Robert Altman is back. His ability to conjure up amazing ensemble casts, manage egos and deliver stunning pictures in spite of it all has never been more evident than in Gosford Park. In recent years, ...
Has there ever been a movie detective like Mary Maceachran, the unassuming but intrepid gumshoe in the new upstairs/downstairs murder mystery, Gosford Park? Sleuthing isn’t Mary’s official profession.
“Gosford Park” and “A Beautiful Mind,” a pair of complex character-driven explorations, took top screenwriting honors Saturday from the Writers Guild of America. The victories rep a major boost to ...
2001 comedy/mystery/drama starring Maggie Smith, Helen Mirren, Michael Gambon, Kristin Scott Thomas, Jeremy Northam, Emily Watson, Clive Owen, Bob Balaban, Ryan Phillippe, Kelly Macdonald. Directed by ...
Director Robert Altman’s upstairs/downstairs murder mystery “Gosford Park” was the big winner at last night’s Screen Actors Guild Awards, adding more confusion to this year’s Oscar race. “Gosford Park ...
Robert Altman's handsome period drama "Gosford Park" finds a new home on DVD, only the distributors appear to be a bit tight for space... Picture The soft looking picture may disappoint some, but the ...
The opening credits of Robert Altman’s grandly entertaining Gosford Park are so thoroughly prestige-packed they’re funny. It’s a drizzly afternoon in the English countryside in 1932. As the camera ...
“Gosford Park” and “A Beautiful Mind,” a pair of complex character-driven explorations, took top screenwriting honors Saturday from the Writers Guild of America. The victories rep a major boost to ...
Cast: Alan Bates, Charles Dance, Stephen Fry, Richard E. Grant, Derek Jacobi, Helen Mirren, Clive Owen, Kristin Scott Thomas and Maggie Smith. Length: 137 minutes Release: 1st February 2002 Fantastic ...
Subtly subversive, Gosford Park imagines at luxurious length and in delicious detail an aristocratic shooting party at an English country house, circa 1932. Veteran director Robert Altman weaves a ...
If you’ve read any of the reviews of “Gosford Park,” you know already that the praises being sung for Robert Altman’s latest film have generally resolved into a single chorus: Beyond the brilliant ...