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Rhys Ifans Notting Hill T Shirt

1999 motion picture by Roger Michell

Notting Hill
A poster with a large picture of a woman shaded blue on it is stuck to a wall. A man walks in front of it.

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Roger Michell
Written by Richard Curtis
Produced past Duncan Kenworthy
Starring
  • Julia Roberts
  • Hugh Grant
  • Hugh Bonneville
  • Emma Chambers
  • James Dreyfus
  • Rhys Ifans
  • Tim McInnerny
  • Gina McKee
Cinematography Michael Coulter
Edited by Nick Moore
Music by Trevor Jones

Production
companies

  • PolyGram Films
  • Working Title Films
Distributed by
  • Universal Pictures (Usa)
  • PolyGram Filmed Amusement (International)

Release dates

  • 21 May 1999 (1999-05-21) (United Kingdom)
  • 28 May 1999 (1999-05-28) (United States)

Running time

124 minutes
Countries
  • United Kingdom[1]
  • United states[i]
Language English language
Budget $42 million
Box office $363.ix million

Notting Hill is a 1999 romantic comedy film directed by Roger Michell. The screenplay was written by Richard Curtis, and the film was produced past Duncan Kenworthy. The picture stars Julia Roberts and Hugh Grant with Rhys Ifans, Emma Chambers, Tim McInnerny, Gina McKee, and Hugh Bonneville in supporting roles. The story is of a romance between a London bookseller (Grant) and a famous American actress (Roberts) who happens to walk into his shop.

Released on 21 May 1999, Notting Colina was well-received by critics and became the highest-grossing British film of all fourth dimension. The picture show was nominated for the Aureate Globe Award for All-time Motion Picture – Musical or One-act, with Roberts and Grant likewise receiving nominations for their performances, while the pic also earned two BAFTA nominations. Information technology besides won a British Comedy Award and a Brit Award for the soundtrack.

Plot [edit]

William Thacker owns a travel book store in Notting Hill, London. Divorced, Will shares a flat with Spike, a flaky and sloppy Welshman. One day, famous Hollywood extra Anna Scott enters the shop and buys a book. Shortly afterwards she has left, Will bumps into her while rounding a street corner, spilling his juice on her. He takes Anna to his place that is directly across the street and so she can change into a clean shirt. When leaving, she impulsively kisses him.

Anna later invites him to visit her at the Ritz Hotel. Upon his arrival he is mistaken for a reporter and ushered into a press junket for her new film. When asked, he says he writes for Horse & Hound magazine. Anna asks to be William'due south engagement at his sis's birthday party later that evening. Though his friends are surprised, she gets on well with anybody and enjoys herself. Later, the 2 enter a individual neighbourhood park, where Anna again kisses Will.

At a restaurant the next 24-hour interval, Will and Anna eavesdrop 4 men at a nearby table discussing her, get-go praising and so disparaging her and equating actresses to prostitutes. Volition confronts them, then she introduces herself and calmly insults the stunned sextet.

Anna invites Will to her hotel room, merely he quickly leaves afterwards discovering that her film star boyfriend, Jeff King, has unexpectedly arrived from America. Over the next six months, Will's friends arrange a serial of dates for him, but Will, unable to forget Anna, is uninterested in some other relationship.

A road with some cars parked on it next to a line of houses

One day, a distraught Anna appears at Will's doorstep, needing to hide from a tabloid scandal. She apologises near King and says their human relationship is over. They detect shared interests, and discuss Volition's impress of Marc Chagall's 1950 painting La Mariée. They make love that dark. The adjacent morning, paparazzi, inadvertently tipped off by Spike, besiege the house and take photos of Will, Anna, and a one-half-dressed Fasten at the front door. Furious, she blames Will and leaves.

Several seasons laissez passer, and Volition remains miserable. When he discovers Anna is back in London making a motion-picture show based on a Henry James novel, something he had suggested, he visits the prepare unannounced. She asks him to wait until shooting is washed, but he leaves subsequently overhearing her being dismissive about him to some other actor. Anna comes to the bookshop the next day, bringing a wrapped gift. Will says he overheard what she said about him to her co-star. She explains that she was merely keeping her personal life individual from another actor. She confesses she loves him, and pleads to rekindle their human relationship. Will says no, explaining he would be also hurt if she left him once again.

Volition meets his friends and sister at a restaurant with Anna's opened gift: Chagall's original La Mariée (The Bride). They half-heartedly support his determination about Anna until Spike arrives and calls him a "daft prick". Will realizes his fault, and anybody races across London to find Anna, who is holding a printing conference at the Savoy Hotel. Will arrives just as her publicist announces that Anna is taking a year off and is leaving the UK that night.

