RottenTomatoes.com
Log In | Register | What is RT?
Check out the new RT Community
  • Home
  • Movies
  • DVD
  • Celebrities
  • News
  • Critics
  • Trailers & Pictures
  • CommunityBeta
  • Box Office
  • | In Theaters
  • | Opening
  • | Upcoming
  • | Best Of
  • | Certified Fresh
  • | Showtimes
RT Search Powered by Google
help icon Enhanced RT
searches on Google
Click here to turn on enhanced search results from RT on your Google searches.
 
Movies / On DVD / The Saddest Music in the World
The Saddest Music in the World

Rate this Movie Help Icon

  • Write a Review
  • Read Reviews
  • Add to List
  • Get this Movie
  • Buy Poster External Icon
  • Visit Official Site External Icon
Bookmark and Share

The Saddest Music in the World (2004)

  • T-Meter Critics
  • Top Critics
  • RT Community
  • My Critics
  • My Friends
  • DVD
78 %
Tomatometer
Template ImageTemplate Image

How does the Tomatometer work Help Icon

Reviews Counted:97

Fresh:76

Rotten:21

Average Rating:7.1/10

Consensus: Guy Maddin perfectly recreates the look and feel of a 1930s in this bizarre picture.

Rated: Not Rated

Runtime: 1 hr 39 mins

Genre: Dramas

Theatrical Release:Apr 30, 2004 Limited

Box Office: $559,351

Synopsis: 1933: The Great Depression is in full black bloom. Failed Broadway impresario Chester Kent and his amnesiac sweetie Narcissa visit a fortune-teller on the outskirts of Chester's hometown of... 1933: The Great Depression is in full black bloom. Failed Broadway impresario Chester Kent and his amnesiac sweetie Narcissa visit a fortune-teller on the outskirts of Chester's hometown of Winnipeg. The fortune-teller has little optimism for the future of this brash, happy-go-lucky entertainer. Chester demonstrates his vigorous disdain for these prognostications by demanding, and receiving, manual pleasure from Narcissa just as the old crone augurs his doom. The prophecy has cost the couple their very last nickel. Arriving in town, they meet a disillusioned streetcar driver who proves to be none other than Chester' s alcoholic ex-surgeon father Fyodor. Fyodor confirms that Chester is in fact an expatriate Canadian just as the streetcar pulls up at Lady Port-Huntly's famed Muskeg Brewery. The grand and imperious Lady, known far and wide as Beer Queen of the Prairie, is just announcing her latest contest: to find the saddest music in the world. The winning musician will collect $25,000 and the tearful adulation of millions. Chester knows an opportunity when he hears one broadcast on the radio. He bluffs his way into her office and it is there we realize that they are old friends – very close old friends – and also that Lady Port-Huntly, while still a regal beauty, is a double amputee who must rely on her manservant Teddy for locomotion. Chester and Lady reminisce about the accident which claimed her lower limbs: first a car crash with Chester at the wheel, and then a botched amputation undertaken by the drunken Fyodor, with whom she had also been romantically entangled. Lady Port-Huntly is understandably bitter towards these Kent men. Amongst the hordes of musicians descending on Winnipeg to participate in the contest, another Kent man arrives: Roderick, Chester' s elder brother, who is in elaborate mourning for his dead son and disappeared wife. Roderick travels as a Serbian under the nom de guerre Gavrilo the Great, Europe's Greatest Cellist. The Muskeg Brewery contest begins, with musicians from Scotland, Siam, Mexico and West Africa, and all points in between vying for the prize. Chester and Narcissa, caught up in the excitement, make love in a snow bank. Fyodor reveals to Roderick that he has made a pair of glass legs for Lady Port-Huntly in an effort to assuage his guilt and proclaim his still-violent love for her. Chester and Lady Port-Huntly, meanwhile, rekindle their own romance, though it is now as much an affair of hate as love. Passion is ever present. It is in full evidence in Fyodor's contest performance, as he plays "The Red Maple Leaves" on an upturned piano. Still, he is beaten by a troupe of African tribesmen. But there is greater shock in store for him: he realizes that Narcissa, the wandering nymphomaniacal amnesiac, is none other than Roderick's departed wife, who has shielded herself from the grief of losing a son by simply forgetting all about it! Roderick makes the same realization the moment he lays eyes upon her, and the sensitive cellist swoons. When he recovers, he sets about trying to bring Narcissa's memory back to her, but this is a cruel proposition, and perhaps a selfish one too – it seems that more than anything Roderick is looking for a companion in his grief. He takes his rage out on Chester, breaking a cornet across his brother's head. Lady Port-Huntly is presented with her new legs. Delighted, she announces a ball to celebrate. But first, a dalliance with the recovered Chester! This is interrupted by Fyodor, whose grief takes him to the bottle and then to a spectacularly fatal accident which sees him floating face-down in a liquid barley grave. Mourning their father doesn't bring the two Kent brothers any closer together. They square off in an instrumental arena. Lady Port-Huntly becomes part of Chester's number, posing on stage atop her vitreous, beer-filled legs. But the sound of Roderick's squealing cello is too much for the glass, and the legs shatter out from under her! Upset does not begin to describe the Lady's manner. She thrusts a spear of glass into Chester Kent's gut. But he is determined to finish his performance. His dropped cigar ignites a blaze in the brewery. The musicians and the audience panic and flee. Roderick continues his grieving keen, which helps to finally bring back Narcissa's memory. They collapse together, ready to mourn as man and wife. Teddy carries legless Lady Port-Huntly to safety. Chester finishes his number on his father' s piano as the flames close in. He dies as the last note is struck, and the brewery burns to the ground. -- © IFC Films [More]

