Nerding Day: The King's Daughter
Added 2022-08-02 12:00:04 +0000 UTCThe King’s Daughter is a new movie starring Pierce Brosnan. That sentence is almost not true, for reasons I will explain. But here’s what’s true: Pierce Brosnan plays France’s King Louis XIV, on a quest to gain immortality by killing a mermaid during an eclipse. You know: the standard plot of a film called “The King’s Daughter”.
Why did I watch this? Especially after I showed the trailer to Brockway and Seanbaby, and they both told me it put them to sleep? I watched this because I’m a perma-fan of Pierce Brosnan. He played James Bond while I was impressionable. That role imprinted him on me. I was a duckling, and he was my mother duck, outrunning a space laser. After taking a look back at Brosnan’s pre-Bond action movie about terrorist spontaneous human combustions, I wondered what he is up to lately. IMDb said this movie came out in January of 2022. That date is the doorway to an astoundingly cursed production history.
But let’s start with the regular-bad stuff. This is a movie about King Louis XIV trying to murder a mermaid because that will give him immortality powers. In real life, King Louis XIV was famous, influential, father of at least a dozen kids, and the longest-reigning monarch in world history. That’s a fascinating person! In real life! This movie takes that fascinating Frenchy, casts Irish James Bond to play him, and makes fake mermaid-murder his whole deal. That’s ridiculous! It’s like if the people making Lincoln (2012) threw out their history books, and depicted Abraham Lincoln as… oh I dunno, what would be cryptozoological and make no sense? Oh I know! A vampire hunter. Yeah, a vampire hunter. (Okay between you and me, I do know about Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter (also 2012!), because I saw it opening week in a theater. But please don’t tell anyone I did that.)
Anyway The King’s Daughter should be titled something wilder. Sort of like how Twilight should be Sparkly Sexy Vampire Teens! with a third movie called SSVT!3: The Hyper-Baby. Once you go as fantastical/silly as these movies do, it doesn’t matter how famous your cast is or how competently somebody held the camera. It’s a B-movie about monster-love. And in The King’s Daughter, his daughter is the least interesting character.
Here’s the exciting stuff: King Brosnan commands a sea captain to catch a mermaid. The captain does that, and stores her in a Disneyland boat ride-lookin’ cave, situated under the Palace of Versailles. The movie’s cast proceeds to rave about the incredibleness of said mermaid…
…in between making plans to de-bone that sucker, because if they kill her during a solar eclipse, her golden healing powers will burst out of her and something something something.
King Louis XIV and his science flunky believe this will turn Louis immortal. And you know what? I’m open to it! As a story, anyway. The dark, hardcore version of that might be good. The dark, hardcore version is an award-winning novel. This movie adapted The Moon And The Sun, a novel by Vonda N. McIntyre that won the 1997 Nebula Award, beating a field that included George R.R. Martin’s A Game Of Thrones. According to skimming its Wikipedia, McIntyre’s book features the mermaid vowing vengeance on humanity, the Pope being an asshole, and a clever scheming dwarf becoming a key adviser to the king. I know that last thing sounds like Tyrion Lannister from Game Of Thrones. Frankly the whole thing sounds like Game Of Thrones, in a good way. It sounds better than this glossy movie about a perky princess who’s obsessed with her cello.
Background: they almost turned this book into a movie back in 1999, starring Natalie Portman (!) and made by Jim Henson (!!!!). Henson’s name reminds me this type of premise can work, if you go full Labyrinth with your vision and creativity. This movie lacks Labyrinth-itude… except for one scene they kind of stole from Labyrinth. There’s a big set piece where our unhinged nobleman does seductive ballroom dancing with the much much younger lead actress.
That’s way creepier here, though, because the male nobleman is the girl’s *father*. That’s creepy! That’s obviously creepy to everyone, right? Wrong. The makers of this film packed this thing with scenes where Pierce Brosnan has ~chemistry~ with The King’s Daughter Who Is His Daughter. Which is…a choice! For example, they could meet all kinds of ways. Their first meeting is her falling into a fountain, coming out soaking wet, and him giving her Bond Eyes about it.
After that, he makes her his royal composer, which means she sits outside his bedchamber window in a gown every morning.
He also hand-draws a portrait of her, while telling her he sent his agents to investigate what she likes.
Then they do the aforementioned sexy waltzing. Then he summons her to his sitting room, and dictates her entrance with step-by-quivering-step rules. It’s kind of royal and kind of ‘Fifty Shades’.
Then when he arranges her marriage to a rich guy, he lets her burst into his bedroom…
…so he can tell her the news while one inch away from her earlobe.
I thiiiink I know what they’re going for here? They’re going for “she reminds him a lot of her mom, who he used to boink.” Our Greatest Living Thespian (Pierce Brosnan) does a slight variation on this, playing it as “he’s gonna boink his own daughter, boink boink boink, all nuit long.” It ends up becoming kind of the main thing in this movie – even though this is a movie where King Louis XIV of France hunts a mermaid. Also I see how Pierce got there! He got there because he read the script, and saw lines like this:
She says that to a priest! Anyway, there are a ton of other scenes where The King’s Daughter pursues the movie’s on-purpose romance. She falls in love with a sea pirate guy. It’s boring. There is one funny element, which is that the sea pirate guy lives in a lighthouse, with a roommate.
