Overview:
A celebration of love and creative inspiration takes place in the infamous, gaudy and glamorous Parisian nightclub, at the cusp of the 20th century. A young poet, who is plunged into the heady world of Moulin Rouge, begins a passionate affair with the club's most notorious and beautiful star.Status: | Released (2001-05-18) |
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Awards: | Won 2 Oscars. 87 wins & 133 nominations total |
BoxOffice: | $57,386,607 |
Screen: | Baz Luhrmann, Craig Pearce |
Productions: | 20th Century Fox, Bazmark |
Production Countries: | Australia, United States of America |
Spoken Languages: | Français, Español, English |
Casts
- 2227: Nicole Kidman - Satine
- 3061: Ewan McGregor - Christian
- 5723: John Leguizamo - Toulouse-Lautrec
- 388: Jim Broadbent - Harold Zidler
- 12206: Richard Roxburgh - The Duke
- 12211: Garry McDonald - The Doctor
- 12210: Jacek Koman - The Unconscious Argentinean
Crews
- 1095: Donald McAlpine - Director of Photography - Camera
- 6211: Craig Pearce - Screenplay - Writing
- 12201: Fred Baron - Producer - Production
- 12204: Annie Beauchamp - Art Direction - Art
- 6204: Martin Brown - Producer - Production
- 7045: Craig Armstrong - Original Music Composer - Sound
- 1720: Ronna Kress - Casting - Production
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Reviews
cadkaup
Review text:
Moulin Rouge has many things to like about it, but comes off as inconsistent at times. All of the actors were top notch. I believe it was Nicole Kidman's best performance of her career. Ewan McGregor usually doesn't add a lot of depth to his characters, but in this movie it was a ....
Continue reading ->Peter89Spencer
Review text:
I could go on why I enjoyed this film - heck, I reviewed this 3 times on Letterbox! But the one simple word I can best describe Moulin Rouge, is poignant. This film give a poignant feeling whenever I get the chance to see this it. The glits, the glamour, the music & the story. This ....
Continue reading ->CinemaSerf
Review text:
"Christian" (Ewan McGregor) is a struggling writer living a stone's throw from the legendary Moulin Rouge in Paris. He cuts quite a solitary figure until he is befriended by "Toulouse-Lautrec" (the scene stealing John Leguizamo) and introduced to the hedonism of the club run by "Zidl ....
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