Starring: Isabella Rossellini, Mark McKinney, Maria De Medeiros, David Fox

Starring: Isabella Rossellini, Mark McKinney, Maria De Medeiros, David Fox, Ross McMillan, Darcy Fehr

Director: Guy Maddin

Director: Guy Maddin
Producer: Niv Fichman
Studio: IFC Films

[See More Credits]

Get This Movie

Rent DVD
 
 

Click on the "ADD" button to put this movie into your Netflix queue.

 
 
Buy DVD
 
 
Release:

Nov 16, 2004

No Details Exist
 
 

Reviews for The Saddest Music in the World

  • T-Meter Critics
  • Top Critics
  • RT Community
  • My Critics
  • My Friends
  • DVD
 
 
1 - 20 (sorted by date)
Text View | 1 2 3 4 5 6 >> >|
Arrange By:Fresh | Rotten | Comments | Name | Source | Date
 
 

The film's expressionist style and lighting design provide it with an immaculate richness of visual textures.

Full Review Source: ColeSmithey.com | comment Comment
06/10/09
Cole Smithey
Cole Smithey
ColeSmithey.com

Here is magic-realism filtered through an oddball sensibility, chilled in the snowdrifts of Winnipeg and bottled in amber-hued frames of celluloid.

Full Review Source: Vue Weekly (Edmonton, Canada) | comment Comment
07/02/07
Brian Gibson
Brian Gibson
Vue Weekly (Edmonton, Canada)
N/R

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Time Out | comment Comment
06/24/06
Derek Adams
Derek Adams
Time Out
N/R

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Combustible Celluloid | comment Comment
05/26/06
Jeffrey M. Anderson
Jeffrey M. Anderson
Combustible Celluloid

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Film Threat | comment Comment
12/06/05
Film Threat
Top Critic Icon Top Critic
N/R

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Houston Chronicle | comment Comment
07/21/05
Houston Chronicle
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

Crammed with cinephilic allusion and rendered in an obsessive "authentic" period style...

Full Review Source: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette | comment Comment
01/29/05
Philip Martin
Philip Martin
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The finest portrayal of a double-amputee beer baroness outfitted with glass-encased, beer-filled legs that I could imagine.

Full Review Source: Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC) | comment Comment
01/26/05
Ken Hanke
Ken Hanke
Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)

One of those metaphoric weird-out flicks that takes mors pride in shocking than telling an interesting tale.

