Phantom Thread
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Phantom Thread is a 2017 American romantic period drama film written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson. It stars Daniel Day-Lewis, Vicky Krieps, and Lesley Manville, and follows an haute couture dressmaker in 1950s London who takes a young waitress as his muse.[6] It is Day-Lewis's most recent film to date.[7][8] The film is the first Anderson film shot outside the United States, with principal photography beginning in January 2017 in Lythe, England. It is Anderson's second collaboration with Day-Lewis, after There Will Be Blood (2007), and his fourth collaboration with composer Jonny Greenwood.
Phantom Thread premiered in New York City on December 11, 2017, and was theatrically released in the U.S. two weeks later.[9] It received acclaim for its acting, screenplay, direction, musical score, costume design, and production values. The National Board of Review chose it as one of the top ten films of 2017,[10] and it is widely considered one of the best films of the 2010s.[11][12]
At the 90th Academy Awards, the film was nominated for Best Picture, Best Director for Anderson, Best Actor for Day-Lewis, Best Supporting Actress for Manville, and Best Original Score for Greenwood; it won for Best Costume Design. It also earned four nominations at the 71st British Academy Film Awards, winning for Best Costume Design,[13] and received two Golden Globe nominations.[14]
Contents
Plot
In 1954 London, fashion designer Reynolds Woodcock creates dresses for members of high society, including royalty. His clients view him as a genius whose creations enable them to become their best selves, but his creativity and charm are matched by his obsessive and controlling personality. Cyril, his sister, manages his fashion house's day-to-day operations and tries to protect him from anything that might distract him from his work. The superstitious Reynolds is haunted by their mother's death and often stitches hidden messages into the linings of the dresses he makes.
After designing a new gown for a revered client, Lady Harding, Reynolds visits a restaurant near his country house and meets a foreign waitress, Alma Elson. She accepts his invitation to dinner. Their relationship blossoms, and she moves in with him, becoming his model, muse, and lover. Cyril initially mistrusts Alma but comes to respect her willfulness and determination.
At first, Alma enjoys being part of Reynolds's work, but he proves aloof, hard to please, and finicky; as a result, they start to bicker. When Alma tries to show her love for Reynolds by surprising him with a romantic dinner, he lashes out, calling it an "ambush" and questioning her motive. Alma retaliates by poisoning his tea with wild mushrooms gathered outside the country house. As he readies a wedding gown for a Belgian princess, Reynolds collapses, damaging the dress and forcing his staff to work all night to repair it. He becomes gravely ill and has hallucinations of his mother. Alma stays by his side, nursing him back to health.
After Reynolds recovers, he tells Alma that a house that does not change "is a dead house" and asks her to marry him. Taken aback, she hesitates, but then accepts. After a honeymoon in Switzerland, Reynolds and Alma start bickering again as Reynolds's domineering personality reasserts itself. Cyril tells Reynolds that Lady Harding is now a client at a rival fashion house and suggests that his classic, conservative designs may be going out of style. Reynolds blames Alma for upending his routines, saying she doesn't fit in and has turned him and Cyril against each other. Alma overhears him.
At the country house, Alma makes Reynolds an omelet poisoned with the same mushrooms as before. As he chews his first bite, she informs him that she wants him weak and vulnerable, then strong again after she has taken care of him. Reynolds realizes the omelet is poisoned, but ostentatiously swallows the bite and tells her to kiss him before he is sick. As he lies ill again, Alma imagines their future with children, a rich social life, and a bigger role for her in the dressmaking business. She acknowledges that while there are challenges ahead, their love and their complementary needs can overcome them.
Cast
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- Daniel Day-Lewis[15] as Reynolds Woodcock
- Vicky Krieps[16] as Alma Elson
- Lesley Manville[16] as Cyril Woodcock
- Camilla Rutherford as Johanna
- Gina McKee as Countess Henrietta Harding
- George Glasgow as Nigel Cheddar-Goode
- Brian Gleeson as Dr. Robert Hardy
- Harriet Sansom Harris as Barbara Rose
- Lujza Richter as Princess Mona Braganza
- Julia Davis as Lady Baltimore
- Nicholas Mander as Lord Baltimore
- Philip Franks as Peter Martin
- Phyllis MacMahon as Tippy
- Silas Carson as Rubio Gurrerro
- Richard Graham[17] as George Riley
- Jane Perry as Mrs. Vaughan
- Ian Harrod as The Registrar
Production
Anderson became interested in the fashion industry after reading about designer Cristóbal Balenciaga.[18] Reynolds Woodcock's obsessive fastidiousness is loosely inspired by English-American fashion designer Charles James.[19] Daniel Day-Lewis, a method actor, spent a year learning dressmaking from Marc Happel in preparation for the role. He gained enough skill to enable him to recreate an iconic Balenciaga dress.[20]
Filming
Principal photography began in late January 2017 in Lythe, England, United Kingdom,[21][22] with a number of other locations in the North York Moors also featuring, including Robin Hood's Bay and Staithes.[23] Filming also took place at Owlpen Manor in the Cotswolds[24] and in the London neighbourhood of Fitzrovia, in Fitzroy Square, and in Grafton Mews.[25] Woodcock drives a maroon Bristol 405 in the film.[26] Filming also took place at the Grandhotel Giessbach, Brienz, Switzerland, Lake Brienz, and Brienzer Rothorn. The New Year's Eve party was filmed at the Blackpool Tower ballroom with approximately 500 supporting artistes.[27]
