(Redirected from Kate and Leopold)
'''Kate & Leopold''' is a
2001 romantic comedy
motion picture that tells a story of a
Duke who
time travels from
1876 to the present and falls in love with a career woman in
New York.
The film is directed by
James Mangold and stars
Meg Ryan,
Hugh Jackman and
Liev Schreiber. The DVD edition contains two versions of the film: one, the original theatrical release, runs for 118 minutes while the
director's cut version runs for 122. One scene in the director's cut shows Ryan's character in a test screening for a new movie and also features a cameo by Mangold.
Plot details
In
1876, Leopold Alexis Elijah Walker Gareth Thomas
Mountbatten,
Duke of Albany and
inventor of the
elevator, is a stifled man and dreamer, like his contemporaries
Edison and
Westinghouse. Strict Uncle Millard has no patience for Leopold's delusions of grandeur and disrespect for the monarchy, chastising him and telling him he must marry a rich American, as the Mountbatten family finances are depleted. His uncle has told him that on his "thirtieth birthday he had become a blemish to the family name".
In the meantime, the puzzled Duke finds Stuart Besser, an amateur
physicist (and descendant of Leopold, according to deleted scenes) perusing through his schematic diagrams and taking photographs of them. He had seen him only earlier while listening to
Roebling's speech about the
Brooklyn Bridge. Leopold follows Stuart and tries to save him from what he thinks is a suicide, falling after him into the portal that brought the man there in the first place.
Leopold awakens in
21st century New York. (Consequently, all elevators malfunction.) He is at first confused and, thinking that he has been kidnapped, he immediately takes a strident and defensive stance against Stuart. Stuart describes to him that he has created formulae to forecast portals in the temporal universe and that Leopold must stay inside his apartment until the portal opens again a week later; he is "held in the time-after". As Stuart takes his dog out, he is injured by falling into the elevator shaft, and is eventually institutionalized for speaking about his scientific discovery.
Leopold is intrigued by the cynical and ambitious Kate McKay, Stuart's ex-girlfriend, who comes to the apartment for her
Palm Pilot pointer. He observes that she is a "career woman" and states that he once dated a librarian from
Sussex. Kate rudely dismisses him and sends him out into the city, demanding that he take Stuart's dog for a walk. Leopold is overwhelmed to see that Roebling's bridge is still standing. Back at the apartment, he befriends Charlie, Kate's brother and an unemployed actor, who believes him to be an actor as well, steadfast to his character.
The pressured Kate, who has been diligently working toward a promotion, enlists Leopold into a commercial for her job. He then ruins her dinner date with her boss. However, Leopold's eloquent apology brings them together. The two become romantically involved, as they dine and tour New York.
Leopold cannot see how she would have him endorse a flawed item without qualms, and declares that "when someone is involved in something entirely without merit, one withdraws". Similar to his uncle, Kate says that sometimes one has to do things they don't want to. He chides her about integrity. She retorts, "I don't have time for pious speeches from two hundred year old men who have not worked a day in their life".
When Kate receives the desired promotion, she must choose between the current time and job or the
19th century with Leopold, as Stuart, who has escaped from the mental hospital with some help, and Charlie arrive in time to the banquet to show Kate pictures of her in
1876. Stuart says that he had thought he disrupted the
spacetime continuum, but actually "the whole thing is a beautiful
4-D pretzel of kismetic inevitability".
'Taglines:'
★ If they lived in the same century they'd be perfect for each other.
★ This Christmas, chivalry makes a comeback.
Leopold's character
Leopold is a duke, but he has "never much felt like one". He is sophisticated, believing a meal to be "the result of reflection and study", with menus prepared in advance and entire courses served. Leopold has even seen the basement of the
Louvre. He was trained in the art of weaponry by the Palace Guard, and taught to ride at the King's Academy. "Life is not solely comprised of tasks, but tastes", says Leopold. He is a man of honor and takes pride in his creations. Highly intelligent, the
scientist improves modern conveniences he encounters.
Film Music

CD cover
# A Clock in New York
# I Want Him Resplendent
# Leopold Chases Stuart to Brooklyn
# That Was Your Best?
# Let's Go!
# Leopold Sees the Completed Bridge
# You Did So Great (Kate's Theme)
# Galloping
# Dearest Kate...
# Prolixin/Leopold and Charlie Buy Flowers
# Charlie Wins Patrice, Leopold Wins Kate
# Secret Drawer
# Time for Bed
# Charlie Realises Leopold Was For Real – 1876
# Kate Goes to the Awards
# Kate Sees the Pictures – "I have to Go"
# You Have to Cross the Girder
# Back in 1876 – Waltz
# Back Where I Belong (song –
Jula Bell)
# Until... (song –
Sting)
Award and Nominations
★ In
2001 the film won the
Golden Globe Award for Best Song for the song "Until", written and performed by
Sting.
★ In
2002 the film was nominated for the
Academy Award for Best Song.
★
Hugh Jackman was nominated in
2001 for the
Golden Globe Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy.
Trivia and mistakes
Leopold has the same name and title as
Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany, the youngest son of
Queen Victoria. In April
1876, at the time of the beginning of the film, Prince Leopold was a 23-year-old student at
Christ Church,
Oxford. In the film, the Leopold character is at least 30 years old. Although
Mountbatten — the family name of the fictional Leopold — is the surname of a cadet branch of the
British Royal Family, the name "Mountbatten" was not adopted until
1917, due to anti-German sentiment in
Great Britain during
World War I. (The original form of the name was
Battenberg.)
In April 1876, at the beginning of the film, Leopold is listening to a speech by, supposedly,
Roebling. (In reality, Roebling died in
1869.) Even if this was meant to be his son,
Washington A. Roebling, chief engineer of the
Brooklyn Bridge, he too never visited the site after 1872, owing to his struggle with
caisson disease.
Leopold lists
Thomas Edison and
George Westinghouse, among others, who were not famous in
1876. For instance, it was not until
1877 that Edison invented the
phonograph which earned him his fame.
There is a scene where Leopold, Charlie and Hector are singing "''I Am the Very Model of a Model Major-General''", from the
Gilbert and Sullivan opera ''
The Pirates of Penzance'', which had its United States' première in
New York on
December 31 1879, whereas Leopold claimed that he had attended the première of "''The Pirates of Penzance''" the previous month (in March 1876). Leopold also got the story of the opera wrong. A similar scene involving a discussion of ''
La Bohème'' would likewise be impossible, as
Giacomo Puccini's version of the opera debuted in
1896 and
Ruggiero Leoncavallo's in
1897 (there is a chance that Leopold might have seen a television production of ''
La Bohème''. Leopold never said that he saw the opera 'live' and we know that he watched television on Stuart's television set).
Stuart was desperate to make sure that Leopold returned to his own time, not out of concern for the invention of elevators, but because Leopold was his great-great-grandfather (and because Stuart would cease to exist if Leopold did not return to his own time due to the
grandfather paradox). This situation was de-emphasised in the theatrical release since Stuart's ex-girlfriend Kate proves to be his great-great-grandmother. A deleted scene in the 'out-takes' on the DVD release shows this point dawning on Kate and Stuart in the back of a taxi.
Kate's dress changes in the last scene. When she lands in 1876, it suddenly has some trim around the neckline and a train, bringing it closer to the dresses worn by women of the time.
External links
★
★
★
''Kate & Leopold'' at currentfilm.com DVD reviews