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The English Patient (film)

1996 drama film directed by Anthony Minghella

The English Patient (film)

Summary

1996 drama film directed by Anthony Minghella

FieldValue
nameThe English Patient
imageThe English Patient Poster.jpg
captionTheatrical release poster
directorAnthony Minghella
producerSaul Zaentz
screenplayAnthony Minghella
based_on
starring{{Plainlist
musicGabriel Yared
cinematographyJohn Seale
editingWalter Murch
studioTiger Moth Productions
distributorMiramax Films
released
runtime162 minutes
countryUnited States
United Kingdom
language{{Plainlist
budget$27–43 million
gross$232 million
  • Ralph Fiennes
  • Juliette Binoche
  • Willem Dafoe
  • Kristin Scott Thomas
  • Naveen Andrews
  • Colin Firth
  • Julian Wadham
  • Jürgen Prochnow United Kingdom
  • English
  • German
  • Italian
  • Arabic The English Patient is a 1996 epic romantic war drama film directed by Anthony Minghella from his own script based on the 1992 novel by Michael Ondaatje, and produced by Saul Zaentz. The film stars Ralph Fiennes and Kristin Scott Thomas alongside Juliette Binoche, Willem Dafoe, Naveen Andrews and Colin Firth in supporting roles.

The protagonist of the title, a man burned beyond recognition who speaks with an English accent, recalls his history in a series of flashbacks, revealing to the audience his true identity and the love affair in which he was involved before the war. The film ends with an onscreen statement that it is a fictionalized account of László Almásy (died 1951) and other historical figures and events. The film received widespread critical acclaim and emerged as a major commercial success at the box-office.

The film received twelve nominations at the 69th Academy Awards, winning nine, including Best Picture, Best Director for Minghella, and Best Supporting Actress for Binoche. It was also the first to receive a Best Editing Oscar for a digitally edited film. Ralph Fiennes, playing the titular character, and Kristin Scott Thomas were Oscar-nominated for their performances. The film also won five BAFTA Awards and two Golden Globes. The British Film Institute ranked The English Patient the 55th-greatest British film of the 20th century. The American Film Institute ranked it the 56th-greatest love story of all time.

Plot

German gunners shoot down a British biplane flying across a desert. A group of Bedouin pulls the badly burned pilot from the wreckage, rescuing him.

Hana, a French-Canadian Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps nurse, learns from a wounded soldier that her boyfriend has been killed. In October 1944 Italy, she is caring for a dying, severely burned English-accented patient who says that he cannot remember his name. His only possession is a copy of Herodotus's Histories, with personal notes, pictures, and mementos stored inside.

When a fellow nurse is killed in front of her, Hana decides she's a curse to her loved ones. She gains permission to settle in a bombed-out monastery with her patient, as he is suffering during their hospital unit's relocation. She's joined by Lieutenant Kip Singh, a Sikh sapper in the British Indian Army posted with Sergeant Hardy to clear German mines and booby traps, and David Caravaggio, a Canadian Intelligence Corps operative who was tortured in German captivity. Caravaggio questions the patient, drawing out details of his past while Hana and Kip begin a love affair.

In the late 1930s, Hungarian cartographer László Almásy is exploring a region of the Sahara as part of a Royal Geographical Society archeological and surveying expedition, which includes his good friend Englishman Peter Madox, and British couple Geoffrey and Katharine Clifton, who conduct aerial surveys with their plane.

Almásy discovers the location of the ancient Cave of Swimmers, containing cave paintings. As the group documents the find, Almásy and Katharine fall in love. He writes about her in notes folded into his book, which she discovers when he awkwardly accepts two watercolours of the cave walls and asks her to paste them into the book.

They return to Cairo and begin an affair, while the group arranges for more detailed archaeological surveys of the cave and surrounding area. Almásy buys her a silver thimble as a gift. Geoffrey secretly watches her from his car and realizes she is cheating. Months later, Katharine breaks things off, fearing the repercussions from Geoffrey. When the archaeological projects are halted by the onset of the war, Madox leaves his Tiger Moth airplane at Kufra Oasis and returns to Britain.

Caravaggio seeks revenge for his injuries, killing the German interrogator who cut his thumbs off and the spy who betrayed him, and seeks out whoever provided maps to the Germans, allowing them to infiltrate Cairo. He confronts Almásy about the Cliftons' death, and he concedes "Maybe ... I did".

Hana overhears Almásy telling Caravaggio about packing camp in 1941 when Geoffrey arrives in the biplane. He aims at Almásy, who jumps out of the way, and crashes. Almásy finds Geoffrey dead at the controls and Katharine badly injured in the front seat. It was an attempted double murder-suicide, as he uncovered their affair. Almásy carries Katharine to the Cave of Swimmers and observes that she is still wearing the thimble he had given her as a gift and she declares she has always loved him.

