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Gosford Park is a 2001 British mystery film directed by Robert Altman and written by Julian Fellowes. The film stars an ensemble cast, which includes Eileen Atkins, Bob Balaban, Alan Bates, Charles Dance, Stephen Fry, Michael Gambon, Richard E. Grant, Derek Jacobi, Kelly Macdonald, Helen Mirren, Jeremy Northam, Clive Owen, Ryan Phillippe, Maggie Smith, Kristin Scott Thomas, and Emily Watson. The story follows a party of wealthy Britons plus an American producer, and their servants, who gather for a shooting weekend at Gosford Park, an English country house. A murder occurs after a dinner party, and the film goes on to present the subsequent investigation from the servants' and guests' perspectives.

Gosford Park
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRobert Altman
Produced byRobert Altman
Bob Balaban
David Levy
Written byJulian Fellowes
StarringEileen Atkins
Bob Balaban
Alan Bates
Charles Dance
Stephen Fry
Michael Gambon
Richard E. Grant
Derek Jacobi
Kelly Macdonald
Helen Mirren
Jeremy Northam
Clive Owen
Ryan Phillippe
Maggie Smith
Kristin Scott Thomas
Emily Watson
Music byPatrick Doyle
CinematographyAndrew Dunn
Edited byTim Squyres
Production
company
USA Films
Capitol Films
The Film Council
Sandcastle 5 Productions
Chicagofilms
Medusa Film
Distributed byEntertainment Film Distributors
Release date
  • 7 November 2001 (2001-11-07) (London)
  • 1 February 2002 (2002-02-01) (United Kingdom)
Running time
137 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$19.8 million
Box office$87.8 million

Development on Gosford Park began in 1999, when Bob Balaban asked Altman if they could develop a film together. Balaban suggested an Agatha Christie-style whodunit and introduced Altman to Julian Fellowes, with whom Balaban had been working on a different project. The film went into production in March 2001, and began filming at Shepperton Studios with a production budget of $19.8 million. Gosford Park premiered on 7 November 2001 at the London Film Festival. It received a limited release across cinemas in the United States in December 2001, before being widely released in January 2002 by USA Films. It was released in February 2002 in the United Kingdom.

The film was successful at the box office, grossing over $87 million in cinemas worldwide, making it Altman's second most successful film after MASH. Widely acclaimed by critics, it received multiple awards and nominations, including seven Academy Award nominations and nine British Academy Film Awards nominations.

The TV series Downton Abbey – written and created by Fellowes – was originally planned as a spin-off of Gosford Park, but instead was developed as a stand-alone property inspired by the film, set decades earlier.

Screenplay

In November 1932, wealthy industrialist Sir William McCordle (Michael Gambon), his wife, Lady Sylvia McCordle (Kristin Scott Thomas), along with their daughter, Isobel (Camilla Rutherford), host a weekend shooting party at their country estate, Gosford Park. The guests are predominantly their relations. After arriving, the guests make small talk at tea, while their servants are directed to their room assignments by head housekeeper, Mrs Wilson (Helen Mirren). Mrs Wilson takes note when valet, Robert Parks (Clive Owen) mentions having been raised in an orphanage. Parks takes an interest in Mary MacEachran (Kelly Macdonald), maid to Lady Constance, Countess of Trentham (Maggie Smith). Head housemaid, Elsie (Emily Watson), guides the inexperienced Mary through the gathering.

After dinner, a silver carving knife has gone missing. Lady Sylvia, meanwhile, has a sexual encounter with Henry Denton (Ryan Phillippe), valet to American film producer, Morris Weissman (Bob Balaban).

The next morning, the men go on a pheasant shoot. A stray shot grazes Sir William's ear. The ladies later join the men for lunch where Commander Anthony Meredith (Tom Hollander) pleads with Sir William not to back out of a business scheme.

While dressing for dinner, Lady Sylvia tells Lady Constance that Sir William may stop her allowance. At dinner, Lady Sylvia states that Sir William was a war profiteer. Elsie blurts out her support for Sir William, inadvertently revealing their affair; Elsie leaves the room and Sir William abruptly exits to the library. Mrs Wilson brings him coffee but, annoyed, he knocks the cup from her hand and demands whiskey.

In the drawing room, actor Ivor Novello (Jeremy Northam) plays the piano to lighten the atmosphere. Upstairs in the library, Sir William is slumped in his chair as someone (only seen by their trousers) stabs him. Louisa, Lady Stockbridge (Geraldine Somerville) later finds his body; her screams alert the house.

Bumbling Inspector Thompson (Stephen Fry) and competent Constable Dexter (Ron Webster) arrive to investigate the murder. No one is permitted to leave the house. Dexter notices the lack of blood from the stab wound, indicating that was not the cause of death. Denton reveals that he is an actor who has been researching for a role in an upcoming film, resulting in the other servants' ire. Later, he again visits Lady Sylvia.

The following morning, staff gossip that Sir William was stabbed and also poisoned. The head cook, Mrs Croft (Eileen Atkins), shares with kitchen staff Sir William's history of seducing female workers in his factories. Any who became pregnant were offered two choices: leave the factory or give the baby up and remain employed. Women were told that the babies would be adopted by good families. In reality, Sir William paid orphanages to take them.

Later that night, Inspector Thompson releases the guests without having interviewed most of the staff.

Parks reveals to Mary that Sir William was his father, saying that a son can hate his father, but that he did not poison Sir William (he was the one who stabbed him). Mary tells Parks that Sir William was already dead when he was stabbed, which means someone else murdered him. Parks says that he does not know nor care if he killed Sir William.

