Trying to fit in.  Born to stand out.
 

BASED ON "The Reluctant Debutante" by William Douglas-Home

 

RELEASED:

USA - 27 March 2003 (premiere)
Australia - 3 April 2003
New Zealand - 3 April 2003
Canada - 4 April 2003
USA - 4 April 2003
Philippines - 19 April 2003
Germany - 26 June 2003
Austria - 27 June 2003
Switzerland - 3 July 2003 (German speaking region)
Italy - 4 July 2003 (premiere)
Iceland - 18 July 2003
Lithuania - 18 July 2003
France - 23 July 2003
Netherlands - 24 July 2003
Israel - 31 July 2003

Belgium - 6 August 2003

Spain - 8 August 2003
UK - 8 August 2003
Norway - 15 August 2003
Bahrain - 20 August 2003
Russia - 21 August 2003
Italy - 22 August 2003
Sweden - 22 August 2003
Hungary - 4 September 2003
Slovenia - 4 September 2003
Turkey - 5 September 2003
Egypt - 10 September 2003
Czech Republic - 11 September 2003
Finland - 10 October 2003

Estonia - 24 October 2003
Argentina - 30 October 2003

Denmark - 14 November 2003

Japan - 15 November 2003

RUN TIME:

105 minutes

AKA

Ce que fille veut - Canada (French title)
London Calling - USA (working title)

American Girl - USA (working title)
Was Mädchen wollen - Germany/Austria

Ce dont revent les filles - France
Mista tytot tykkaa - Finland
Royal Seventeen - Japan (English title)
Tudo Que Uma Garota Quer - Brazil
Un Sueno para ella - Spain
Una Ragazza e il suo sogno - Italy

FILMING LOCATIONS:

Lancaster House, The Mall, St James's, London, England, UK
Royal Naval College, Greenwich, London, England, UK

Chapel of St. Peter and St. Paul, Royal Naval College, Greenwich, London, England, UK
West Wycombe Park, High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England, UK

Hyde Park, London, England, UK

Battersea Park, Battersea, London, England, UK

The Athenaeum Club, Pall Mall, London, England, UK

 

DIRECTOR: Dennie Gordon WRITER: William Douglas-Home (1958), Jenny Bicks & Elizabeth Chandler (screenplay)
PRODUCERS: Denise DeNovi, E K Gaylord II, Bill Gerber, Alison Greenspan, Casey La Scala, Hunt Lowry CINEMATOGRAPHER: Andrew Dunn
Cast - in credits order
Amanda Bynes ... Daphne Reynolds
Colin Firth ... Henry Dashwood
Kelly Preston ... Libby Reynolds
Eileen Atkins ... Jocelyn Dashwood
Anna Chancellor ... Glynnis Payne
Jonathan Pryce ... Alistair Payne
Oliver James ... Ian Wallace
Christina Cole ... Clarissa Payne
Sylvia Syms ... Princess Charlotte
Soleil McGhee ... Young Daphne
Peter Reeves ... Sir John Dashwood
James Greene ... Percy
Steven Osborne ... Staff Member
Mike Toller ... Libby's Band Member
Tom Penn ... Libby's Band Member
Tom Goodfellow ... Libby's Band Member
James Bell ... Libby's Band Member
Mindy Lee Raskin ... Bride
Stanley Townsend ... Bride's Father
Raffaello Degruttola ... Groom
Pieter Vodden ... Sven
James Woolley ... Political Advisor One
James Linton ... Political Advisor Two
Jonah Russell ... Policeman
Ella Desmond Oakley ... Baby Daphne
Peter Hugo ... Prince Charles
Matthew Turpin ... Prince William
Chris Castle ... Prince Harry
Ben Scholfield ... Armistead Stuart
Charlie Beall ... Rufus
Tom Harper ... Edward
Natalie Bromley ... Jane
Stephanie Lane ... Fiona
Antony Carrick ... Prince Michael
Neville Phillips ... Butler
Roger Ashton-Griffiths ... Lord Orwood
Cassie Powney ... Peach Orwood
Connie Powney ... Pear Orwood

Production Companies
Castle Rock Entertainment
DiNovi Pictures
Gaylord Films
HSI Tomorrow Film
Sloane Square Films
Warner Bros.


Distributors
Warner Bros. (Argentina)
Warner Bros.
Warner Bros.
Warner Bros.


Special Effects
Cinesite (Europe) Ltd.


