The Duchess: DVD, Blu-ray Review (2008)
Directed by Saul Dibb, written by Dibb, Jeffrey Hatcher and Anders Thomas Jensen, 105 minutes, rated PG-13.

While she’s having a gas with some male and female friends, high above her in that estate is her formidable mother, Lady Spencer (Charlotte Rampling), who is busy navigating decisions about Georgiana’s life that will turn it into one corseted soap opera.
Wigs will burn in this movie (literally), fine wine will put out the fire (literally), but as for the smoke left in its wake, let’s just say its stink will linger awhile longer.

It’s only after her fate has been sealed by others that Georgiana is handed her sentence by her beaming mother. She will become the Duchess of Devonshire, to which Georgiana initially cheers. The gowns! The jewels! The status! The love of the people!

Saul Dibb based his movie on a script he co-wrote with Jeffrey Hatcher and Anders Thomas Jensen from Amanda Foreman’s

For many reasons, Georgiana pointedly recalls that other Spencer, Diana, whose life the movie takes great pains to parallel, and for good reason. Doing so, after all, makes the 16th century seem almost current and relevant, but the good news is that this isn’t so much a distraction as it is a curiosity. Since Knightley’s performance is galvanizing--she can be a political force in one scene, a victim in another, a fashion icon the next--those parallels don’t overcome the movie so much as they complement it.

Grade: B+
DVD Features
Features:
How Far She Went....Making The Duchess
Georgiana In Her Own Words
Costume Diary
Video:
Widescreen 2.35:1 Color
Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1
SPANISH: Dolby Digital 5.1
FRENCH: Dolby Digital 5.1
Subtitles:
English, Spanish, French
December 28, 2008 at 8:35 PM
Sounds fascinating.
December 28, 2008 at 8:37 PM
Thanks for the opportunity to enter this sweepstakes.