A reporter asks about the embarrassing photographs taken at Will's apartment, and Anna says they are merely friends. Will, again pretending to be a Horse & Hound reporter, asks her if she would consider being more than than friends if Thacker begged her forgiveness. She says she would, so asks to be asked over again how long she plans to stay in England. Grinning, she answers "indefinitely".

Anna and Will marry and she is now pregnant. They spend fourth dimension in the individual park that they had visited on their start date.

Cast [edit]

  • Julia Roberts as Anna Scott
  • Hugh Grant as William "Will" Thacker
  • Hugh Bonneville equally Bernie
  • Emma Chambers every bit Honey Thacker
  • James Dreyfus every bit Martin
  • Rhys Ifans as Spike
  • Tim McInnerny as Max
  • Gina McKee as Bella
  • Richard McCabe as Tony
  • Dylan Moran as Rufus, the thief
  • Henry Goodman as the Ritz concierge
  • Julian Rhind-Tutt equally Time Out journalist
  • Lorelei Rex as Anna'southward publicist
  • John Shrapnel as Anna'due south Britain printing amanuensis
  • Clarke Peters as Helix lead actor
  • Arturo Venegas as actor in Helix
  • Yolanda Vazquez equally interpreter
  • Mischa Barton equally 12-twelvemonth-one-time actress in Helix
  • Emily Mortimer as Perfect Daughter
  • Samuel West as Anna'southward co-star (as Sam West)
  • Ann Embankment equally William'southward female parent
  • Patrick Barlow as Savoy concierge

Uncredited cast

  • Alec Baldwin as Jeff King
  • Simon Callow equally himself in Film-within-Film
  • Joe Cornish every bit Fan Receiving Anna'south Autograph
  • Matthew Modine as Player in Motion picture-within-Picture
  • Sally Phillips as Caroline (scenes deleted)

Casting notes

  • Julia Roberts was the "one and only" choice for the role of Anna Scott, although Roger Michell and Duncan Kenworthy did not expect her to have. Her agent told her it was "the best romantic comedy she had always read".[2] Roberts said that afterward reading the script she decided she was "going to accept to practice this".[3]
  • The decision to cast Hugh Grant equally William Thacker was unanimous, as he and Richard Curtis had a "author/actor union made in heaven". Michell said that "Hugh does Richard better than anyone else, and Richard writes Hugh meliorate than anyone else", and that Grant is "one of the only actors who can speak Richard'southward lines perfectly".[2]
  • Mischa Barton appears every bit the kid role player whom Will pretends to interview for Horse & Hound.
  • The casting of Bonneville, McInnerny, McKee, Chambers, and Ifans as Will's friends was "rather like assembling a family unit". Michell explained that "When you lot are casting a conduce of friends, you lot have to cast a residue of qualities, of types and of sensibilities. They were the jigsaw that had to be put together all in one go, and I think we've got a very good variety of people who can realistically notwithstanding alive in the same world."[2]
  • Sanjeev Bhaskar has a cameo part as a loud and offensive restaurant patron (who refers to Meg Ryan as "the actress who has an orgasm every time she's taken out for a loving cup of java") in the restaurant Anna and Will visit.[four]
  • Omid Djalili makes an uncredited cameo as the vendor who sells Will the orangish juice that he accidentally spills on Anna moments later.

Production [edit]

"I would sometimes wonder what it would be like if I just turned upwards at my friends' business firm, where I used to have dinner once a week, with the about famous person at that time, be it Madonna or whomever. Information technology all sprang from there. How would my friends react? Who would try and exist absurd? How would you become through dinner? What would they say to you afterwards?"
– Richard Curtis[5]

Richard Curtis developed the film from thoughts while lying awake at nighttime. He described the starting point as "the idea of a very normal person going out with an unbelievably famous person and how that impinges on their lives".[v] In an interview with GQ in 2018, Hugh Grant claimed the film was based on real life and loosely followed a friend of Richard's who fell in love with an 'extremely world-famous person who [Grant wasn't] allowed to mention'.[half dozen] Much similar the picture show, Curtis's friend was an everyday person who met the well known celebrity in a shop (Harrods) and they ended upward having a relationship. [7]

The film has been likened to "a 90's London-ready version of Roman Holiday".[8] Nonetheless, Curtis has said that he had not seen the 1953 film.[ix]

Four Weddings and a Funeral director Mike Newell was approached but rejected information technology to work on Pushing Tin. He said that in commercial terms he had made the incorrect decision, but did non regret it.[10] The producer, Duncan Kenworthy, and then turned to Roger Michell, maxim that "Finding someone as good as Roger, was only like finding the right thespian to play each function. Roger shone out."[2]

