Marie Antoinette (film): Difference between revisions

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''Marie Antionette'' is a 2006 film by written and directed by [[Sofia Coppola]], loosely based on the life of [[Marie Antoinette]] ([[Kirsten Dunst]]). The film follows the fifteen year old princess on her way to the French Court to be married to Louis XVI, her reign as queen, and through the beginning of the [[French Revolution]], when [[wikipedia:The Women's March on Versailles|she and her husband where forced to relocate to Paris]].
''Marie Antionette'' is a 2006 film by written and directed by [[Sofia Coppola]], loosely based on the life of [[Marie Antoinette]] ([[Kirsten Dunst]]). The film follows the fifteen year old princess on her way to the French Court to be married to Louis XVI, her reign as queen, and through the beginning of the [[French Revolution]], when [[wikipedia:The Women's March on Versailles|she and her husband where forced to relocate to Paris]].
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{{tropelist}}
=== Provides Examples Of: ===


* [[Anachronism Stew]]: Deliberately invoked. The director used modern music and a quick shot of sneakers to express the idea of Marie Antoinette being a teenaged girl.
* [[Anachronism Stew]]: Deliberately invoked. The director used modern music and a quick shot of sneakers to express the idea of Marie Antoinette being a teenaged girl.

Revision as of 16:27, 7 November 2015

Marie Antionette is a 2006 film by written and directed by Sofia Coppola, loosely based on the life of Marie Antoinette (Kirsten Dunst). The film follows the fifteen year old princess on her way to the French Court to be married to Louis XVI, her reign as queen, and through the beginning of the French Revolution, when she and her husband where forced to relocate to Paris.


Tropes used in Marie Antoinette (film) include:


Companion: We should all go to Paris for the masked ball.
Marie Antoinette: We're not allowed to go without a formal reception.
Companion: Well, if it's a masked ball...no one would have to know, would they?