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The English Patient (film)
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The English Patient is a 1996 film adaptation of the novel by the same name by Michael Ondaatje. The film, directed by Anthony Minghella, won nine Academy Awards, including Best Picture. Ondaatje worked closely with the filmmakers to preserve his artistic vision, and stated that he was happy with the film as an adaptation.
Synopsis The film is set during World War II and depicts a critically burned man, at first known only as 'the English patient', who is being looked after by Hana (Juliette Binoche), a French-Canadian nurse in a ruined Italian villa.

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Encyclopedia
The English Patient is a 1996 film adaptation of the novel by the same name by Michael Ondaatje. The film, directed by Anthony Minghella, won nine Academy Awards, including Best Picture. Ondaatje worked closely with the filmmakers to preserve his artistic vision, and stated that he was happy with the film as an adaptation.
Synopsis The film is set during World War II and depicts a critically burned man, at first known only as 'the English patient', who is being looked after by Hana (Juliette Binoche), a French-Canadian nurse in a ruined Italian villa. The patient is reluctant to disclose any personal information but through a series of flashbacks, viewers are allowed into his past. It is slowly revealed that he is in fact a Hungarian geographer, Count László de Almásy (Ralph Fiennes), who was making a map of the Sahara Desert, and whose affair with a married woman (Kristin Scott Thomas) ultimately brought about his present situation. As the patient remembers more, David Caravaggio (Willem Dafoe), a Canadian thief/intelligence operative, arrives at the monastery. Caravaggio lost his thumbs while being interrogated by officers of the German Afrika Korps, and he gradually reveals that it was the patient's actions that had brought about his torture.
In addition to the patient's story, the film devotes time to Hana and her romance with Kip (Naveen Andrews), an Indian sapper in the British Army. Due to various events in her past, Hana believes that anyone who comes close to her is likely to die, and Kip's position as a bomb defuser makes their romance full of tension.
Sources
The film is often radically different from the novel, which is far less focused on the love affair between Almásy and Katharine. Among other differences, Jürgen Prochnow's German Abwehr character was an Italian officer in the book, and the circumstances of Caravaggio's capture by Axis troops were also drastically different.
Ondaatje based the central figure on the real Count László de Almásy, a famous Hungarian researcher of the Sahara Desert. Like the character, Almásy was a disciple of Herodotus, and discoverer of the Ain Doua prehistoric rock painting sites, including the Cave of Swimmers, in the western Jebel Uweinat mountains, on the Gilf Kebir plateau in what is today remote Southwestern Egypt. However, the film's version of Almásy is still heavily fictionalised. A factual overview of his life is provided in the 2002 Saul Kelly book, The Hunt for Zerzura: The Lost Oases and the Desert War.
The cave scenes depicted in the film are an artificially created filmset.
Post-production
| Academy Awards |
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| 1. Best Actress in a Supporting Role, Juliette Binoche | | 2. Best Picture, Saul Zaentz | | 3. Best Director, Anthony Minghella | | 4. Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Stuart Craig, Stephanie McMillan | | 5. Best Costume Design, Ann Roth | | 6. Best Score, Gabriel Yared | | 7. Best Best Cinematography, John Seale | | 8. Best Sound, Walter Murch, Mark Berger, David Parker, Christopher Newman | | 9. Best Film Editing, Walter Murch | | Golden Globe Awards |
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| 1. Best Picture - Drama | | 2. Best Original Score - Motion Picture, Gabriel Yared | |
| BAFTA Awards |
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| 1. Anthony Asquith Award for Film Music, Gabriel Yared | | 2. Best Cinematography, John Seale | | 3. Best Editing, Walter Murch | | 4. Best Film, Saul Zaentz, Anthony Minghella | | 5. Best Screenplay - Adapted, Anthony Minghella | | 6. Best Supporting Actress, Juliette Binoche |
In his book, The Conversations: Walter Murch and the Art of Editing Film (2002), Michael Ondaatje records his conversations with the film's editor and sound designer Walter Murch, who won two Academy Awards for the film. Murch describes the complexity of editing a film with multiple flashbacks and timeframes; he edited and re-edited numerous times, and notes that the final film features over 40 time transitions.
