
The Affair of the Necklace
In pre-Revolutionary France, a young aristocratic woman left penniless by the political unrest in the country must avenge her family's fall from grace by scheming to steal a priceless necklace.
- Rated
- R
- Runtime
- 1h 58m
- Released
- 2001
- Country
- United States
Details
Release year: 2001
Storyline
In pre-Revolutionary France, a young aristocratic woman left penniless by the political unrest in the country must avenge her family's fall from grace by scheming to steal a priceless necklace.
Top credits
Hilary Swank — Jeanne St. Remy de Valois
Simon Baker — Rétaux de Vilette
Jonathan Pryce — Cardinal Louis de Rohan
Adrien Brody — Nicolas De La Motte
Awards
0 wins & 1 nomination
See all awards →Did you know
• In the Marie Antoinette (1938), Norma Shearer refused any complimentary make-up for the final scene showing her character going to the guillotine. She wanted to look as haggard and exhausted as the real Queen had in her final moments. In the final scene for this movie, Joely Richardson expressed the same wishes, as her reflection can be viewed in the water bucket beside guillotine before the beheading.
• The film cast includes three Oscar winners: Hilary Swank, Christopher Walken, and Adrien Brody; and one Oscar nominee: Jonathan Pryce.
• The mansion shown belonging to the Cardinal Louis de Rohan is actually the Chateau de Vaux-Le-Vicomte, built between 1658 and 1661 for Nicolas Fouquet, Marquis de Belle Île, Viscount of Melun and Vaux, the superintendent of finances to Louis XIV. To ensure there was enough room for the Chateau and the planned gardens, three villages were bought and demolished. Fouquet was unfortunetly not able to enjoy the property for very long. In August of 1661, a few days after a ball, to which Lous XIV was invited, to celebrate the completion of the Chateau, the King had Fouquet arrested, charged with misappropriation of public funds, to pay for the lavish estate's construction. Fouquet was imprisoned for life, and his wife exiled. The King bought or confiscated many of the furnishings and works of art on the property, and hired the team responsible for its construction to design and build the Palace of Versailles. The property was returned to Madame Fouquet in the mid 1670s. The Chateau was never the property of the Cardinal, nor did he ever live there. In 1705, shortly after the death of her husband and son, Madame Fouquet sold the Chateau to the Marshall Villars, one of Louis XIV's most trusted Generals. He bought it sight unseen. His son would sell the property to the Duke de Praslin in 1764, and his descendants kept the property for over one hundred years. It was eventually bought, in a sad state of disrepairs, and with the gardens overgrown, and uncared for, by the Sommier family, who restored the gardens and the Chateau. The Sommier still own Vaux-le-Vicomte, and the Chateau is now open to the public. The Chateau has cropped up frequently in movies and television shows, most memorably as the home "rebuilt stone by stone in California" by the villain Drax in the James Bond film Moonraker (1979).
Box Office
Gross (Domestic): $471,210
Opening Weekend (Domestic): $125,523 (2001-12-02)
User reviews
A ...NECKLACE Made of Both True Gems and Fabulous Fakes
A Good Movie That Could Have Been Great
There's really only one thing you need to know about this flick
Technical specs
- Sound mix
- DTS, Dolby Digital, SDDS
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
- Color
- Color





















