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Relative Values

  • 2000
  • PG
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
Colin Firth, Julie Andrews, William Baldwin, Stephen Fry, Jeanne Tripplehorn, and Edward Atterton in Relative Values (2000)
Home Video Trailer from First Look
Play trailer1:31
1 Video
10 Photos
Comedy

A man returns home with his bride-to-be, an actress, who turns out to be the sister of his family's maid.A man returns home with his bride-to-be, an actress, who turns out to be the sister of his family's maid.A man returns home with his bride-to-be, an actress, who turns out to be the sister of his family's maid.

  • Director
    • Eric Styles
  • Writers
    • Noël Coward
    • Paul Rattigan
    • Michael Walker
  • Stars
    • Julie Andrews
    • Edward Atterton
    • William Baldwin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    2.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Eric Styles
    • Writers
      • Noël Coward
      • Paul Rattigan
      • Michael Walker
    • Stars
      • Julie Andrews
      • Edward Atterton
      • William Baldwin
    • 22User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Relative Values
    Trailer 1:31
    Relative Values

    Photos9

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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Julie Andrews
    Julie Andrews
    • Felicity, Countess of Marshwood
    Edward Atterton
    Edward Atterton
    • Nigel, Earl of Marshwood
    William Baldwin
    William Baldwin
    • Don Lucas
    Colin Firth
    Colin Firth
    • Peter
    Stephen Fry
    Stephen Fry
    • Crestwell
    Sophie Thompson
    Sophie Thompson
    • Moxie
    Jeanne Tripplehorn
    Jeanne Tripplehorn
    • Miranda Frayle
    Stephanie Beacham
    Stephanie Beacham
    • Elizabeth
    Gaye Brown
    Gaye Brown
    • Lady Hayling
    Anwen Carlisle
    • Alice
    Kathryn Dimery
    • Mrs Crane
    Charles Edwards
    Charles Edwards
    • Phillip Bateman-Tobias
    Michael Higgs
    Michael Higgs
    • Film Director
    John Hinnigan
    • Stable Boy
    Patrick Marley
    Patrick Marley
    • Hawkins
    Richard Nichols
    • Frank
    David Schaal
    David Schaal
    • The Baddie
    Lynn Seymour
    • Air Stewardess
    • (as Lynne Seymour)
    • Director
      • Eric Styles
    • Writers
      • Noël Coward
      • Paul Rattigan
      • Michael Walker
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    6.42.7K
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    Featured reviews

    7bkoganbing

    On the rebound to a title

    Relative Values was never given a Broadway production during the lifetime of Noel Coward. It only made it there in 1986 thirteen years after Noel died. But in the original British production the star was the formidable Gladys Cooper. She's in the role of Duchess of Marchwood so Julie Andrews had some big shoes to fill.

    I'll have to say that Andrews did it good style and a British production of even a second line Noel Coward work is better than a lot that is around. What I found interesting that with his various trips across the pond Coward felt comfortable enough to put some American characters in his work.

    Andrews is the mother of Edward Atterton who is a well known jet setting playboy who always comes home to mother especially when things go spectacularly bad or good. Depending on your point of view he arrives home with American movie star Jeanne Tripplehorn in tow who is on the rebound from a breakup. They're going to be married, a fact that does not please mother.

    Neither does it please William Baldwin who is an action film star of the era, late Forties when the play was written. He's who Tripplehorn is on the rebound from and he wants her back. He knows full well that Tripplehorn would be bored to tears as the lady of the manor in training in the quiet English countryside.

    Add to all of that Sophia Thompson is personal maid to Andrews and she's Tripplehorn's long lost sister. It all comes to a head when Tripplehorn starts spouting off the invented studio biography where Thompson who has a fake status of her own for the occasion just explodes and these two have a cat fight to beat all.

    Observing all this are butler Stephen Fry and cousin Colin Firth who seems to be a permanent house guest. They get the lion's share of the Coward wit in the dialog. This is Coward who was the pet of the English society. But Coward's third voice in the film is that of Thompson. Coward came from some pretty humble background and she also might very well be modeled on Coward's good friend from adolescence Gertrude Lawrence who also came from most modest means.

    Relative Values was a pleasure to see because other than his really acclaimed work like Blithe Spirit or Private Lives, too little of Coward is played today. We could certainly use some of his wit now. I often wonder what Coward would have made of some of the events of the last forty years.
    7ANeary

    Inconsequential but fun

    This is based on a Noel Coward play, so you should know what to expect.

