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Post by jo on Mar 21, 2015 0:19:31 GMT -5
I was channel-surfing when a familiar scene and a familiar face in period costume came into view. It was halfway through this movie which I have been planning to revisit for sometime now. I am still going to watch it in full, but I decided I could spend the next hour rewatching the movie where I first saw Hugh Jackman as a film actor. It was KATE AND LEOPOLD!
Those scenes where they danced on the rooftop, where they listened to Moon River, where they finally reunite a century or so earlier get me all the time.
I had originally classified it as a rom-com ( not exactly a great fan - I can take some but not all the time), while some call it a time-travel story.
As I watched it, I did not realize how much I was enchanted by this movie -- and Hugh looked such a sensitive soul and so aristocratic and so deliciously handsome ...And part of the charm is that the storyline melds the two New York time periods in one romantic story. I do have a special affinity with the city!
When the finale came, for the first time I was choked and almost teary-eyed! Such a beautiful, romantic, and improbable ending -- that is why I think it is a modern fairy tale smiley-love029. A pity that the modern generation may think Cinderella is the best fairy tale ever, when there is KATE AND LEOPOLD
Because this movie is what a modern fairy tale should be ( down to the romantic music from STING)!
If I have to name my top Hugh Jackman favorite movies, I think Kate and Leopold will be among Les Miserables, Australia, The Wolverine/XMen 2, The Prestige, and The Fountain! Of course Oklahoma! is not a film adaptation, but the filmed stage musical also deserves mention among my most watched
PS: It seems that James Mangold is able to draw very sympathetic performances from Hugh. I hope their third teaming up ( Wolverine 3) will be another Jackman favorite movie to watch!
Jo
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Post by mamaleh on Mar 21, 2015 10:21:31 GMT -5
Every time I watch K&L, three views of Hugh especially transfix me: his gorgeous close-up when he's riding in the carriage post-purse snatcher, yet another breathtakingly handsome shot when he says, "I am the man who loves your sister," and his sweet smile at the end, as he scoops up Kate for their engagement waltz. They get me every time.
Ellen
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Post by njr on Mar 21, 2015 14:08:21 GMT -5
I love time travel movies and K&L is one of my favorites (along with the Christopher Reeve/Jane Seymour movie Somewhere In Time) (and of course our friends Janis and Bill are in K&L!) Nancy
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jo
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Post by jo on Mar 21, 2015 18:03:22 GMT -5
If I had to choose my favorite moment of Hugh Jackman dancing -- it would not be the dream ballet from Oklahoma!, nor the Fosse-like Legs Diamond number, nor the tap dancing in Back on Broadway, nor the samba in the finale from The Boy from Oz, nor the Rockette precision-dancing at the Radio City Music Hall, nor the Tony performance with Bicoastal/Not The Boy Next Door...
it will always be the gorgeous sight of an elegant Hugh Jackman leading his partner magnificently in a beautiful waltz smiley-love029
And he has to be in period costume smiley-love067
Jo
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Post by jo on Jul 30, 2015 13:04:46 GMT -5
Behind the scenes ( from another HJ film site. smiley-love029
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Post by foxie on Aug 5, 2015 18:31:07 GMT -5
I was channel-surfing when a familiar scene and a familiar face in period costume came into view. It was halfway through this movie which I have been planning to revisit for sometime now. I am still going to watch it in full, but I decided I could spend the next hour rewatching the movie where I first saw Hugh Jackman as a film actor. It was KATE AND LEOPOLD!
Those scenes where they danced on the rooftop, where they listened to Moon River, where they finally reunite a century or so earlier get me all the time.
I had originally classified it as a rom-com ( not exactly a great fan - I can take some but not all the time), while some call it a time-travel story.
As I watched it, I did not realize how much I was enchanted by this movie -- and Hugh looked such a sensitive soul and so aristocratic and so deliciously handsome ...And part of the charm is that the storyline melds the two New York time periods in one romantic story. I do have a special affinity with the city!
When the finale came, for the first time I was choked and almost teary-eyed! Such a beautiful, romantic, and improbable ending -- that is why I think it is a modern fairy tale smiley-love029. A pity that the modern generation may think Cinderella is the best fairy tale ever, when there is KATE AND LEOPOLD
Because this movie is what a modern fairy tale should be ( down to the romantic music from STING)!