Responses
The film garnered widespread critical acclaim and was a major award winner as well as a box office success; its awards included the Academy Award for Best Picture, the Golden Globe Award and the BAFTA Award for Best Film. Juliette Binoche won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, winning out over Lauren Bacall for The Mirror Has Two Faces (it would have been Bacall's only Oscar win, and in her acceptance speech Binoche commented that she had expected Bacall to win). Anthony Minghella took home the Oscar for Best Director. Kristin Scott Thomas and Ralph Fiennes were nominated for Best Actress and Best Actor. In all, The English Patient was nominated for an impressive 12 awards and ultimately walked away with 9. It is the highest-grossing non-IMAX film (and second highest-grossing film overall) to never reach the weekend box office top 5.
Since weekend box office top 10 rankings were first recorded in 1982, The English Patient and Amadeus are the only two Best Picture winners to never enter the weekend box office top 5.
Chicago Sun Times critic Roger Ebert gave the movie a 4 star rating (out of a maximum of 4), saying that "It is the kind of movie you can see twice — first for the questions, the second time for the answers."
Trivia
- Demi Moore was considered for the role of Katharine Clifton when the project was at Twentieth Century-Fox.
- Ralph Fiennes so enjoyed a spoof version of the film, made with soft toys and shown on The Adam and Joe Show on UK television's Channel 4, that he contacted the show for a copy.
- The 1942 capture of Tobruk is depicted in the film but erroneously has Germans parachuting into the town. In reality this never actually happened - Fallschirmjäger were only used as motorized or line infantry in North Africa due to the earlier massive casualties during the Invasion of Crete - Hitler saw parachutist soldiers as having passed their usefulness.
- The entire film was shot on location in Italy and Tunisia.
- In December 1999, Juliette Binoche gave birth to a daughter who shares the same name as her character in the film, Hana.
- Jason Done who plays Tom Clarkson in BBC 1's school drama Waterloo Road plays the soldier who asks Hana to kiss him right at the start of the film.
Cast and crew
Actors
Awards and nominations
1997 Academy Awards
- Won, Best Picture
- Won, Best Actress in a Supporting Role: Juliette Binoche
- Won, Best Art Direction-Set Decoration (Stuart Craig and Stephanie McMillan)
- Won, Best Cinematography (John Seale)
- Won, Best Costume Design (Ann Roth)
- Won, Best Director (Anthony Minghella)
- Won, Best Film Editing (Walter Murch)
- Won, Best Music, Original Dramatic Score (Gabriel Yared)
- Won, Best Sound (Walter Murch, Mark Berger, David Parker, and Christopher Newman)
- Nominated, Best Actor in a Leading Role: Ralph Fiennes
- Nominated, Best Actress in a Leading Role: Kristin Scott Thomas
- Nominated, Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium (Anthony Minghella)
1997 Golden Globes, USA
- Won, Best Motion Picture - Drama
- Won, Best Original Score - Motion Picture (Gabriel Yared)
- Nominated, Best Director - Motion Picture (Anthony Minghella)
- Nominated, Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama: Ralph Fiennes
- Nominated, Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama: Kristin Scott Thomas
- Nominated, Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture: Juliette Binoche
- Nominated, Best Screenplay - Motion Picture (Anthony Minghella)
1997 BAFTA Awards, UK
- Won, Best Film
- Won, Best Cinematography (John Seale)
- Won, Best Editing (Walter Murch)
- Won, Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role (Juliette Binoche)
- Won, Best Screenplay - Adapted (Anthony Minghella)
- Won, Best Music (Gabriel Yared)
Popular Culture The film was referred to in a episode of Seinfeld of the same name, and in an episode of the British sitcom Peep Show, in which main character Jeremy claims to have watched a 'porno' with a promiscuous neighbour, when in fact they had watched The English Patient.
The film is referenced in number 36 of the set of rules in Wedding Crashers.
External links
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