Curtis chose Notting Colina as he lived at that place and knew the surface area, saying "Notting Hill is a melting pot and the perfect place to set a film". This left the producers to film in a heavily populated surface area. Kenworthy noted "Early, we toyed with the idea of building a huge exterior set. That style nosotros would have more control, because we were worried nigh having Roberts and Grant on public streets where we could go thousands of onlookers." In the end they decided to pic in the streets. Michell was worried "that Hugh and Julia were going to turn up on the commencement 24-hour interval of shooting on Portobello Route, and at that place would be gridlock and we would be surrounded by thousands of people and paparazzi photographers who would preclude us from shooting". The location team and security personnel prevented this, as well equally preventing problems the presence of a flick crew might have caused the residents of Notting Colina, who Michell believes were "genuinely excited" about the film. Location manager Sue Quinn described finding locations and getting permission to film as "a mammoth task". Quinn and the rest of her team had to write to thousands of people in the surface area, promising to donate to each person'south favourite charity, resulting in 200 charities receiving money.[11]

"The major problem we encountered was the size of our motion-picture show unit. We couldn't just go in and shoot and come out. We were everywhere. Filming on the London streets has to be washed in such a way that information technology comes up to health and safety standards. There is no such thing every bit a road closure. We were very lucky in the fact that we had 100% cooperation from the police and the Council. They looked favorably on what we were trying to do and how it would promote the surface area."
– Sue Quinn[11]

Stuart Craig, the production designer, was pleased to practice a contemporary film, saying "we're dealing with streets with thousands of people, market place traders, shop owners and residents which makes it really complex".[11] Filming began on 17 April 1998 in W London and at Shepperton Studios.[2] Will's bookshop was on Portobello Route, one of the main areas in which filming took place. Other places within Notting Hill included Westbourne Park Road, Golborne Road, Landsdowne Road and the Coronet Cinema.[11] Volition's house, 280 Westbourne Park Road, was owned by Richard Curtis and behind the archway there is a grand house, not the apartment in the pic that was fabricated upwardly in the studios. The blue door was auctioned for charity. The current door is blue again. The Travel Book Store is located at 142 Portobello Road.[12] Later filming for six weeks in Notting Hill, filming moved to the Ritz Hotel, where work had to take place at nighttime, the Savoy Hotel, the Nobu Restaurant, the Zen Garden of the Hempel Hotel and Kenwood House.[11] 1 of the terminal scenes takes identify at a picture show premiere, which presented difficulties. Michell wanted to film at Leicester Square but was declined. Constabulary had found fans at a Leonardo DiCaprio premiere problematic and were concerned the same might occur at the staged premiere. Through a health and safe human action, the product received permission to picture and constructed the scene in 24 hours.[11] Interior scenes were the last to be filmed, at Shepperton Studios.[11] The final cut was iii.5 hours long, xc minutes edited out for release.[13]

The pic features the 1950 Marc Chagall painting La Mariée ("The Bride"). Anna sees a print of the painting in William's home and later gives him what is presumably the original. Michell said in Entertainment Weekly that the painting was chosen considering Curtis was a fan of Chagall'southward piece of work and because La Mariée "depicts a yearning for something that'southward lost." The producers had a reproduction made for the film, simply had to get permission from the owner besides as clearance from the Design and Artists Copyright Society. Finally, co-ordinate to Kenworthy, "we had to agree to destroy information technology. They were concerned that if our imitation was too practiced, it might float effectually the market and create bug." The commodity also noted that "some experts say the existent canvas could be worth between US$500,000 and U.s.a.$1million."[14]

The movie features the book Istanbul: The Purple City (1996) by John Freely. William recommends this volume to Anna, commenting that (dissimilar another book in the store) the writer has at to the lowest degree been to Istanbul. In reality, Freely taught at Boğaziçi Academy in Istanbul,[15] and was the author of 9 books about the city.

In the last scene of the moving-picture show, Will is shown reading the 1994 book Helm Corelli'south Mandolin by Louis de Bernières. This was to have been Roger Michell's next film, but a heart assault forced him to withdraw from the product.