If I have to name my top Hugh Jackman favorite movies, I think Kate and Leopold will be among Les Miserables, Australia, The Wolverine/XMen 2, The Prestige, and The Fountain! Of course Oklahoma! is not a film adaptation, but the filmed stage musical also deserves mention among my most watched
PS: It seems that James Mangold is able to draw very sympathetic performances from Hugh. I hope their third teaming up ( Wolverine 3) will be another Jackman favorite movie to watch!
Jo It will always be my fav of Hugh's
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Post by foxie on Aug 5, 2015 18:31:49 GMT -5
I was channel-surfing when a familiar scene and a familiar face in period costume came into view. It was halfway through this movie which I have been planning to revisit for sometime now. I am still going to watch it in full, but I decided I could spend the next hour rewatching the movie where I first saw Hugh Jackman as a film actor. It was KATE AND LEOPOLD!
Those scenes where they danced on the rooftop, where they listened to Moon River, where they finally reunite a century or so earlier get me all the time.
I had originally classified it as a rom-com ( not exactly a great fan - I can take some but not all the time), while some call it a time-travel story.
As I watched it, I did not realize how much I was enchanted by this movie -- and Hugh looked such a sensitive soul and so aristocratic and so deliciously handsome ...And part of the charm is that the storyline melds the two New York time periods in one romantic story. I do have a special affinity with the city!
When the finale came, for the first time I was choked and almost teary-eyed! Such a beautiful, romantic, and improbable ending -- that is why I think it is a modern fairy tale smiley-love029. A pity that the modern generation may think Cinderella is the best fairy tale ever, when there is KATE AND LEOPOLD
Because this movie is what a modern fairy tale should be ( down to the romantic music from STING)!
If I have to name my top Hugh Jackman favorite movies, I think Kate and Leopold will be among Les Miserables, Australia, The Wolverine/XMen 2, The Prestige, and The Fountain! Of course Oklahoma! is not a film adaptation, but the filmed stage musical also deserves mention among my most watched
PS: It seems that James Mangold is able to draw very sympathetic performances from Hugh. I hope their third teaming up ( Wolverine 3) will be another Jackman favorite movie to watch!
Jo It will always be my fav of Hugh's As much as I love him I don't like wolverine!
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Post by carouselkathy on Aug 5, 2015 21:55:24 GMT -5
Jo, I used to watch KATE AND LEOPOLD at bedtime every night. Of course, I eventually would fall asleep, so it became my "blankie". The TV in my bedroom is broken, but when I get a new one, K&L might again be a nightly ritual.
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Post by mamaleh on Aug 6, 2015 7:25:22 GMT -5
What a soothing way to drift off!
Ellen
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Post by jo on Aug 6, 2015 8:38:28 GMT -5
Love that scene when Leopold has Kate in a cuddle...and she starts to fall asleep...while Moon River plays in the background!
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Post by foxie on Aug 6, 2015 18:01:02 GMT -5
Golden globe nomination!
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Post by jo on Jul 3, 2016 16:38:28 GMT -5
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Post by jo on Jul 7, 2016 17:11:26 GMT -5
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Post by jo on Jul 7, 2016 17:14:25 GMT -5
Some of the scenes -- Hugh was singing the song of The Pirate King from the Gilbert & Sullivan operetta PIRATES OF PENZANCE. A musical hint of things to come ( Broadway...Les Miserables...and now Greatest Showman) I have some interesting personal memories of walking in the downtown area re work. I do remember walking very fast ( to keep up with the pace of my long-legged banker/host) around the Wall Street area for some consultations with people on buildings located in different locations. I was also once a guest (among others) at the New York Stock Exchange and one of the top floor Executive Dining for one of the major banks. There were many physical reminders of the time when Leopold "once" lived there....Also in the area is the famous Trinity Church near the end of Broadway St ( yes, the same Broadway where the modern-day Leopold, aka Hugh Jackman, performs once in a while). It still has a cemetery/churchyard nearby and where one of its most famous people buried there is Alexander Hamilton ( yes, that HAMILTON!). I call this the MOON RIVER scene! It reminds me of the movie where it came from -- BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY! Did you ever copy Audrey Hepburn gazing at the famous Tiffany yellow diamond or was it another set of fabulous Tiffany jewels on its window on Fifth Avenue Fifth Avenue itself has its share of famous locations -- from Kate and Leopold era buildings to modern glass structures. The most interesting of this part of central Manhattan stretches from the Museum Mile... to the luxury residences overlooking the park... to arguably the most famous shopping strip in the world ... down to the New York Library (where the nearby Bryant Park was a location for the scene where Hugh and Ewan McGregor acted out their roles in DECEPTION ). And no missing arguably the most famous park in the world -- where Leopold took Kate on a carriage ride...and where he chased a bag snatcher riding through the park on a horse! Yes, Central Park ( including that street which intersects Fifth Avenue called Central Park South). And if the location was supposed to be in the TRIBECA area, could the modern-day location of LAUGHING MAN ( Duane St) be somewhere close by Jo
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Post by jo on Jul 7, 2016 17:50:27 GMT -5
Hugh looked so young and handsome here Jo
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Post by mamaleh on Jul 8, 2016 9:13:58 GMT -5
Leopold's house now also contains a restaurant that a bunch of us dined in a couple of years ago. Nice place.
