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September 23, 1998
QUOTE MARTIAL
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In her majesty's serviceArthur J Pais
Elizabeth, the screen bio of the Virgin Queen who ruled England in the 16th century for more than 40 years, received excellent reviews at the Venice International Film Festival last week. One of the more prestigious film festivals, the Venice film event showed, among others, the latest work of such veteran directors as John Frankenheimer (Ronin, starring Robert De Niro) and Woody Allen (Celebrity). The ovation Elizabeth received in Venice also augurs well for the European run of the movie, trade experts say. "Usually, films about British royalty do not perform well in Europe," says entertainment writer and short film-maker Paul Noglows. "Kapur's film could prove to be an exception."
And though like many other historical films, Elizabeth too takes liberties with history, Kapur does not face law suits as it happened in the case of Bandit Queen. Polygram, the makers of such artistic movies as Tim Robbins' Dead Man Walking, which were also successful at the box-office, will release Elizabeth in England and America in about three weeks. The film will have a "platform release" -- it will open in a handful of movie houses in key British and American cities, and will gradually expand, hopefully fuelled by good reviews and positive word of mouth.
Elizabeth stars the Oscar-winner Geoffrey Rush (for Shine) and Sir Richard Attenborough, the Oscar-winning director of Gandhi. Rush plays Sir Francis Walsingham whose loyalties are ever uncertain. If Elizabeth turns out to be a hit, Kapur will make history; he will become the first Indian director with a mainstream hit. Though Mira Nair's Mississippi Masala was quite a success, grossing about $ 20 million worldwide, it was still considered an ethnic film.
Elizabeth, modestly budgeted at $ 18 million (the average Hollywood movie costs $ 60 million), is expected to do better than the critically acclaimed royal saga, Mrs Brown, which was released last year to critical acclaim and a healthy box-office, and earned an Oscar nomination for Dame Judi Dench, who played the cold and reserved Queen Victoria. The $ 3 million movie grossed over $ 10 million worldwide. Elizabeth offers more intrigue, drama, and production values than Mrs Brown, say trade pundits.
A movie has to gross two and half times its budget in movie houses and through television cable deals before it breaks even. Elizabeth could fetch at least $ 10 million from television and cable deals in America and Britain, trade sources say. EXTERNAL LINKS (Pages will open in a new browser window):
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