Cinematography
It was reported in June 2017 that Anderson himself would serve as the film's cinematographer, because Robert Elswit, his frequent collaborator for cinematography, was absent during production.[28] Anderson denied this, saying there is no official credit for cinematography and that it was a "collaborative effort".[18] Michael Bauman, who previously worked as Anderson and Elswit's gaffer, was credited as the "lighting cameraman". Anderson and Bauman pushed their 35 mm film stock and filled its frames with "theatrical haze" to "dirty up" their look; according to Bauman, "One of the first things [Paul] said was, 'Look, this cannot look like The Crown. That was a big thing. When people think of a period movie it becomes this beautifully polished, amazingly photographed—I mean, The Crown looks beautiful—but super clean, gorgeous light, and he was clear it couldn't look like that."[29]
Soundtrack
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The soundtrack is by Jonny Greenwood, who previously worked with Anderson on the soundtracks for There Will Be Blood (2007), The Master (2012), and Inherent Vice (2014). It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Score, Greenwood's first Academy Award nomination.[30] The soundtrack features prominently in the film, with nearly ninety minutes of music during the film's 130-minute runtime.[31][32]
Reception
Box office
Phantom Thread grossed $21.2 million in the U.S. and Canada and $26.6 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $47.8 million, against a production budget of $35 million.[5]
After three weeks in limited release, where it made $2.8 million, the film was added to 834 theaters on January 19, 2018 (for a total of 896), and grossed $3.8 million over the weekend, finishing 12th at the box office.[33] The next weekend, after the announcement of its six Oscar nominations, and having added 125 theaters, the film grossed $2.9 million.[34]
Critical response
Phantom Thread received widespread critical acclaim. On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 91%, based on 358 reviews, with an average rating of 8.5/10. The site's critics consensus reads: "Phantom Thread's finely woven narrative is filled out nicely by humor, intoxicating romantic tension, and yet another impressively committed performance from Daniel Day-Lewis."[35] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 90 out of 100, based on 51 critics' reviews.[36]
The A.V. Club's A.A. Dowd gave the film an A−, calling it a "charitable and even poignantly hopeful take on the subject [of being in a relationship with an artist]" and writing, "in the simple, refined timelessness of its technique, Phantom Thread is practically a love letter to classic aesthetic values—cinematic, sartorial, or otherwise".[37] The Observer critic Mark Kermode gave the film five stars out of five, calling it "a deftly spun yarn" and praising Day-Lewis's performance, calling his role a "perfect fit [in a] beautifully realised tale of 50s haute couture".[38]
Christy Lemire of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association placed the film second on her list of the ten best films of 2017, calling it "captivating" and "one of Paul Thomas Anderson's absolute best" and singling out Greenwood's score as "intoxicating".[39] Michael Wood, for the London Review of Books, wrote that the film unsuccessfully references other gothic films such as Rebecca from the 1940s. He also wrote: "Can we imagine a long future for this couple? The film can, and does, but the picture is so hackneyed—pram, baby, walk in the park—that it has to be a dream, or an irony."[40]
Top ten lists
Phantom Thread was on many critics' top ten lists for 2017.[41]
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- 1st – Marlow Stern, The Daily Beast
- 1st – Ben Kenigsberg, RogerEbert.com
- 2nd – Sasha Stone, Awards Daily
- 2nd – Alison Willmore, BuzzFeed
- 2nd – Christy Lemire, RogerEbert.com
- 3rd – Justin Chang, Los Angeles Times
- 3rd – Glenn Kenny, RogerEbert.com
- 4th – Mark Olsen, Los Angeles Times
- 4th – Michael Phillips, Chicago Tribune
- 5th – Eric Kohn, IndieWire
- 5th – Brian Tallerico, RogerEbert.com
- 5th – Joshua Rothkopf, Time Out New York
- 5th – A.A. Dowd & Ignatiy Vishnevetsky, The A.V. Club
- 6th – Matt Zoller Seitz, RogerEbert.com
- 6th – Richard Brody, The New Yorker
- 6th – A. O. Scott, The New York Times
- 6th – Todd McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter
- 8th – Manohla Dargis, The New York Times
- 8th – Matt Singer, ScreenCrush
- 8th – Emily Yoshida, New York
- 9th – Christopher Orr, The Atlantic
- 9th – Peter Rainer, The Christian Science Monitor
- 10th – David Ehrlich, IndieWire
- 10th – David Edelstein, New York
- 10th – Peter Travers, Rolling Stone
- Top 10 (listed alphabetically) – Ty Burr, The Boston Globe
- Top 10 (listed alphabetically) – Dana Stevens, Slate
- Top 10 (listed alphabetically) – Joe Morgenstern, The Wall Street Journal
Accolades
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References
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External links
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- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Phantom Thread at IMDb
- Phantom Thread at AllMovie
- Phantom Thread at Box Office Mojo
- Phantom Thread at Rotten Tomatoes
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- 2017 films
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- 2010s American films
- 2010s English-language films
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- Annapurna Pictures films
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- Films about fashion designers
- Films about fashion in the United Kingdom
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- Films directed by Paul Thomas Anderson
- Films produced by Megan Ellison
- Films scored by Jonny Greenwood
- Films set around New Year
- Films set in 1954
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