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W.E.

2011

Action / Drama / History / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Natalie Dormer Photo
Natalie Dormer as Elizabeth
Annabelle Wallis Photo
Annabelle Wallis as Arabella Green
David Harbour Photo
David Harbour as Ernest
Oscar Isaac Photo
Oscar Isaac as Evgeni
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
1018.57 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 59 min
P/S 2 / 3
1.91 GB
1920*800
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 59 min
P/S 1 / 3

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle5 / 10

beautiful but lacking

Lonely Wally Winthrop (Abbie Cornish) feels neglected by her often-absent doctor husband William Winthrop (Richard Coyle). Sotheby's is auctioning off the Windsor Estate including his abdication desk. She falls in love with their romance. She's desperate to have a baby and tries IVF. In flashbacks and in daydreams, King Edward VIII (James D'Arcy) and his love American divorcée Wallis Simpson (Andrea Riseborough) come to life.

This Madonna project is beautifully costumed. She was probably meticulous with the designs and costumes. Her directing and writing prowess is another matter. The historical romance lacks a certain heat. It does have an upperclass comfortableness but it feels cold. With his abdication and their rumored Nazi connection, there should plenty of drama to work with. Madonna is stuck on their romance for a little too long and the drama is bled out of it. The performances of the royals are cold. The Nazi connections are papered over as Madonna is obviously making it a case of victim of falsehoods. It's fine to have a point of view but one has to pull it off. As for Abbie Cornish, her role has some big melodramatic moves. Overall, Madonna may have bit off more than she could chew.

Reviewed by blanche-26 / 10

a directing/writing effort of Madonna

I suppose there is the germ of a good idea here, and 2011's "W.E." is not unsuccessful. As a directing effort by Madonna, it's okay. And you have to give her credit since she had to know everyone would be gunning for her.

In 1998, the estate of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor goes up for auction. One person particularly interested in it is Wally Winthrop (Abbie Cornish),who is very taken with the love story between Wallis Simpson and the Duke of Windsor, and particularly Wallis' life and other marriages. The film takes us through the courtship and marriage of the Duke and Duchess as well as Wally's disintegrating marriage to William, and then her relationship with the Soviet security guard she meets at the auction house.

Personally I've never found anything romantic or sympathetic about Wallis and David. I think Wallis was a great excuse for David to duck responsibility and heap it onto his stammering brother. And neither he nor Wallis thought about what they were going to do once they were married. And what did they do? Roamed the world, showing up at a location when it was in season, and making friends who would write books about them after they died. By the time the couple realized what they had done, it was too late. No breaking up the great romance.

Nevertheless, as many times as their story has been told, it's still fascinating, and much more interesting than the marriage of Wally Winthrop and her husband. Not to mention, there is a fantastic performance by Andrea Risborough as Wallis. As Edward, James D'Arcy is incredibly dashing and attractive. It's really the stronger story, and Madonna might have been better off just telling their tale, using a different point of view than others have in the past.

The moral seems to be to take a risk and go for happiness. It's a fine moral; I'm just not sure I would use the Duke and Duchess of Windsor as inspiration. Was theirs a great love story? I'm sure it was, and no doubt the Duke's death hit the Duchess very hard. But they were human beings who undoubtedly fought, took one another for granted, and had some misgivings. And that's the big problem with idealizing any romance - in the end, the people we idealize are too much like us.

Reviewed by ferguson-64 / 10

Let's do the Twist

Greetings again from the darkness. The true story of Edward abdicating the crown for the love of his life transcends romance or history. It is even more interesting than the story of his brother's reign in his place ... as documented by Oscar winner The King's Speech. To think this man surrendered the power that comes with being King, lost his family, and was outcast from his beloved country, all because he chose this woman ... well that's what dreams are made of.

This particular presentation is brought to us by director Madonna, who also co-wrote the script with Alex Keshishiam (the director of Madonna: Truth or Dare, 1991). An attempt is made to correlate a modern story featuring a Wallis and Edward obsessed Abbie Cornish, and a Russian security guard played by Oscar Isaac. This weak story line intertwines with the original story of Wallis Simpson and Edward. Guess which story is WAY more interesting than the other? Despite that, much screen time is wasted on Cornish and Isaac.

Andrea Roseborough is outstanding as Wallis, the American twice-divorced spirited woman that Edward (James D'Arcy) falls so hard for. The only issue I had was that her speech pattern and tone reminded me of Rosalind Russell every time she spouted off another tart line of dialogue. Still, the sparks were evident between between these two despite the sometimes horrendous camera work. Which leads me to the biggest problem ... this is a poorly made film and it doesn't do justice to such an intriguing true life story.

On the bright side, I found both the film score and the costumes to be spot on, and of the highest quality.

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