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IMDbPro

A Little Chaos

  • 2014
  • R
  • 1h 57m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
26K
YOUR RATING
Kate Winslet and Matthias Schoenaerts in A Little Chaos (2014)
Sabine is chosen to build one of the main gardens at King Louis XIV's new palace at Versailles. In her new position of power, she challenges gender and class barriers while also becoming professionally and romantically entangled with the court's renowned landscape artist Andre Le Notre.
Play trailer2:31
4 Videos
99+ Photos
Period DramaDramaRomance

Famed builder Le Notre is tasked with building an ethereal palace for King Louis XIV that transcends beauty. Le Notre hires Sabine de Barra to design and construct the outdoor ballroom and i... Read allFamed builder Le Notre is tasked with building an ethereal palace for King Louis XIV that transcends beauty. Le Notre hires Sabine de Barra to design and construct the outdoor ballroom and is soon captivated by her beauty.Famed builder Le Notre is tasked with building an ethereal palace for King Louis XIV that transcends beauty. Le Notre hires Sabine de Barra to design and construct the outdoor ballroom and is soon captivated by her beauty.

  • Director
    • Alan Rickman
  • Writers
    • Jeremy Brock
    • Alison Deegan
    • Alan Rickman
  • Stars
    • Kate Winslet
    • Alan Rickman
    • Stanley Tucci
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    26K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alan Rickman
    • Writers
      • Jeremy Brock
      • Alison Deegan
      • Alan Rickman
    • Stars
      • Kate Winslet
      • Alan Rickman
      • Stanley Tucci
    • 106User reviews
    • 124Critic reviews
    • 51Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos4

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:31
    Official Trailer
    Final Trailer
    Trailer 1:38
    Final Trailer
    Final Trailer
    Trailer 1:38
    Final Trailer
    Side
    Interview 5:26
    Side
    Side
    Interview 3:42
    Side

    Photos173

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    + 167
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    Top cast69

    Edit
    Kate Winslet
    Kate Winslet
    • Sabine De Barra
    Alan Rickman
    Alan Rickman
    • King Louis XIV
    Stanley Tucci
    Stanley Tucci
    • Philippe, Duc d'Orleans
    Matthias Schoenaerts
    Matthias Schoenaerts
    • André Le Notre
    Thomas Allam
    • Louis Alexander
    Hope Hancock
    • Francoise Marie
    Isabella Steinbarth
    Isabella Steinbarth
    • Louise Francoise
    Hal Hewetson
    • Philippe
    Carolina Valdés
    • Queen Marie Therese
    Eleanor Montgomery
    • Royal Nurse
    Danny Webb
    Danny Webb
    • Claude Moulin
    Cathy Belton
    Cathy Belton
    • Louise
    Steven Waddington
    Steven Waddington
    • Thierry Duras
    Adrian Scarborough
    Adrian Scarborough
    • Daniel Le Vielle
    Adrian Schiller
    Adrian Schiller
    • Jean Risse
    Ben Fox
    Ben Fox
    • Monsieur Mauve
    Morgan Watkins
    Morgan Watkins
    • Luc
    Angus Wright
    Angus Wright
    • Sualem
    • Director
      • Alan Rickman
    • Writers
      • Jeremy Brock
      • Alison Deegan
      • Alan Rickman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews106

    6.526.3K
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    Featured reviews

    8dierregi

    Precious gem of a movie

    A rare gem in the world of contemporary movies, this story has sympathetic characters. I thought they all but disappeared from the screen. It is purely fictional, but I like to believe it could have happened. Schoenaerts plays Andre Le Notre, the real landscape architect who designed the park of Versailles for King Louis XIV. Andre is interviewing other landscape gardeners to help him with the job, among them the only woman, fictional Sabine De Barra (Winslet).

    They don't meet so cute, but Le Notre is intrigued and Sabine is hired. In the society of the time, Sabine is a bit of a low class oddity who manages to make friends in high places. Admitted to court, she attracts attention and curiosity for her beauty and skills, but she also attract Le Notre's wife jealousy.

    Le Notre is unhappily married with his unfaithful Madame, but Madame is well connected at court and sort of blackmails him into staying with her. However, that will not stop the slowly burning romance between Andre and Sabine.

    Sabine holds back not only because Andre is married but also because of her mysterious tragic past.

    We finally get to know Sabine's sad history during one of the most moving scenes of the film. Sabine talks to the court ladies and discovers that they also share tragic losses, although at court it is forbidden to talk about death. Once able to face her past, Sabine can finally move into her future.

    Winslet is really good as Sabine and Schoenaerts seems particularly gifted for the role of the strong, silent, lover. He had similar roles in The Danish Girl and Suite Francaise and was equally good. Their scenes together are moving and tender, without any of the artificial slickness or aggressiveness of contemporary romances.Rickman playing Louis XIV as a rather melancholic man who takes a fatherly fancy to Sabine.

