Age Range: It is a fun movie for any age, with lots of dancing scenes to keep younger ones interested. I liked when I was little and my grandmother did, too.
Overall Score: 8.5!
"I always smile when I'm heartbroken."
Bonus thoughts:
As I said, this is the first movie that I remember watching with Fred Astaire. I know that I had seen tons of clips of his other movies, but this was the first one that I sat down and watched all the way through. So while a lot of people think of him and Ginger Rogers as a team, I always think Jane Powell. Once my sisters, grandma, and I watched it about once a week for two months and we were all so tired of it, but watching it again the other day I really enjoyed it. This was also my introduction to Peter Lawford who I absolutely love watching and can never find enough movies with him in it. So yeah, this is quite enjoyable way to spend some time! Actually, the dances are quite iconic!


What about all of you? What was the first Fred Astaire movie that you watched? Anyone else as big a fan of Peter Lawford as I am? Thanks for reading!

"Pip now!"

MovieCritic

14 comments:

  1. This is a really cute movie! No matter how many times I see the dancing on the ceiling sequence I'm still blown away by the ingenuity of the scene. I also love the scene when Fred and Jane are dancing on the ship in the storm. Have you seen Good News with June Allyson and Peter Lawford? That movie made me a fan of him as well as Easter Parade!

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    1. The two scenes that you mentioned are my favorites, too! I tried to figure out how they did the dancing on the ceiling, but I'm baffled! I haven't seen Good News, but I definitely want to now! Thanks for the recommendation! One of these days I'm going to watch the version of Little Women that stars June Allyson and him. I, too, love Easter Parade!

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  2. Fred Astaire AND Jane Powell? How have I not seen this movie!? Definitely adding it to my to-watch list. :)

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    1. I hope you like it! It is super fun. :) Actually, I think it is the only movie that I've seen Jane Powell in, so I need to fix that!

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  3. Your blogs are solid. I usually come back here to read them again. Looking forward to reading more!

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  4. Sounds really good. I want to watch this one. :D

    astorydetective.blogspot.com

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    1. I think that you'd have a fun time watching this, Rakayle! :D

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  5. As always your content is one of a few that I stop to read it entirely!

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    1. I'm glad that you found it helpful! Thanks for telling me.

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  7. really like your blog and how you put things together, keep it up!

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