Leaving her with provisions and his book, Almásy walks three days across the desert to British-held El Tag. He asks for help for her, but a young officer detains him on suspicion of being a spy. Transported away by train, Almásy escapes and encounters a German army unit which takes him to the Kufra Oasis, where Madox has hidden his plane. Exchanging maps for fuel, Almásy flies to the cave, finds Katharine dead, and is shot down flying her body away. After hearing the story, Caravaggio abandons his quest for revenge.

Kip is reposted after the explosives are cleared and agrees with Hana they'll meet again. Almásy tells her he's had enough by pushing vials of morphine towards her. Though distraught, Hana grants his wish, administering a lethal dose. As he drifts to sleep, she reads him Katharine's final letter, written while alone in the cave. The next morning, Hana goes with Caravaggio to Florence, clutching Almásy's book.

Cast

  • Ralph Fiennes as Almásy
  • Juliette Binoche as Hana
  • Willem Dafoe as Caravaggio
  • Kristin Scott Thomas as Katharine Clifton
  • Naveen Andrews as Kip
  • Colin Firth as Geoffrey Clifton
  • Julian Wadham as Madox
  • Jürgen Prochnow as Major Muller
  • Kevin Whately as Hardy
  • Clive Merrison as Fenelon-Barnes
  • Nino Castelnuovo as D'Agostino
  • Hichem Rostom as Fouad
  • Peter Rühring as Bermann

In addition, Torri Higginson plays Mary and Liisa Repo-Martell plays Jan, appearing briefly as Hana's nursing corps colleagues.

Production

Triumph 3HW 350cc motorcycle specified in the novel as Kip's choice of transport and used in the film

Saul Zaentz was interested in working with Anthony Minghella after he saw Minghella's film Truly, Madly, Deeply (1990); Minghella brought this project to Zaentz's attention. Michael Ondaatje, the Sri Lankan-born Canadian author of the novel, worked closely with the filmmakers. According to Minghella, during the development of the project with 20th Century Fox, the "studio wanted the insurance policy of so-called bigger" actors. Zaentz recalled, "they'd look at you and say, 'Could we cast Demi Moore in the role'?" After months of disputes with Fox, the studio pulled out just three weeks before production was to begin and Harvey Weinstein came in and acquired worldwide rights for Miramax Films for $27.5 million. Zaentz sued Miramax Films in 2006 claiming $20 million but the case was still unresolved when Zaentz died in 2014.

The film was shot on location in Tunisia and Italy.

The Conversations: Walter Murch and the Art of Editing Film by Michael Ondaatje is based on the conversations between the author and film editor. Murch, with a career that already included such complex works as the Godfather trilogy, The Conversation, and Apocalypse Now, dreaded the task of editing the film with multiple flashbacks and time frames. Once he began, the possibilities became apparent, some of which took him away from the order of the original script. A reel without sound was made so scene change visuals would be consistent with the quality of the aural aspect between the two. The final cut features over 40 temporal transitions. It was during this time that Murch met Ondaatje and they were able to exchange thoughts about editing the film.

In the film, two types of aircraft were used: a De Havilland D.H.82 Tiger Moth and a Boeing-Stearman Model 75. Both are biplanes. The camp crash scene was made with a -size scale model.

The Hungarian folk song "Szerelem, Szerelem", performed by Muzsikás featuring Márta Sebestyén, was featured in the film.

Music

Main article: The English Patient (soundtrack)

Reception

The English Patient received widespread critical acclaim, and emerged as a major commercial success at the box-office, and received nine Academy Awards, six BAFTA awards, and two Golden Globe Awards.

Janet Maslin of The New York Times called the movie "a stunning feat of literary adaptation as well as a purely cinematic triumph". In The New Yorker, Anthony Lane argues that "the triumph of the film lies not just in the force and the range of the performances—the crisp sweetness of Scott Thomas, say, versus the raw volatility of Binoche—but in Minghella's creation of an intimate epic: vast landscapes mingle with the minute details of desire, and the combination is transfixing".

The film has a rating of 86% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 91 reviews, with an average of 7.90/10. The website's critical consensus states, "Though it suffers from excessive length and ambition, director Minghella's adaptation of the Michael Ondaatje novel is complex, powerful, and moving." The film also has a rating of 87/100 on Metacritic, based on 31 critical reviews. Chicago Sun Times critic Roger Ebert gave the film a four-star rating, saying "it's the kind of movie you can see twice – first for the questions, the second time for the answers". In his movie guide, Leonard Maltin rated the film out of 4, calling it "a mesmerizing adaptation" of Ondaatje's novel, saying "Fiennes and Scott Thomas are perfectly matched", and he concluded by calling the film "an exceptional achievement all around". In 2021, The Boston Globe called the movie a "masterpiece" in a 25-year anniversary review.

Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade of "A−" on a scale of A+ to F.

It became the highest-grossing film in the history of Miramax with a worldwide gross of $232 million.

The film is referred to in the Seinfeld episode "The English Patient", where the character Elaine is shunned by her friends and co-workers for disliking the film.

Accolades

AwardCategoryNominee(s)ResultRef.
Academy AwardsBest PictureSaul Zaentz
Best DirectorAnthony Minghella
Best ActorRalph Fiennes
Best ActressKristin Scott Thomas
Best Supporting ActressJuliette Binoche
Best Screenplay – Based on Material Previously Produced or PublishedAnthony Minghella
Best Art DirectionArt Direction: Stuart Craig;
Set Decoration: Stephenie McMillan
Best CinematographyJohn Seale
Best Costume DesignAnn Roth
Best Film EditingWalter Murch
Best Original Dramatic ScoreGabriel Yared
Best SoundWalter Murch, Mark Berger, David Parker, and
Christopher Newman
American Cinema Editors AwardsBest Edited Feature FilmWalter Murch
American Society of Cinematographers AwardsOutstanding Achievement in Cinematography in Theatrical ReleasesJohn Seale
Art Directors Guild AwardsExcellence in Production Design – Feature FilmStuart Craig and Aurelio Crugnola
Artios AwardsOutstanding Achievement in Feature Film Casting – DramaDavid Rubin
Australian Film Institute AwardsBest Foreign FilmSaul Zaentz
Berlin International Film FestivalGolden BearAnthony Minghella
Best ActressJuliette Binoche
Boston Society of Film Critics AwardsBest CinematographyJohn Seale
British Academy Film AwardsBest FilmSaul Zaentz and Anthony Minghella
Best DirectionAnthony Minghella
Best Actor in a Leading RoleRalph Fiennes
Best Actress in a Leading RoleKristin Scott Thomas
Best Actress in a Supporting RoleJuliette Binoche
Best Screenplay – AdaptedAnthony Minghella
Best CinematographyJohn Seale
Best Costume DesignAnn Roth
Best EditingWalter Murch
Best Make Up/HairFabrizio Sforza and Nigel Booth
Best Original MusicGabriel Yared
Best Production DesignStuart Craig
Best SoundMark Berger, Pat Jackson, Walter Murch, Chris Newman,
David Parker, and Ivan Sharrock
British Society of Cinematographers AwardsBest Cinematography in a Theatrical Feature FilmJohn Seale
Cabourg Film FestivalBest ActressJuliette Binoche
César AwardsBest Foreign FilmAnthony Minghella
Chicago Film Critics Association AwardsBest Film
Best Supporting ActressJuliette Binoche
Best CinematographyJohn Seale
Chlotrudis AwardsBest Supporting ActorNaveen Andrews
Best Supporting ActressJuliette Binoche
Cinema Audio Society AwardsOutstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for Motion PicturesChristopher Newman, Walter Murch, Mark Berger, and
David Parker
Critics' Choice AwardsBest Picture
Best DirectorAnthony Minghella
Best Screenplay
Czech Lion AwardsBest Foreign Film
Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics Association AwardsBest Picture
Best Supporting ActressJuliette Binoche
Best CinematographyJohn Seale
Directors Guild of America AwardsOutstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion PicturesAnthony Minghella
Empire AwardsBest British Director
European Film AwardsEuropean Film of the YearSaul Zaentz
European Actress of the YearJuliette Binoche
European Cinematographer of the YearJohn Seale
Florida Film Critics Circle AwardsBest Cinematography
Golden Globe AwardsBest Motion Picture – Drama
Best Actor in a Motion Picture – DramaRalph Fiennes
Best Actress in a Motion Picture – DramaKristin Scott Thomas
Best Supporting Actress – Motion PictureJuliette Binoche
Best Director – Motion PictureAnthony Minghella
Best Screenplay – Motion Picture
Best Original Score – Motion PictureGabriel Yared
Golden Reel AwardsMotion Picture Feature Films: Music EditingRobert Randles
Golden Screen Awards
Goya AwardsBest European FilmAnthony Minghella
Grammy AwardsBest Instrumental Composition Written for a Motion Picture or for TelevisionThe English Patient – Gabriel Yared
Japan Academy Film PrizeOutstanding Foreign Language Film
London Film Critics Circle AwardsBritish Director of the YearAnthony Minghella
Los Angeles Film Critics Association AwardsBest CinematographyJohn Seale
Mainichi Film AwardsBest Foreign Language FilmAnthony Minghella
National Board of Review AwardsTop Ten Films
Best Supporting ActressJuliette Binoche(Tied)}}
Kristin Scott Thomas
National Society of Film Critics AwardsBest Supporting Actress
Best CinematographyJohn Seale
Nikkan Sports Film AwardsBest Foreign Film
Online Film & Television Association AwardsBest PictureSaul Zaentz
Best Drama Picture
Best DirectorAnthony Minghella
Best ActorRalph Fiennes
Best Drama Actor
Best ActressKristin Scott Thomas
Best Drama Actress
Best Supporting ActressJuliette Binoche
Best Screenplay – Based on Material from Another MediumAnthony Minghella
Best CinematographyJohn Seale
Best Film EditingWalter Murch
Best MakeupFabrizio Sforza and Nigel Booth
Best Production DesignStuart Craig and Stephanie McMillan
Best ScoreGabriel Yared
Producers Guild of America AwardsOutstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion PicturesSaul Zaentz
Visionary Award – Theatrical Motion Pictures
Satellite AwardsBest Motion Picture – Drama
Best DirectorAnthony Minghella
Best Actor in a Motion Picture – DramaRalph Fiennes
Best Actress in a Motion Picture – DramaKristin Scott Thomas
Best Screenplay – AdaptedAnthony Minghella
Best Art DirectionStuart Craig
Best CinematographyJohn Seale
Best Film EditingWalter Murch
Best Original ScoreGabriel Yared
Screen Actors Guild AwardsOutstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion PictureNaveen Andrews, Juliette Binoche, Willem Dafoe,
Ralph Fiennes, Colin Firth, Jürgen Prochnow,
Kristin Scott Thomas, and Julian Wadham
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading RoleRalph Fiennes
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading RoleKristin Scott Thomas
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting RoleJuliette Binoche
Society of Texas Film Critics AwardsBest Screenplay – AdaptedAnthony Minghella
Southeastern Film Critics Association AwardsBest Picture
Best ActorRalph Fiennes
Best Supporting ActressJuliette Binoche
Best ScreenplayAnthony Minghella
Turkish Film Critics Association AwardsBest Foreign Film
USC Scripter AwardsAnthony Minghella (screenwriter);
Michael Ondaatje (author)
Writers Guild of America AwardsBest Screenplay – Based on Material Previously Produced or PublishedAnthony Minghella