Soundtrack [edit]

Original music was composed past Trevor Jones.[sixteen] A main score was written, and excerpts were used throughout the motion-picture show. The score was cleaved downwards into two songs for the soundtrack (Volition and Anna/Notting Hill). Several additional songs written by other artists include Elvis Costello's encompass of the Charles Aznavour song "She". Charles Aznavour's original version tin be heard during the opening credits while Elvis Costello's version is played at the stop of the movie (before the end credits). Other songs are Shania Twain's remixed version of "You've Got a Way", every bit well as Ronan Keating'south especially recorded encompass of "When You lot Say Null at All"; the song reached number 1 in the British charts. Pulp recorded a new song "Built-in to Cry", which was released on the European version of the soundtrack album.

The vocal played when Will strides downwardly Portobello Route is "Ain't No Sunshine" past Neb Withers. Tony and Bernie play "Bluish Moon" on the piano at Tony'due south eating house on the night information technology closes.[17] Originally, Charles Aznavour'south version of "She" was used in the film, but American exam screening audiences did not reply to it. Costello was and then brought in by Richard Curtis to record a cover version of the song.[xviii] Both versions of the vocal announced in not-US releases.

The soundtrack album was released by Isle Records.

US version track list
Catalog #314 546 196-2

  1. "No Matter What"– Boyzone (4:33)
  2. "You've Got a Fashion" (Notting Loma remix)– Shania Twain (iii:21)
  3. "I Exercise (Cherish You)"– 98° (3:45)
  4. "She"– Elvis Costello (3:06)
  5. "Ain't No Sunshine"– Neb Withers (2:03)
  6. "How Can Y'all Mend a Broken Center"– Al Green (half-dozen:24)
  7. "Gimme Some Lovin'"– The Spencer Davis Group (2:57)
  8. "When Y'all Say Nothing at All"- Ronan Keating (4:14)
  9. "Own't No Sunshine"– Lighthouse Family (iii:41)
  10. "From the Eye"- Another Level (iv:51)
  11. "Everything Nearly You lot (remix)"- Steve Poltz (3:55)
  12. "Volition and Anna"– Trevor Jones (Score) (3:35)
  13. "Notting Hill"– Trevor Jones (Score) (4:45)

Britain/European union version track listing
Catalog #314 546 428-2

  1. "From the Middle"- Another Level (four:51)
  2. "When You Say Nada at All"- Ronan Keating (four:xiv)
  3. "She"– Elvis Costello (3:06)
  4. "How Can You lot Mend a Broken Heart"– Al Greenish (half-dozen:24)
  5. "In Our Lifetime"–Texas (4:06)
  6. "I Do (Cherish You)"– 98° (3:45)
  7. "Built-in To Weep"– Lurid (5:33)
  8. "Ain't No Sunshine"– Lighthouse Family (3:41)
  9. "You've Got a Way" (Notting Loma remix)– Shania Twain (3:21)
  10. "Gimme Some Lovin'"– The Spencer Davis Group (two:57)
  11. "Will and Anna"– Trevor Jones (Score) (iii:35)
  12. "Notting Loma"– Trevor Jones (Score) (4:45)
  13. "Ain't No Sunshine"– Bill Withers (2:03)

The movie score and original music was recorded and mixed by Gareth Cousins (who besides mixed all the songs used in the motion-picture show) and Simon Rhodes.

Yr-end charts [edit]

Certifications [edit]

Release [edit]

The film had its premiere at the Odeon Leicester Square on 27 April 1999[31] and opened in the UK on 21 May 1999 and in the United States the following week.

Critical reception [edit]

On Rotten Tomatoes the motion picture holds an approval rating of 83% based on 100 reviews, with an average rating of seven.1/10. The website'due south critical consensus reads: "A rom-com with the right ingredients, Notting Hill proves there's naught similar a love story well told – especially when Hugh Grant and Julia Roberts are your leads."[32] On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 68 out of 100 based on 34 critics, indicating "generally favourable reviews".[33] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[34]

Variety's Derek Elley said that "It'south slick, it'due south gawky, it's 10 minutes besides long, and information technology'southward certainly not "Four Weddings and a Funeral Part ii" in either structure or overall tone", giving it an overall positive review.[35] Cranky Critic chosen it "Encarmine damned good", as well as proverb that it was "A perfect date moving-picture show."[36] Nitrate said that "Notting Hill is whimsical and light, fresh and quirky", with "endearing moments and memorable characters".[37] In his review of the moving picture's DVD John J. Puccio noted that "the movie is a fairy tale, and writer Richard Curtis knows how much the public loves a fairy tale", calling it "a sugariness movie".[38] Desson Howe of The Washington Post gave the film a very positive review, particularly praising Rhys Ifans' operation every bit Spike.[39] James Sanford gave Notting Hill three and a half stars, maxim that "Curtis' dialogue may be much snappier than his sometimes dawdling plot, but the starting time hour of Notting Colina is so beguiling and consistently funny it seems churlish to complain that the rest is merely good."[forty] Sue Pierman of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel stated that "Notting Hill is clever, funny, romantic– and oh, aye, reminiscent of Four Weddings and a Funeral", simply that the pic "is and then satisfying, it doesn't pay to nitpick."[41] Roger Ebert praised the motion-picture show, maxim "the movie is bright, the dialogue has wit and intelligence, and Roberts and Grant are very easy to similar."[42] Kenneth Turan gave a good review, terminal that "the picture show's romantic core is impervious to problems".[43] CNN reviewer Paul Clinton said that Notting Hill "stands alone as another funny and heartwarming story about love against all odds".[44]

