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DETAILS

MPAA Rating - G

Length:
    133 Minutes

Genre:
    Musical

Original Release Date:
    Apr 27, 1999

Director
    Walter Lang

Cast
    Deborah Kerr, Yul Brynner, Rita Moreno, Martin Benson, Terry Saunders, Rex Thompson, Carlos Rivas, Patrick Adiarte

 
Movie Summary
The King and I, Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammersteins 1951Broadway musical hit, was based on Margaret Landons book Anna and the King of Siam. Since 20th-Century-Fox had made a film version of the Landon book in 1946, that studio had first dibs on the movie adaptation of King and I. Deborah Kerr plays English widow Anna Leonowens, who comes to Siam in the 1860s to tutor the many wives and children of the countrys progressive King (Yul Brynner, recreating his Broadway role-and winning an Oscar in the process). The culture clash between Anna and the King is but one aspect of their multilayered relationship. Through Anna, the King learns the refineries and responsibilities of modern western civilization; Anna meanwhile comes to realize how important it is for an Oriental ruler to maintain his pride and to uphold the customs of his people. After a successful evening entertaining foreign dignitaries, Anna and the King celebrate with an energetic dance, but this is cut short by a bitter quarrel over the cruel punishment of the Kings new Burmese wife Tuptim (Rita Moreno), who has dared to fall in love with someone else. Despite the many rifts between them, Anna and the monarch come to respect and (to a degree) love one another. When the King dies, Anna agrees to stay on to offer help and advice to the new ruler of Siam, young Prince Chulalongkhorn (Patrick Adiarte). In general, The King and I tends to be somewhat stagey, with the notable exception of the matchless Small House of Uncle Thomas ballet, which utilizes the Cinemascope 55 format to best advantage (the process also does a nice job of handling Deborah Kerrs voluminous hoopskirts). Most of the Broadway versions best songs (Getting to Know You, Whistle a Happy Tune, A Puzzlement, Shall We Dance etc.) are retained. None of the omissions are particularly regrettable, save for Annas solo Shall I Tell You What I Think of You? This feisty attack on the Kings chauvinism was specially written to suit the talents of Gertrude Lawrence, who played Anna in the original production; the song was cut from the film because it made Deborah Kerr seem too bitchy (Kerrs singing, incidentally, is dubbed for the most part by the ubiquitous Marni Nixon). When all is said and done, the principal attraction of The King and I is Yul Brynner, in the role that made him a star and with which he will forever be identified. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide


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