Metropolitan (film)

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Metropolitan

Promotional poster for Metropolitan
Directed by Whit Stillman
Produced by Whit Stillman
Written by Whit Stillman
Starring Edward Clements
Chris Eigeman
Carolyn Farina
Taylor Nichols
Dylan Hundley
Music by Jock Davis
Tom Judson
Mark Suozzo
Cinematography John Thomas
Editing by Christopher Tellefsen
Distributed by New Line Cinema
Release date(s) August 3, 1990 (USA)
Running time 98 minutes
Country USA
Language English
Budget $225,000
Box office $2,938,208 (USA)

Metropolitan is the first film by director and screenwriter Whit Stillman. It received an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

Shot on location in Manhattan and Long Island, the movie depicts the lives of young, upper-class New Yorkers (or, as one character calls them, the "Urban Haute Bourgeoisie") during debutante ball season while home for winter break in their first year of college. Middle-class Princeton student Tom Townsend, an admirer of Charles Fourier's socialism, observes this comedy of manners with an outsider's distance but eventually becomes deeply attached to the characters he meets.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Production

Whit Stillman wrote the screenplay for Metropolitan between 1984 and 1988 while he was running an illustration agency in New York and financed it by selling his apartment for $50,000 as well as acquiring few contributions from family members and friends. He claims that the movie is based on a string of real-life events that happened to him late in 1970, while he was living with his divorced mother in Washington D.C.. While on Christmas break during his first year at Harvard University, he met a group of like-minded college students from various universities around the country. Each night, he and his new group of friends would attend formal ballroom dance parties at various hotels and conventions halls, and then retire to an after-hours gathering at one of the students' parents' houses in nearby Georgetown. The group would then spend the remainder of the night talking, debating, and discussing a wide range of topics. This nightly ritual eventually ended just after New Year's Day when Stillman and the rest of the group returned to their respective schools.

[edit] Awards and honors

American Film Institute recognition:

[edit] Credits & titles

The credits and title card font is Antique Roman, the typeface usual in formal party invitations like those the characters receive.

[edit] References

  • Barcelona & Metropolitan; A Tale of Two Cities (1994) Author: Whit Stillman. Publisher: Faber and Faber Ltd. ISBN 0-571-17365-9

[edit] External links

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