    It is very nicely done - the locations look great (Isle of Man standing in for Kent), the cars and clothes are fabulous, and the casting is excellent. Stephen Fry plays a butler (again) with some Jeevesian touches, but is pretty low-key. Colin Firth plays against type in the role Coward so obviously designed for himself - and is funny (again, not something one expects from Firth). Jeanne Tripplehorn looks suitably glamorous as the Hollywood star, and Baldwin This does make a few digs at class and snobbery, but it is really a bit of fluffy comedy to pass a pleasant hour.
    10Katherina_Minola

    Wonderful and witty

    This film, based on a Noel Coward play, stars Julie Andrews, as Lady Felicity Marshwood, who is upset to learn that her son, Lord Nigel (Edward Atterton) is engaged to be married to Hollywood film star Miranda Frayle (Jeanne Tripplehorn). However, the situation soon becomes even more complicated when Nigel plans to bring Miranda to meet his aristocratic family, only for the family's maid Moxie (Sophie Thompson), to announce that Miranda is in fact her sister! Throw in Miranda's co-star and former lover Don Lucas (William Baldwin) who is coming to England to try and stop the marriage, and Colin Firth and Stephen Fry as respectively Nigel's cousin Peter, and the family butler Crestwell, and the stage is set for a fine comedy!

    I loved this film – it did remind me somewhat of another Noel Coward adaptation – Easy Virtue, which like Relative Values, also starred Colin Firth, and which also featured the son of an upper-crust English family bringing his vivacious American girlfriend to meet his relatives, but the films play out quite differently (I loved easy Virtue too).

    All the cast were excellent – in particular, Thompson, Andrews and Firth. Stephen Fry was playing a role which could have been written for him, and although he is one of the supporting rather than main cast members, he certainly makes the most of his screen time. Baldwin is also very funny as the often drunk Lucas, who throws a spanner in the works of Miranda's plan to transform herself from a starlet to a Lady of the Manor. And Moxie, who is transformed from a maid, into a wealthy family friend (so that Miranda won't recognise her) is the centre of one of the funniest scenes, when Moxie gets drunk to try and overcome her fear at meeting her sister who she hasn't seen for some 20 years. Colin Firth is just adorable as Peter – it could have been a nothing role in the wrong actor's hands, but Firth is perfect.

    The plot itself is rather daft – why didn't they just tell Miranda that her sister was working for the family, rather than try and cover up the fact (and surely Miranda would have recognised her own sister!), but I think that it's just something that you need to go with, accept, and enjoy. Overall, this was a very funny and hugely delightful film. At just under one and a half hours, it never gets boring, the cast is top-notch, and I would certainly recommend it.
    ALS1

    Don't overlook Sophie!

    This was a pretty darn good movie, and I always enjoy seeing Julie Andrews do comedy. But for me, the highlight of the movie was the dinner scene, with "Moxy" (Sophie Thompson) furiously biting her tongue while her clueless real-life sister (Jeanne Trippelhorn) concocts falsely slanderous stories about their mother, painting her as a bawdy alcoholic. Moxy's outraged cry of "Jugs of Beer!?" after Miranda/Freda leaves is priceless, as is her dressing down of Freda near the end of the film.

    I liked this film, too, because it didn't sink too far into the "Silly Ass/Bright Young Thing" mode that most of Coward's works tend to. Rent it if you can. It's worth catching.
    5Chris_Docker

    Value it for what it is, not whether it comes up to the original

    Most of the criticism has been because the gags of Noel Coward about class are not so funny now as they were then. But that is just to judge the film by the play. It's *mildly* funny - I dozed at the beginning but then woke up when I realised how enjoyable it was. The real gems are the superb performances all the way through and the way English and American life, mannerisms and etiquette of the 50's (when they were far more distinct) are portrayed so touchingly. Luxuriate in a nice comfy cinema seat (if they have them near you) and be pampered by it!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      While filming on the Isle of Man in 1999, the cast joined members of the public to watch the eclipse. This provoked such surprise that more people ended up watching Dame Julie Andrews than the eclipse.
    • Quotes

      Frederick Crestwell: There is a social time bomb up there which is likely to go off at any minute.

    • Connections
      Referenced in QI: Film (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      Almost Like Being in Love
      Written by Alan Jay Lerner, Frederick Loewe

      Performed by Rick Riso and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Relative Values?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 23, 2000 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Gente con clase
    • Filming locations
      • Isle of Man
    • Production companies
      • Encore Media Group
      • Isle of Man Film Commission
      • Isle of Man Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 27 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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