The following morning, Lady Trentham and Lady Sylvia, while in Mary's presence, talk about Mrs Croft and Mrs Wilson. Lady Sylvia says that Mrs Wilson was previously known as Parks, Parker, or Parkinson. Mary realizes Parks is Mrs Wilson's son. Mary later confronts Mrs Wilson, who says that she and Mrs Croft are sisters, and that Parks is her illegitimate son by Sir William, though she will never tell Parks. Mrs Wilson killed Sir William to protect her son, Parks, because she realized that he had arranged to come to Gosford Park to murder him. She says that the authorities can never touch him because it is not a crime to stab a dead body. In private, Mrs Wilson grieves never having known her son. Mrs Croft comforts her, saying that her son is alive and that is what matters, while she herself lost her infant son, also fathered by Sir William. Mary chooses to say nothing to Parks about his mother.

The last guests, Lady Trentham and the Stockbridges, depart. No one has been charged with the crime.

Above stairs:

  • Maggie Smith as Constance, Countess of Trentham
  • Michael Gambon as Sir William McCordle
  • Kristin Scott Thomas as Lady Sylvia McCordle
  • Camilla Rutherford as Isobel McCordle
  • Charles Dance as Raymond, Lord Stockbridge
  • Geraldine Somerville as Louisa, Lady Stockbridge
  • Tom Hollander as Lt. Commander Anthony Meredith
  • Natasha Wightman as Lady Lavinia Meredith
  • James Wilby as Freddie Nesbitt
  • Claudie Blakley as Mabel Nesbitt
  • Jeremy Northam as Ivor Novello
  • Bob Balaban as Morris Weissman
  • Ryan Phillippe as Henry Denton
  • Laurence Fox as Lord Rupert Standish
  • Trent Ford as Jeremy Blond

Below stairs:

  • Kelly Macdonald as Mary Maceachran
  • Clive Owen as Robert Parks
  • Helen Mirren as Mrs Wilson
  • Eileen Atkins as Mrs Croft
  • Alan Bates as Mr Jennings
  • Emily Watson as Elsie
  • Derek Jacobi as Probert
  • Richard E. Grant as George
  • Jeremy Swift as Arthur
  • Sophie Thompson as Dorothy

Others:

  • Stephen Fry as Inspector Thompson

The film is a study of the British class system during the 1930s; Stephen Fry, Inspector Thompson in the film, says that it shows the upper class's dependency on a servant class. A number of secondary themes are also explored. For example, the film takes a subtle look at sexual mores during the 1930s. As it is set in 1932, between the world wars, the impact of the First World War is explored in the film's screenplay. It mentions the decline of the British Empire and the peerage system. Writing for PopMatters, Cynthia Fuchs described surface appearances, rather than complex interpersonal relationships, as a theme of the film.

Salon.com critic Steven Johnson notes a revival of the manor house mystery style, popularised by the writings of Agatha Christie, in the screenplay for Gosford Park. He called it a blend between this literary style and that of the 19th century novel. Bob Balaban, an actor and producer for Gosford Park, says that the idea of creating a murder mystery told by the servants in the manor was an interesting one for him and Altman.

Themes from the film were picked up and integrated into the series Downton Abbey by Julian Fellowes. Maggie Smith starred again in her role as a dowager countess, this time her title not being Trentham but Grantham; the family are related to the Marquess (rather than the Earl) of Flintshire.

Development and writing

In 1999, Bob Balaban asked Robert Altman if there were something they could develop together, and Altman suggested a whodunit. Altman wanted to create an Agatha Christie-like country house murder mystery that explored that way of life; he called the film a "classic situation: all suspects under one roof". Altman was also inspired by the 1930s films, The Rules of the Game and Charlie Chan in London. Altman chose British actor and writer Julian Fellowes to write the screenplay, because Fellowes knew how country houses operated. Fellowes, who had never written a feature film before, received a telephone call from Altman, who asked him to come up with some characters and stories. Fellowes was given a brief outline of the film: it was to be "set in a country house in the '30s and to have a murder in there somewhere, but for it to really be an examination of class." Altman also wanted the film to explore the three groups of people: the family, the guests, and the servants. Of the call, Fellowes said, "All the way through I thought this can't be happening—a 50 year old fat balding actor is phoned up by an American movie director—but I did work as if it was going to happen."

The original title of the film was The Other Side of the Tapestry, but Altman thought it was awkward. Fellowes began looking through some books and came up with Gosford Park. Altman said: "Nobody liked it, everyone fought me on it. But when you make a picture using a name, that's its name. It's not a gripping title. But then MASH wasn't either."

Fellowes says the screenplay was "not an homage to Agatha Christie, but a reworking of that genre." Fellowes was credited not only as the film's writer but as a technical advisor as well, meaning he wrote portions of the film as it was being produced. He notes that in certain large scenes with many characters, the actors were left room to improvise.

Arthur Inch, the retired butler of Sir Richard and Lady Kleinwort, was the consultant on correct procedures and arrangements for dining on the set. Inch is credited as "Butler" immediately before Altman as Director in the final credits. Ruth Mott was the consultant for the kitchen, and Violet Liddle for the parlour maids.

Casting

In Gosford Park, as in many of his other films, Altman had a list of actors he intended to appear in the film before it was cast formally. The film's casting director was Mary Selway, whom producer David Levy described as knowing many British actors. Very few actors who were offered parts did not end up in the film. Jude Law dropped out of the production just before the shoot began, and he was replaced by Ryan Phillippe. Kenneth Branagh and Robert Bathurst were both tied down by scheduling conflicts. Alan Rickman, Joely Richardson and Judi Dench were also considered for roles in the film. The cast is notable for featuring two knights (Michael Gambon and Derek Jacobi) and two dames (Maggie Smith and Eileen Atkins). Three other members of the cast (Alan Bates, Helen Mirren and Kristin Scott Thomas) were later elevated to that status.

Filming and editing

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