    The music is not overbearing period and the costumes are absolutely fantastic. The final scene looks like is taking place in the real, still existing, rock ballroom.

    Great movie, a balm for the soul.
    9Red-125

    A fantasy, but a lovely one

    A Little Chaos (2014) is a British film co-written, starring, and directed by Alan Rickman. Rickman plays the French King Louis XIV, Matthias Schoenaerts plays the landscape architect André Le Notre, and Kate Winslet plays Sabine De Barra. Madame Like Le Notre, De Barra is also a landscape architect. She's hired by Le Notre to help with the magnificent gardens at Versailles. However, this isn't a movie about gardens or gardening. (In fact, Winslet says that, unlike her character, she's not really a gardener.)

    The film is really about human emotions--love, hate, happiness, and sadness. The gardens are just the plot device that brings together all of the main characters in one place at one time.

    Matthias Schoenaerts is excellent in this movie, as he was in "Far from the Madding Crowd." However, as Farmer Oak he had to be intelligent but grounded in the necessities of his situation. In "A Little Chaos," he has to have superior intelligence that soars with creative ideas and solutions.

    Rickman is a fine actor. His perpetual sneer in the Harry Potter movies has been replaced almost by benevolence in this film. From what we know of the historical "Sun King," he wasn't exactly the kindly, gentle monarch that is portrayed in "A Little Chaos."

    Kate Winslet is a wonderful actor, and she looks right for the role. Of course, she's beautiful, but her beauty is distinct, intelligent, and individual--she doesn't look like just another cookie-cutter movie star.

    The plot is very tightly constricted--almost all of it takes place at the court in Versailles, which is a huge, but claustrophobic, setting. Everyone intrigues with everyone else, assignations are made, vows are made and betrayed, and no one can trust anyone.

    What's interesting to me is that I was caught up in this atmosphere. I wanted to see De Barra complete her project. I couldn't understand why the king wouldn't put more money into the gardens at Versailles.

    When I thought about it, I realized there isn't a single poor, miserable, hungry person shown in the film. The only non-elite characters we see are interchangeable servants, grooms, and garden assistants. They may not have a happy life, but at least they were paid and fed.

    We know historically that the French poor suffered terrible hardships during this time. It was with taxes torn from them that Louis XIV paid for his gardens at Versailles. However, as was probably true in real life in 17th Century France, the nobles were protected and insulated from the people and their suffering. That's the way this film is structured--we see the politics at court, and we see the garden moving forward, but we don't see the squalor of ordinary life. There's no remedy for this. Your only choice as a viewer is to take it or leave it. You can't change it.

    We saw this movie at the excellent Little Theatre in Rochester, NY. It will work somewhat better on the large screen, but it will work well enough on DVD. I recommend it, despite its drawbacks.

    As I write this review, the movie has a horrendous 6.3 rating. It's interesting that women gave it a 6.7, while men gave it a 6.0. Nothing about the film suggested to me that it would be much more popular among woman than among men.

    Although this isn't a superb movie, I don't think a rating of 6.3 does justice to it. I think it's worth seeing, and I would recommend it.
    9davidgee

    THE DUCHESS moves to Versailles

    Belying its title, this is a charmingly well-ordered 'chamber-piece' movie about the creation of Louis XIV's spectacular grounds at Versailles. Landscape architect Andre Le Notre (Matthias Schoenaerts) recruits - a surprise in 17th-century society - a woman to design one of the garden's water features. Sabine De Barra (Kate Winslet) is a widow; Andre is married to a heartless slut (Helen McCrory); so we can expect something more than potting to be happening in the potting shed before the gardens are finished! There's a lovely scene when Sabine finds King Louis (Alan Rickman) alone and unwigged on a bench and mistakes him for the chief gardener.

    I worried that A LITTLE CHAOS might be like one of Peter Greenaway's movies, a triumph of style over substance, but it's got almost as much substance as an Oscar Wilde adaptation. There's no attempt to "Frenchify" the language in the style of 'Allo 'Allo: everyone speaks accentless English. Alan Rickman (who also directed) plays the king in the grand style of Lady Bracknell, and Winslet is perfectly cast as a woman of substance and quiet wisdom. Belgium's Monsieur Schoenaerts is having a busy year and although this is role is similar to the one he had in SUITE FRANCAISE he seems more comfortable in it this time. Stanley Tucci and Jennifer Ehle play the top dogs/bitches in His Majesty's court and I'd like to have seen more of them both.