Lists

YearCategoryDistinction
1999BFI Top 100 British films
2002AFI's 100 Years...100 Passions

In 2009, The English Patient was included in The Guardian's 25 best British films of the last 25 years list.

Home media and rights

In the US, The English Patient was first released on VHS on September 23, 1997, by Buena Vista Home Entertainment (under the Miramax Home Entertainment banner). The film received two separate US LaserDisc releases; the first on October 1, 1997 and the second on November 12, 1997. The first US LaserDisc release featured DTS Digital Surround, while the second was a Criterion Collection edition. In 1997, the film also received LaserDisc releases in France, Hong Kong, Singapore and Spain. The film's first US DVD release on March 24, 1998 was presented in widescreen, while the second release on June 29, 2004 was a 2-Disc edition under the "Miramax's Collector's Edition" line.

In December 2010, Miramax was sold by The Walt Disney Company, their owners since 1993. That same month, the studio was taken over by private equity firm Filmyard Holdings. Filmyard licensed the home media rights for most of Miramax's notable titles to Lionsgate, with lower profile titles being licensed to Echo Bridge Entertainment. On January 31, 2012, The English Patient received a Blu-ray release through Lionsgate Home Entertainment. In 2011, Filmyard Holdings licensed the Miramax library to streamer Netflix. This streaming deal included The English Patient, and ran for five years, eventually ending on June 1, 2016.

Filmyard Holdings sold Miramax to Qatari company beIN Media Group in March 2016. In April 2020, ViacomCBS (now known as Paramount Skydance) acquired the rights to Miramax's library, after buying a 49% stake in the studio from beIN. The English Patient is among the 700 titles they acquired in the deal, and since April 2020, the film has been distributed by Paramount Pictures. The deal also included the much smaller library of Miramax Television, as well as including a first look agreement with beIN/Miramax, which allows Paramount to release any future projects based on Miramax properties.

In late 2020, Paramount Home Entertainment started reissuing many of the Miramax titles they had acquired, and on February 23, 2021, they reissued The English Patient on Blu-ray. In March 2021, Paramount Home Entertainment also released The English Patient on a ten film Blu-ray set, featuring nine other Paramount-owned films which won Academy Award for Best Picture. Among the other films included were American Beauty and Gladiator, which Paramount acquired in 2006, via their acquisition of DreamWorks' live-action film library (consisting of 59 films by that point).

The film was made available on Paramount's subscription streaming service Paramount+, which launched in March 2021, in addition to being made available on Paramount's free streaming service Pluto TV.

Television adaptation

In August 2021, another adaptation of the novel was in early development for a new BBC television series, co-produced by Miramax Television and Paramount Television Studios. However, in March 2023, it was reported that it was no longer moving forward.

Notes

References

Bibliography

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