And Jo, I think the song the trio were singing around the piano was not "(I Am a) Pirate King," but "I Am the Very Model of a Modern Major General." THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE is my favorite Gilbert & Sullivan operetta.
HJ did indeed look fresh-faced and adorable throughout this movie. I really wish he had done more quality rom-coms in his career.
Ellen
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Post by jo on Jul 8, 2016 10:12:03 GMT -5
Lol - you are very right -- that is the song of "the very model of a modern major general" Maybe it was my wishful thinking that Hugh, if ever he does operettas, sing the role of THE PIRATE KING. I had a chance to see the operetta at the Sydney Opera House at the time of Hugh's 2006 TBFO arena tour. The Pirate King was played by Anthony Warlow who seemed to be channeling Johnny Depp's Pirate of the Caribbean. I also remember watching a filmed version with Kevin Kline as the Pirate King and Linda Rondstadt as Frederic's love interest and Angela Lansbury or was that someone else as her nanny. Did you ever see that long-ago version? Did I get the casting right But my real intro to Pirates of Penzance was when I researched the operetta ( and got the Kevin Kline version) because the role of Frederic had Michael Ball in one of his first professional appearances. I did see him at the New York State Theatre ( Lincoln Center) in another G&S operetta called PATIENCE. Anthony Warlow also played one of the key roles in the Australian production of PATIENCE ( which I saw via a DVD). It's funny how the names Anthony Warlow, Michael Ball, and Hugh Jackman would all come together not just because of PIRATES OF PENZANCE but also because of LES MISERABLES, in one production/adaptation or another Jo
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Post by jo on Jul 8, 2016 10:24:15 GMT -5
While I do like Pirates of Penzance, my favorite operetta is Sigmund Romberg's THE STUDENT PRINCE. I only saw the film version, with Edmund Purdom and Ann Blyth, but with Mario Lanza's voice dubbing the male lead played by Purdom! I was lucky to have gotten a DVD ( transferred from the VHS copy presumably) and I still enjoy playing it once in a while. While Hugh cannot sing anywhere near Mario Lanza's stunning vocal prowess, I can visualize him as the Prince. He looks aristocratic enough, as Kate and Leopold proved to us Jo
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Post by njr on Jul 8, 2016 12:10:20 GMT -5
I first saw The Pirates Of Penzance when I was 8 or 9 on a school field trip! This would have been 1963 or 1964. Loved it!
Nancy
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Post by jo on Jul 8, 2016 19:04:29 GMT -5
This reminds me of something - when I saw Gilbert & Sullivan's PATIENCE at Lincoln Center, I was apprehensive that the husband of my niece ( I took them both with me) would find the show boring because of the patter songs that characterize comic operettas. He assured me: "Don't worry - I was cast as one of the pirates in a presentation of PIRATES OF PENZANCE in our boarding school!" LOL!
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Post by jo on Jul 22, 2016 19:22:35 GMT -5
I think it was KATE AND LEOPOLD which started the Jackman female fanbase Jo
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Post by jo on Feb 26, 2017 9:51:16 GMT -5
James Mangold as a filmmaker sometimes likes to court controversy ( and in LOGAN it seems to be paying off) --
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Post by njr on Feb 26, 2017 10:16:18 GMT -5
So the director's cut is longer and minus the cuts? Or the opposite? The statement in bold above has me confused. Just pulled out my copy and will have to watch the director's cut. Probably saw the theatrical version only.
Nancy
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Post by jo on Jul 27, 2019 21:19:15 GMT -5
In what scene did you fall in love with Leopold Jo
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Post by jo on Jul 27, 2019 21:27:09 GMT -5
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