    OK this movie is a bit overdone and artificial (like the gardens at Versailles), but the cast are believable and lovable, and the story delivers comedy, romance and intrigue. If you liked THE DUCHESS, you will love this.
    7pattyp-37595

    Compelling and Entertaining

    Until now, I've never seen Kate Winslet portray a character in any movie that I could connect with. I've always thought she was miscast in Titanic. In A Little Chaos though, she draws us out n, bit by bit, by showing a great deal of vulnerability, a person bruised, but not quite broken by her paifully past. I could not hold back thevtears when she finally faces what haunts her. Good movie about a gentle soul trading a potentially treacherous path in life, willing to reach for what seems barely possible.
    8VickiHopkins

    A Little Slow, but Thoughtful and Moving with Words of Wisdom

    Unfortunately, A Little Chaos has limited distribution. It was only showing in one theater where I live in downtown. I could have taken public transit and walked five blocks to get to the venue but kept putting it off. Good that I did, because A Little Chaos is currently streaming on Amazon with a run time of 1:53 minutes.

    It's an interesting and unique story about a woman named Sabine, who has a gift for gardening. Yes, she has a quaint little backyard of flowers and trees, but her real talent is that of a landscape artist. She applies for the opportunity to work in the gardens of Versailles.

    After obtaining the position, she is charged by the head architect, Andre (played by Matthias Schoenaerts who was just in Far From the Madding Crowd), to work on a special project that the two eventually design together. The fact that Sabine was a woman of great talent did not mean that her task was an easy one, but it was eventually successful.

    However, underneath Sabine is a woman of great sadness. She is a widow and has also lost her daughter of six years of age. Ther reason for her family's passing isn't revealed until the end of the movie. How it occurs is heartbreaking, so I won't spoil that part in case you decide to watch the movie.

    Of course, Andre, who is unhappily married to another woman, who possesses less than a stellar character, falls in love with Sabine. At first she resists because of her sorrow from the past, but eventually discovers solace and comfort in his arms.

    Kate Winslet does the movie great charm. Her portrayal of Sabine is nothing but brilliant as all her movies. There is one particular scene that literally brought me to tears where she is among a group of women from the King's court. The ladies sit together and talk about what ladies talk about, but the conversation turns toward whether she is married and has children. Sabine, of course, can barely choke out the truth, and it is then that the majority of the woman in the room relay to her their sorrow of lost children of their own due to smallpox or other tragedies. It is so touching, I could barely keep from crying. Sabine is deeply moved when she realizes that she is not the only woman carrying such a deep burden of grief.

    As the movie continues, you are made aware of her gracious character, wisdom, and kindness to others that eventually lead her to a road of healing. Yes, the movie is about the gorgeous gardens of Versailles, but it also much more. The story is rich with sidelines about others who are close to the King as well.

    Alan Rickman plays Louis, but he also directs the movie. As beautifully touching as the story is at times, you may find it a bit slow in movement. There is construction of her portion of the garden, her interaction with the King and his court, her blossoming love for Andre, that all move toward the end at a leisurely pace. Some may like it -- some may not. I wanted to push it a bit myself but later scenes redeemed whatever discomfort I felt while waiting for the story to unfold.

    You will see many characters played by British actors that you will recognize - Rupert Penry-Jones (Captain Wentworth in Jane Austen's Persuasion); Steven Waddington (who played the Duke of Buckingham in The Tudors); Adrian Scarborough (who has done his share of British television roles including Midsomer Murders); Stanely Tucci (who has been in plenty of movie roles that you can remember); and many other well-known faces. What you may find a bit unsettling is the majority of the cast lacking French accents from British and American actors, however, there are a few women who do have one.

    Nevertheless, the costumes are quite stunning as well as the scenery and sets. The production was filmed in England at nine locations (click here to see where), including Hampton Court, which I immediately recognized the exterior and interior.

    If you're looking for a touching, but not spectacular period movie, you may want to check this one out.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Andre Le Notre designed the Champs-Élysées in Paris.
    • Goofs
      In the beginning of the film Louis XIV is surrounded by his children in his bedroom. One of his young daughters is wearing a very modern, 21st century 'bob' hairstyle while her sisters have very long hair which would have been correct for the period.
    • Quotes

      King Louis XIV: And what protection can the gardener afford this rose from the harsh elements of change?

      Sabine De Barra: Patience, care, and a little warmth from the sun are our best hope your Majesty.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits: There is an outdoor ballroom in the gardens of Versailles. In what follows, that much at least is true.
    • Connections
      Featured in Projector: The Water Diviner/A Little Chaos (2015)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 26, 2015 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • En los jardines del rey
    • Filming locations
      • Blenheim Palace, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England, UK(bridge and lake)
    • Production companies
      • BBC Film
      • K. JAM Media
      • Lionsgate
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $558,173
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $181,791
      • Jun 28, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $10,084,623
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 57 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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