Impromptu
Impromptu Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:James Lapine
Studio:Hemdale Home Video I
Writer:Sarah Kernochan
Date Added:2011-05-26
Last Seen:2019-10-15
ASIN:6302185890
UPC:9786302185898
Genre:Comedy
Location:0832
Duration:107
James Lapine  ...  (Director)
Sarah Kernochan  ...  (Writer)
 
Judy Davis  ...  
Hugh Grant  ...  
Mandy Patinkin  ...  
Bernadette Peters  ...  
Julian Sands  ...  
Bruno de Keyzer  ...  Cinematographer
Michael Ellis  ...  Editor
Summary: Still more Victorian country-house shenanigans: novelist George Sand (Judy Davis, affected but pretty darn charming) has eyes for Franz Liszt's young protégé Chopin (Hugh Grant, solid as always, but burdened by a silly Polish accent and a script that never lets him stretch out), but various lovers, jealous rivals, and Chopin's own overdeveloped sense of propriety conspire to confound her. "Impromptu" is witty but overlong--probably 20 minutes of hijinks and repartee, not to mention several completely gratuitous and redundant characters, could have been sliced from the film. Davis plays Sand as an impetuous, overgrown tomboy, outraging her genteel hosts by wearing pants, chomping cigars, and falling off horses; her coterie of artist-friends assure us, in a series of naked plot devices, that she nonetheless has a heart of gold. It's all good silly fun, and about as feminist as your average Def Leppard video--the other two developed female characters are ugly stereotypes: a featherbrained, feckless social climber (Emma Thompson, who once again proves she's up for anything) and a spiteful, back-stabbing shrew (the ever-capable Bernadette Peters). Director James Lapine clearly belongs to the Dr. Quinn school of historical accuracy, so don't expect to learn anything about the period or the artists themselves. "Impromptu" is far more "Melrose Place" than "Mrs. Dalloway", or perhaps best described as an episode of "Entertainment Tonight" set in the 19th century. "--Miles Bethany"