Eine Chronik des Lebens von Gertrude Bell, einer Reisenden, Schriftstellerin, Archäologin, Forscherin, Kartographin und Abgesandten des britischen Empires zu Beginn des zwanzigsten Jahrhunde... Alles lesenEine Chronik des Lebens von Gertrude Bell, einer Reisenden, Schriftstellerin, Archäologin, Forscherin, Kartographin und Abgesandten des britischen Empires zu Beginn des zwanzigsten Jahrhunderts.Eine Chronik des Lebens von Gertrude Bell, einer Reisenden, Schriftstellerin, Archäologin, Forscherin, Kartographin und Abgesandten des britischen Empires zu Beginn des zwanzigsten Jahrhunderts.
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Nominierung insgesamt
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesOn their first day of filming, James Franco and Nicole Kidman climbed a tower, where a vulture sat. Prior to filming the scene, Werner Herzog had found the vulture by coincidence, with its owner, by the side of the road and decided to put it into the film. The vulture was not trained for such screen roles, and tried to peck Kidman, but luckily it was on a leash. This scene is one of Kidman's favorite in the film.
- PatzerGertrude Bell and Winston Churchill 's wife Clementine were cousins on her father's side i.e. via his sister. In spite of the first scene where Churchill asks "Who is this Gertrude Bell?", in real-life he was very much aware of who she was.
- Zitate
Gertrude Bell: Nightingale with drops in heart bleed. A fed red rose. Then came the wind. And catching her, jealous branches. I have coiled heart with a hundred thorns
- Crazy CreditsThe credits are shown over footage of sand blowing across the desert.
- Alternative VersionenA new cut with a running time of 110 minutes was presented at the AFI Fest in Los Angeles on Nov.8 2015. The original version, which premiered in Feb. 2015 at the Berlinale and was released in some countries, has a running time of 128 minutes.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Werner Herzog - Radical Dreamer (2022)
- SoundtracksLes Nubiemes Valse
from the ballet "Faust"
Written by Charles Gounod
Performed by Vaughan Jones and The Manor House String Ensemble
Her friendship with the married Doughty Wiley was shown, as was her iffy working relationship with T. E. Lawrence who supported her while being quite catty behind her back, but her later unrequited love for Henry Fitzsimmons, who used her but refused flat out to marry her, was not. Nor was her long and very close friendship with King Faisal of Iraq, which began when he was Prince and whom she had been instrumental in supporting on the throne. As Faisal's wife and family remained in Mecca and Gertrude became his close adviser, many suspected that they were lovers.
Her years of round the world tours to get over Henry's death were left out. Eventually she began her journeys through the middle east and gained the knowledge which put her in the center of things in WWI as a source of information about the Arab tribes, and supporter and close adviser to King Faisal. She was present at the Paris Peace Conference when the winners, desperate to get their hands on the oil, divided up the middle east between them, largely reneging on the promises to allow the Arabs their own kingdom and instead installing puppet kingdoms under British and French mandates.
The film ended with a very brief meeting with Faisal and his brother Abdullah, and an epilogue about the creation of Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia where Gertrude Bell had helped define the borders and choose the rulers. But there was much more to the story. After the heady success of helping to create the modern middle eastern kingdoms, being appointed Oriental Secretary awarded the CBE, and being Faisal's right hand woman, called upon every day not only for advice, but companionship, games, tennis, Gertrude found herself becoming less and less important as her task had ended. It probably did not help that she was a woman and had trodden on quite a few toes on the way up. Men would have felt threatened by her and wives would have been jealous. She concentrated her efforts on her writing and establishing the Baghdad Museum, but her life had become empty and no doubt she felt unwanted and useless. Faisal saw less of her and spent more time in Europe 'taking the cures'. Her family fortune disappeared in the post war changing times and she was reduced to living alone if not in poverty, but 'straightened circumstances'. In 1926 she died of an overdose of sleeping pills, which was ruled an accident.
Other than leaving half the story out, the other serious flaw was the miscasting of Faisal and Abdullah and their very brief appearance at the close of the film. The two actors should have switched parts. Abdullah, the great grandson of today's King of Jordan, was short and round faced, Faisal was tall, thin, charismatic and extremely handsome. His leadership of the Arab revolt was the reason for the allied win over the Turks. From the film one would think she had only met with Faisal for one minute. Showing more of her relationship with Faisal would have perked up the film enormously.
Overall, this topic should have been a Masterpiece Theater miniseries running for at least six hours.
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- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Offizielle Standorte
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- Auch bekannt als
- Queen of the Desert
- Drehorte
- Ait Benhaddou, Marokko(exteriors caravan scene)
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Box Office
- Budget
- 15.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 1.592.853 $
- Laufzeit2 Stunden 8 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1