Full Review Source: Reno Gazette-Journal | comment Comment
12/17/04
Forrest Hartman
Forrest Hartman
Reno Gazette-Journal

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Looking Closer | comment Comment
12/06/04
J. Robert Parks
J. Robert Parks
Looking Closer

When a director's "primitive" style is as developed as Maddin's, your aesthetic response can seem like all the emotion you need, his thrill your thrill.

Full Review Source: Blogcritics.org | comment Comment
11/19/04
Alan Dale
Alan Dale
Blogcritics.org

Requires an acquired taste for such inspired but unwieldy madness.

Full Review Source: Ozus' World Movie Reviews | comment Comment
11/17/04
Dennis Schwartz
Dennis Schwartz
Ozus' World Movie Reviews

A Guy Maddin film is so visually inventive, so full of rich detail, and so prismatic in appearance that attempting to describe it is like trying to explain the color blue.

Full Review Source: Not Coming to a Theater Near You | comment Comment
11/16/04
Matt Bailey
Matt Bailey
Not Coming to a Theater Near You

Vital and delirious, The Saddest Music in the World hurtles along on twin tracks of vaudevillian humor and gleeful bad taste.

Full Review Source: Las Vegas Mercury | comment Comment
09/12/04
Jeannette Catsoulis
Jeannette Catsoulis
Las Vegas Mercury

...a little bit like what Matthew Barney's Cremaster Cycle might have been without the illusions of grandeur or pretentious aftertaste.

Full Review Source: Weekly Planet (Tampa, FL) | comment Comment
08/30/04
Lance Goldenberg
Lance Goldenberg
Weekly Planet (Tampa, FL)

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: New Yorker | comment Comment
08/01/04
Anthony Lane
Anthony Lane
New Yorker
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

The best film of 2004. A throwback in more than just its look, Guy Maddin's latest brings new life to the melodrama.

Full Review Source: Flak Magazine | comment Comment
07/22/04
Martin Scribbs
Martin Scribbs
Flak Magazine

Chances are that those who haven't bolted for the door after the first 15 minutes will love it; others could be driven to drink.

Full Review Source: RTE Interactive (Dublin, Ireland) | comment Comment
07/16/04
Harry Guerin
Harry Guerin
RTE Interactive (Dublin, Ireland)

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Film Threat | comment Comment
07/11/04
Film Threat
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Premiere Magazine | comment Comment
07/03/04
Premiere Magazine
Top Critic Icon Top Critic
 
 
1 - 20 (sorted by date)
Text View | 1 2 3 4 5 6 >> >|
all

Latest News for The Saddest Music in the World

March 16, 2005: Ebert's Overlooked Film Festival 2005
A 70-mm French comedy by Jacques Tati will open my 7th annual Overlooked Film Festival this April, and a Bollywood musical starring "the most beautiful woman in the... More...

See All

More DVDs

Close
Top Rentals
Tomatometer Percentage Movie
45% 45% Ice Age: Dawn of the D…
19% 19% Transformers: Revenge …
55% 55% Orphan
43% 43% The Proposal
26% 26% Land of the Lost

More Rentals…

New On DVD This Week
Tomatometer Percentage Movie
98% 98% Up
88% 88% Ballast
67% 67% The Merry Gentleman

More New Releases…

See All

RT On Current TV

The Rotten Tomatoes Show on Current TV

DIRECTV 358 | Comcast 107 | DISH Network 196 | More...

Learn how you can be part of the show

More...

What’s Hot On RT

60+ New Moon pics

60+ New Moon pics

You want Twilight images? We got 'em!

Transylmania

Transylmania

Cheeky trailer for the vampire comedy!

John Cusack

John Cusack

We list his 10 top rated movies!

Salt trailer

Salt trailer

Angelina Jolie! Espionage! Check it out!