Widgett Walls of Needcoffee.com gave the film "3 and a half cups of java", stating that "the humour of the film saves information technology from a completely trite and unsatisfying (nay, shall I say enraging) ending", but criticised the soundtrack.[45] Dennis Schwartz gave the motion picture a negative review with a grade of "C-" citing "this film was pure and unadulterated balderdash".[46] Some criticised the film for giving a "sweetened unrealistic view of London life and British eccentricity."[47] The Contained derided the film for existence unrealistic.[48] In item, the film was criticised for declining to reflect the demographic of the area: "only Curtis could write a flick about Notting Hill, London'southward well-nigh diverse borough, and not feature a unmarried black face in it."[49] [50]

Lists [edit]

Notting Hill was 95th on the British Film Plant'southward "list of the all-time top 100 films", based on estimates of each film's British cinema admissions.[4]

Box office [edit]

The film opened over the Memorial Day weekend in the United States and Canada, the aforementioned weekend as Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace, and opened at number 2 for the weekend, grossing US$27.7meg over the 4-day weekend, the biggest opening for a romantic comedy picture, chirapsia My Best Friend'south Wedding (which besides starred Julia Roberts).[51] [52] Notting Hill made some other United states$15million the post-obit week.[53] [54] 1 month afterward its release, Notting Hill lost its record for highest-grossing opening weekend for a romantic comedy picture to Runaway Bride (over again starring Roberts).[55] The film grossed £31 million in the Uk[56] (the 2nd highest-grossing moving-picture show of 1999 backside The Phantom Menace) and US$116,089,678 in the United States and Canada (the sixteenth highest-grossing picture of 1999),[57] with a worldwide gross of U.s.$363,889,678,[58] making it the highest-grossing British film of all time, surpassing the record set by Four Weddings and a Funeral in 1994 (also starring Hugh Grant),[56] and the 7th highest-grossing film of 1999.

Awards and nominations [edit]

Notting Hill won the Audience Honor for Nigh Popular Film at the BAFTAs in 2000,[59] and was nominated in the categories of The Alexander Korda Award for Outstanding British Film of the Year, and All-time Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Function for Rhys Ifans.[60] The motion picture won Best Comedy Flick at the British One-act Awards.[61] The pic's soundtrack won Best Soundtrack at the 2000 Brit Awards, beating Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace.[62] The film won Best British Picture show, Best British Director for Roger Michell, and Best British Histrion for Hugh Grant at the Empire Awards.[63] The film received three nominations at the Golden Globes, in the categories All-time Motion Picture– Comedy/Musical, Best Motion Picture Player– Comedy/Musical for Hugh Grant, and All-time Picture Actress– One-act/Musical for Julia Roberts.[64]

References [edit]

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  59. ^ "2000 British Academy of Movie and Television Awards". infoplease.com. Retrieved 22 May 2007.
  60. ^ "Bafta nominations in total". BBC News Online. 1 March 2000. Retrieved 22 May 2007.
  61. ^ "The Past Winners 1999". British Comedy Awards. Archived from the original on 26 Oct 2010. Retrieved 22 May 2007.
  62. ^ "Brits 2000: The winners". BBC News Online. three March 2000. Retrieved 22 May 2007.
  63. ^ "What are they doing?". British Theatre Guide. twenty February 2000. Archived from the original on six June 2007. Retrieved 21 May 2007.
  64. ^ "Notting Hill". TheGoldenGlobes.com. Archived from the original on 17 October 2007. Retrieved 22 May 2007.

External links [edit]

  • Notting Colina at IMDb
  • Notting Loma at the TCM Motion-picture show Database
  • Notting Loma at AllMovie
  • Notting Loma at the American Film Institute Catalog
  • Notting Loma at Box Office Mojo
  • Notting Hill at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Notting Loma at Metacritic Edit this at Wikidata

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Notting_Hill_%28film%29

Posted by: naquinyouriaget.blogspot.com

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