The Moulin Rouge the most outlandishness nightclub, bordello and cabaret Paris has ever seen; where the inspired intersects with the impossible.

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‘MOULIN ROUGE’

The Moulin Rouge the most outlandishness nightclub, bordello and cabaret Paris has ever seen; where the inspired intersects with the impossible. Set in and around the hippest and most famous nightclub of the Monmartre district of fin-de-siècle Paris, Moulin Rouge spins a variation on the Orpheus myth, depositing a fresh-faced innocent into this den of iniquity; it is the centre of the bohemian world. Starring Nicole Kidman and Ewan McGregor, a summer movie made with conventional wisdom and stands out as a vibrant, imaginative gem suffused with the very staples of humanity (freedom, truth, beauty, love) that serve as its unofficial tagline. A story about idealism in the face of all that is beyond our control, as well as being an absinthe soaked culture, Moulin Rouge is best described as a glittering pop opera that freebases much of the 20th century musical landscape, but it radically reinterprets and re-imagines said material. The Moulin Rouge, a place where anything can happen (and does happen), we see the blossoming love between two people, but it soon becomes forbidden as we see the trials they are put through, ranging from the bedroom scene where we first see the two lovers together and the dance floor - a kaleidoscope of colour and choreography.

The film is directed by Baz Lurhmann, a filmmaker who has made a career out of genre-defying bedazzlement with Strictly Ballroom and William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet, is at his best. He uses lots of the same methods in the other films, but the techniques he uses have been taken to the extreme in order to create this film, as with his other films you see that every character is individual and has its own meaning (in Romeo + Juliet, we see them in fancy dress – Romeo, a knight in shining armour and Juliet – an angel). The costumes used the in the Moulin Rouge are bright, vibrant and very colourful and represents each characters personality and emotions or feelings, for example Satine is the ‘sparkling diamond’ so she wears diamonds, you could go a little deeper and say that she is the sparkling diamond because she is pictured ‘better’ than everyone else or the star of the show – when we see her on her swing the camera has a extreme close-up shot and bright lights are on her, giving the impression of ‘sparkling diamond’. Lurhmann lighting techniques are similar in both films as they all have two lovers, so the story is mainly cantered around what they doing, that means they will always have back lighting – in the bedroom the back lighting is in red which shows love; Spot lighting when they are singing, and have under lighting when they are dancing, when the lovers (Christian and Satine) are together there is usually a key light on them, as it is very bright it works well with the point they are making – there love is brighter than anything else and its special and he uses green key filters to show jealousy (the duke). Lurhmann uses many of the same techniques seen in his other films, he uses a lot of music of all different genres in all his films but he interprets and re-imagines said material, digging at the root appeal and emotive core of everything from Nirvana, U2 and the Beatles to David Bowie, Fat boy Slim and Rodgers and Hammerstein, as well as, in larger odes, Madonna’s “Like a Virgin,” The Police’s “Roxanne” and Elton John’s “Your Song”. As the film is in the style of a musical most of the songs are sung by the characters which helps them to express their emotions and shows the audience how their feeling, the characters do their own singing - particularly enjoyable is McGregor’s unique phrasing, and in scene too, with minimal dubbing. The audience are very important to this film as it a musical making it like a stage show on Broadway, it appeals to the audience because they feel they are involved and a part of the film. Lurhmann uses a lot of connotations in the way he directs, he particularly pays attention to the colours he uses in the bedroom, as it is the one used by the courtesan it is done in red (it signifies love) and gold (signifying richness, a courtesan tends to deal with richer people like kings and dukes etc), he uses lots in his mis-en-scene as well.

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The bedroom scene in Moulin rouge is, I think, a key scene in the film, as it is where everything happens. The scene is obviously set in the bedroom, which is in an elephant – perhaps Satine had a rich king or prince from India at one time. In this scene we see, for the first time, Satine and Christian together although they both have very different agendas. Christian is set up by the absinthe soaked Tolouse La Trec for what he thinks is a private poetry reading, whereas Satine has other ideas – it is very entertaining to the ...

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