BOTTOM
LINE:
Yet another film with
Keira Knightley in a corset; it's very average with bland characters,
even if it does offer some insight in to the nature of 18th Century
English society.
THE GOOD:
One of the advantages of a period film such as this
one is that you have the ability to immerse yourself in a whole
other world and in terms of production design, costume and photography,
"The Duchess" really excels. Every visual detail has been
meticulously detailed which makes it much easier to get in to the
story of Georgiana, the Duchess of Devonshire (Keira Knightley)
who is married off to the Duke of Devonshire (Ralph Fiennes) when
she is seventeen. In the beginning, she feels tremendous excitement
at marrying in to the top end of high society, but it all goes pear-shaped
fairly quickly when it becomes blatantly obvious that the Duke's
only interest in her is to produce a son and nothing else. From
day one, they barely talk and as time passes, the Duke has affairs
left, right and centre but the Duchess is powerless to do anything
about it. She was contracted to produce an heir for the Duke and
unfortunately, she keeps having girls. As a result, the Duke is
very harsh on the Duchess for much of the film, and it's hard not
to feel a certain level of sympathy for the Duchess and her plight,
especially when the Duke has an affair with the Duchess' best friend
and the Duchess is powerless to expel her friend from the house
because the Duke wants to keep her, leading to some very awkward
dinner sequences between the three characters. One of the aspects
that works well in this film is the window in to 18th century social
practices, particularly the treatment of women in marriages like
these and how so much has changed since those times. A classic example
of this occurs when the Duchess finally does produce a son and the
Duke hands over a cheque as payment for services rendered. "The
Duchess" has some noble intentions to its story, and really
excels in the technical aspects of production.