Other News

Close
  • Top Stories
  • Popular
  • Interviews
 
 

Comments

 
 
Top Stories
Headlines Comments
  
  • Rachel McAdams Rumored for Spider-Man 4 Source: Mania.com
126
  • Danny Elfman Leaves The Wolfman Source: Cinemusic.net
22
  • Oldboy Remake Rumored Dead Source: Latino Review
13
  • Francis Lawrence Directing a Futuristic Sgt. Rock Source: Hollywood Reporter
2
  • Can Avatar Make Money? Source: New York Times
97
  • Robert Pattinson Says Breaking Dawn Could Roll in Fall 2010 Source: Collider.com
34
  • Joe Johnston Talks The Wolfman Source: Ain't It Cool News
8
  • Jason Schwartzman Talks Scott Pilgrim Source: Collider.com
1
  • Weekly Ketchup: Abrams eyes Micronauts, Aykroyd as Yogi Bear
102
  • J.J. Abrams Producing Micronauts Movie? Source: Wall Street Journal
11
Popular
Headlines Comments
  
  • Critics Consensus: A Christmas Carol Dazzles But Disappoints
43
  • Total Recall: John Cusack's Best Movies
40
  • Ho-ho-horror! 10 Scary Christmas Movies
36
  • RT on DVD: Up, the Ultimate Watchmen Cut, and More
36
  • Weekly Ketchup: Abrams eyes Micronauts, Aykroyd as Yogi Bear
34
  • Box Office Guru Wrapup: Christmas Carol Tops, Precious Rocks
32
  • Friday Harvest: Prince of Persia, The Road, and more!
26
  • Five Favorite Films with Roland Emmerich
22
  • John Hurt Talks Harry Potter, Quentin Crisp and Alien - The RT Interview
14
Interviews
Headlines Comments
  
  • John Hurt Talks Harry Potter, Quentin Crisp and Alien - The RT Interview
14
  • Terry Gilliam Talks Doctor Parnassus
15
  • Wes Anderson Talks Fantastic Mr. Fox - RT Interview
8
  • Wolverine Creator Len Wein Talks About the Film
28
  • Gavin Hood Talks Wolverine; Possible Sequel
28
  • Duncan Jones talks Moon, Sam Rockwell, and Mute
14
  • Emma Stone talks Zombieland - RT Interview
40
  • Michael Moore: The RT Interview
139
  • Andrea Arnold talks Fish Tank - RT Interview
4
  • Neill Blomkamp talks District 9 - RT Interview
51
 
 

Sponsored Links

Around The Network

  • The Saddest Music in the World at Rotten Tomatoes
  • The Saddest Music in the World at AskMen

Fresh Links

Featured
Worst Movie Biopics
Worst Movie Biopics External Link

Moviefone brings us 9 failed attempts at biographical films.

Top Cameron Crowe Moments
Top Cameron Crowe Moments External Link

TIME reminisces on the 10 most iconic moments from the films of Cameron Crowe.

November Films
November Films External Link

BuzzSugar wants to know which movies coming out this month you're most looking forward to.

The New Cult Canon
The New Cult Canon External Link

The AV Club takes a look back at Hedwig and the Angry Inch.

 
 
About| Site Map| Help| RT To Go| Contact Us| Critics Submission| Linking to RT| Licensing| Movie List| Games| Celebs List| Newsletter
IGN Logo

IGN.com | GameSpy | Comrade | Arena | FilePlanet | GameSpy Technology
TeamXbox | Planets | Vaults | VE3D | CheatsCodesGuides | GameStats | GamerMetrics
AskMen.com | Rotten Tomatoes | Direct2Drive | Green Pixels


By continuing past this page, and by the continued use of this site, you agree to be bound by and abide by the User Agreement.
Copyright 1998-2009, IGN Entertainment, Inc. About IGN | Support | Advertise | Privacy Policy | User Agreement | Subscribe to RT's XML feed! IGN RSS Feeds
IGN's enterprise databases running Oracle, SQL and MySQL are professionally monitored and managed by Pythian Remote DBA
Certain product data ©1995-present Muze, Inc. For personal use only. All rights reserved.