Tonight's theme in TCM's 31 Days of Oscar is movies set in France. One of the movies in the lineup had been running in the FXM rotation and, not having seen it before, I had recorded it. That movie is Baz Luhrmann's 2001 version of Moulin Rouge!, so with the TCM showing tonight at 10:00 PM, I decided to watch it now rather than wait for another showing on FXM.
Christian (Ewan McGregor) is an Englishman right around the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries who, being a hopless romantic, decided to go off to Paris to write the great novel that way a lost generation of Americans would do in the 1920s. He gets a crappy room in an apartment hotel in Montmartre, not far from the famous Moulin Rouge nightclub. Not that his writing is going well, and worse for him, a man falls through the ceiling into his apartment!
That man is the Narcoleptic Argentine, part of a troupe of actors led by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (John Leguizamo). They're trying to write a play, without much success, but Christian comes up with some brilliant idea by mouthing platitudes that would become song lyrics from well-known pop (and some other genre) songs of an era much later than the characters inhabit: "The hills are alive with the sound of music", "All you need is love", and so on, with a lot of music used. Toulouse-Lautrec is impressed and takes Christian with them to see Zidler (Jim Broadbrent), the proprietor of the Moulin Rouge.
Zidler is planning to use his courtesan Satine (Nicole Kidman), who has been the star of previous stage shows at the Moulin Rouge, as the star of this new show. But there's a catch. Zidler's desire is to turn the Moulin Rouge into something serious, and for that he needs money. To that end, he was hoping to get the Duke (richard Roxburgh) to sponsor the show in exchange for the services of Satine who, being a courtesan, may or may not be honestly in love with anybody. In any case, the Duke loves Satine, and certainly Christian does too.
Satine meets Christian and thinks he's the Duke. But since Christian, romantic that he is, really does love Satine, and because she likes the ideas for the play, she is more than willing to lead him on in exchange for his being the writer of the play. The idea for the play grows more fantastic as Christian is in many ways writing the love triangle that he, Satine, and the Duke are getting involved in, only setting it over in one of the princely states of British India.
The Duke is no dummy, especially because he's got operatives among the cast of the play, and figures out what's going on. He's also insanely jealous, wanting Satine only for himself, and being more than willing to kill Christian in order to get that. Meanwhile, Satine has been diagnosed with consumption. All of the threads come together at the climactic performance of the play Christian has written.
Moulin Rouge! received a bunch of Oscar nominations. I can see why, but I can also see why some people are really going to dislike the movie. The reasons for that I think largely fall on the direction of Baz Luhrmann. His directorial choices, in terms of lighting, editing, and camera movement, are all highly stylized, but also for me incredibly intrusive at times. The extremely fast-paced editing may not be to everybody's liking either. Other people are probably going to enjoy trying to figure out all of the music that's being used, as there's a lot of it. For me, that wasn't quite enough to overcome the issues I had with the direction, but again I can understand why that might not be the case for other people. Moulin Rouge! is a movie I'm glad I got the chance to see, but not one I'm looking to watch a second time any time soon.
