Gosford Park is a 2001
British film directed by Robert Altman. It received an Academy Award for Best Original
Screenplay, and is rated R for some language and brief sexuality.
Taking place in 1932, it features a party at the country
manor of William (Michael Gambon) and Sylvia (Kristin Scott-Thomas) McCordle.
The guests arrive for a weekend of hunting, each accompanied by a valet or
maid. This was a time in Britain when the classes were quite distinctly
separated in terms of wealth and servitude. Not exactly American slavery in the
pre-civil war days, but it had its own disgusting over- and undertones to it as
depicted in the film.
The cast is divided into the upstairs guests, and the
downstairs servants. Mrs. Wilson
(Helen Mirren) meticulously runs every aspect of the servants’ work. Her sister
also works in the manor, as does the sister’s husband. Elsie (Emily Watson) is
an outspoken servant, warming to a visiting maid Mary (Kelly Macdonald). Robert
Parks (Clive Owen) enters the picture as the valet of a guest, and the other
residents of this mansion do not ignore his good looks.
The trailer suggests that someone will be murdered during
this film, and thus it is a whodunit, with clues sprinkled liberally throughout.
Missing knives, bottles of poison, and lots of motives to do any number of people
in, both within the guests as well as for the servants milling about trying to
do their job to their employer’s satisfaction.
Morris Weissman (Bob Balaban) is a Hollywood exec invited to
the hunting weekend, and he brings his valet, a curious Scotsman, Henry Denton (Ryan
Phillippe). Sexual dalliances in the house are common, and the upper class
doesn’t seem to be any better off really than the lowly servants, financially
that is.
A Hollywood star Ivor Novello (Jeremy Northam) provides
welcome relief as he plays the piano and sings. William’s aunt Constance
(Maggie Smith) is a real shrew, very disdainful to the other guests, and goes
about with such an air of entitlement that perhaps only Maggie Smith could pull
it off (and she did). The grounds where they go pheasant hunting are quite
beautiful. You can almost feel the rain and dampness that permeates the poorly
heated mansion.
Basically, I liked this film. Robert Altman directed the
weaving of these disparate lives together very well. I wondered how he could
keep track of all the different scenes, as the action travels upstairs and
downstairs to give us a feel for who all the characters are, setting the stage
for the murder that comes well after an hour into the film.
Who did it? I can’t say much more here as no spoilers will
pass my lips. How do all the players fit together? You will need to see for yourself.
It is a well-written and filmed murder mystery, not launching prematurely, but
allowing us to see what this culture was like. If you’re an Anglophile, or a
Maggie Smith fan, definitely watch Gosford
Park.