Other Companies
Cine Image Film Opticals Ltd. ... titles and opticals
Lee Lighting Ltd. ... lighting
Panavision (UK) Ltd. ... cameras equipment provided by

Technical Specifications

Color info: Color
Sound mix: DTS / Dolby Digital / SDDS
Camera: Panavision Cameras and Lenses
Negative format: 35 mm
Process: Panavision (anamorphic)
Printed format: 35 mm
Aspect ratio: 2.35 : 1
 

MUSIC: Soundtrack:

Good Life - Leslie Mills
Out Of Place - Gavin Thrope
Crazy - Meredith Brooks
London Calling - The Clash
Who Invited You - The Donnas
Long Time Coming - Oliver James
Kiss Kiss - Holly Valance
What's Your Flava - Craig David
I Wanna Be Bad - Willa Ford
Half-Life - Duncan Sheik
Somebody Stop Me - Erica Rivera
Rock And Roll, Hoochie Koo - Rick Derringer
Greatest Story Ever Told - Oliver James
Whats Good For Me - Lucy Woodward
Ride Of Your Life - John Gregory

OTHER MUSIC IN THE FILM:

Shout - Isley Brothers, performed by Kelly Preston

Get Up Offa That Thing/Release The Pressure - James Brown, performed by Oliver James

You Get Me - Michelle Branch

What A Wonderful World - Performed by Oliver James

Have I Told You Lately - Van Morrison, performed by Matt Acheson

Heaven Is A Place on Earth - Performed by Kelly Preston

Muddled - Ian Lefeuvre

Because You Loved Me - Celine Dion, performed by Kelly Preston

Get A Move On - Mr. Scruff

Hypin' Woman Blues - T-bone Walker

Lament 1, Bird's Lament - Moondog

The Way You Look Tonight - Performed by Oliver James

Reviews

Reviewed by Stella Papamichael
Updated 06 August 2003

Cinderella has been done so many times she can no longer wear white to her wedding. Not that Amanda Bynes would ever dream of doing anything so conventional in "What a Girl Wants". You see, she's American, and therefore fun and funky, where we Brits are staid and stuffy. What-ho! I say, spiffing cucumber sandwiches, etc.

One gets the idea. In fact, if you thought "The Princess Diaries" was a mite hackneyed, there are even fewer surprises in this effort - "inspired" by 50s pic "The Reluctant Debutante" - by director Dennie Gordon.

Hip chick Daphne Reynolds ("Big Fat Liar star Bynes) jets from New York to London to make the acquaintance of the father she's never known. He just happens to be Lord Henry Dashwood (Colin Firth), very debonair but so uptight he could crack a nut when he walks.

And that's nothing compared to Dashwood's fiancée (Anna Chancellor) and prospective stepdaughter (Christina Cole) - a frosty double act to rival the Polar ice caps.

Inevitably Daphne causes quite the ballyhoo, threatening Dashwood's impending marriage, and his political ambitions, with her infernal jollity. She even goes so far as to give HRH The Prince of Wales an impromptu lap dance in one of few mildly amusing moments.

Her inclination towards open displays of affection also jars with The Dashwood Way. Moving to give her grandmother a hug, she's waved away with the advice: "I'm British. We only show affection to dogs and horses."

Director Gordon rolls out one cliché after another at a wearing pace. Ironically though, it's Colin Firth's square-shaped performance that proves to be the high note in the movie; Amanda Bynes' monotone exuberance feeling strained by comparison.

Admittedly prepubescent girlie-girls might be won over by Miss Bynes' chickadee antics, but supervising guardians should be warned: it'll take a lot more than a stiff upper lip to swallow this bag of old chestnuts.

PERSONAL REVIEW - CFFan

I don't know what the critics wanted from this movie. I got what I paid to see over and over again. I even bought both the wide and full screen DVD's.  As for the movie, we know it was implausible.  It was just a fun, fluff film.  Every movie doesn't have to be violent, sexual or thought provoking.  Sometimes we want escapism, that's what WAGW is. What I wanted was a decent movie and lots of good Colin Firth moments. As ever, he did not disappoint me in any way. Well, maybe the sunglasses in the regatta scene.  (Who picked those out?) Otherwise he was gorgeous, gorgeous, gorgeous. Oh, his performance.  Excellent as always.  I loved the scenes of vulnerable emotions.  He is so good at that.  Did I say good?  Understatement.  Then there's the leather pants - to DIE for! Definitely the best performance in the movie.   Lots of yummy looks.

Supporting him in the movie there definitely was a chemistry that came across with Colin and Kelly Preston, as Libby his one true love.  Amanda Bynes has been soundly criticized for her role.  I didn't find her all that bad. A few of her facial expressions were over the top, but, I think she did just fine. Oliver James has been criticized a bit.  For a new actor I feel he did an admirable job.  Isn't he cute? I never liked Anna Chancellor anyway, so this found me no different.  I didn't like the barbs about English stuffiness, but it's a small, small phrase in an otherwise delightful film.

Date: 21 October 2003
Summary: Brilliant Colin Firth!

This is a rather foreseable unconventional-teenager-comes-to-find-her-unknown-conventional-father-story. Nothing out of the ordinary really.

What makes this movie so special nevertheless is the brilliant Colin Firth who brings Lord Henry Dashwood to real life, making him a 3-dimensional person despite the script.

An absolute MUST SEE for all Colin Firth-Fans and people who love to see good acting and a beautiful romantic ending.

 
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