Also they walk to this lighthouse from Versailles. If I’m mapping that right, his lighthouse is more than 100 miles from the sea. Now that you know the one funny geography thing, you can skip these scenes. No sparks. She has less chemistry with the sea pirate than with her father. And who can blame her? Her father is played by Pierce Brosnan. Surprise: I can blame her. The sea pirate actor is played by her future real-life husband.
Meanwhile, holy moly, there’s a friggin’ mermaid under the Palace of Versailles. You would think more of the movie would be about that. This mermaid movie does not know what to do with its mermaid. So they keep her in the movie by making The King’s Daughter take sudden, unmotivated dives into her pool.
One dive is because The King’s Daughter has a Horse Injury, and the mermaid heals it. Other dives are for funsies, I think. Honestly, I can’t remember all the specifics of this movie. It’s got a spazzy flow to it, in a way I can’t screencap. It hops from scene to scene without letting anything matter. Example: midway through, The King’s Daughter is being kept in her room by a guard. She laments that she’s as much of a prisoner as the mermaid. She laments this half a moment before climbing out a window and escaping easily.
This feeling maxes out in the movie’s climax. King Pierce is on a cliff overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. Below him: the mermaid, who swam to the ocean from Versailles (116 miles), because the King’s Daughter spun a big wooden wheel that messed with the palace plumbing and funneled her out. Don’t worry about it. Point is, she says King Pierce only cares about himself, because his guys are lined up to kill the mermaid with their guns once the eclipse starts. He begs her to notice that he’s changed. He is no longer the selfish immortality-seeking king he once was.
Then, twenty-eight seconds later, he tells his guys to kill the mermaid.
Is this a devilish switcheroo? Did he do this after obtaining something or other, by being crafty? No. The movie just kind of does both personalities in one scene. On the issue of mermaid murder, he “Duck Season! / Wabbit Season!”s himself. Oops! Oh well. Then he doesn’t shoot the mermaid and everyone lives happily ever after. Also, the final scene of the movie is The King’s Daughter in an ocean rowboat. She jumps into the ocean, reaches a depth of maybe eight feet, and discovers The Entire City Of Atlantis. This event gets described by a pop song’s lyrics, and by a narrator who is (no joke) Dame Julie Andrews.
I would talk about the scenes of the movie more, but there’s a much more cursed lore awaiting us in reality. The mere release date of this movie is a nightmare. Because this came out in 2022… and this got filmed in 2014. Your math is correct: this film was released eight years after they shot it. Eight years of aging, on a secluded shelf, like a pretty alright wine or an almost-Laphroaig. As a Brosnan Freak, I noticed this time warp immediately. I know Pierce’s face like the back of my own hand – and to me, Pierce looked way too freakin’ great for [uses Google to triple-check Pierce Brosnan’s 2022 age, because it sounds like a joke, but is not a joke, it’s the actual age number I’m working with here] sixty-nine.
This time warp is even weirder for other cast members. Such as William Hurt. Here he is, in this movie, playing King Brosnan’s favorite priest.
Within the eight year limbo of not releasing this movie, Hurt made four Marvel movies, four TV shows, and other stuff. A couple months after it released, he died. Guess what ended up on the top of his IMDb page, forever?
On the other end of the death/life spectrum, let’s take another gander at this film’s (legal) romantic leads:
These randos get most of the non-Brosnan screen time. You may know Kaya Scodelario from Skins or The Maze Runner. Let’s pretend I don’t know Benjamin Walker, the male lead, from his title role in Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter. Let’s pretend I spend my time super well, actually. Anyway, according to IMDb’s trivia section, these two sweeties had their first real-life kiss in their pretend scenes for this movie. According to People.com, they’re now a married couple with two children. That means they made *a family* faster than this movie made its debut.
Why did this movie take so long to come out? We all know the usual reason: badness! That is one reason here. But this movie is more than bad. It’s also two significant financial crimes. Any bad movie with famous-ish cast members still plops onto VOD within a couple years. This movie decayed far longer, because in two separate ways, it defrauded the country of China. Surprise! This story involves China, a lot.
Sorry, China. You are a large country that Hollywood wants to reach. Some movies do that by thoughtfully incorporating China’s fascinating culture, lengthy history, or talented artists. This movie cast one Chinese actor as a trick to score Chinese financing for half their budget. This is who they cast, and who they played.
That last screencap contains all of Fan Bingbing’s dialogue in this movie. I’m not joking. I wish I were joking! She plays a mermaid who communicates with THE KING’S DAUGHTER through telepathic made-up mermaid words and telepathic music-noises. Which is bonkers, because holy cow, they booked Fan Bingbing! The most famous actress in China! A performer who Vanity Fair calls China’s equivalent of Nicole Kidman plus Julia Roberts plus Jennifer Lawrence plus Sandra Bullock. She’s so famous, I’ve only ever seen one Chinese TV drama, and it co-stars Fan Bingbing. But she’s so CGI’d up, I didn’t even recognize her. And she spends this movie trapped in a cave under the Palace of Versailles, in a non-speaking role, because the producers wanted to swindle enough Chinese cash to rent out The Actual Palace Of Versailles.
They wasted Fan Bingbing to scam foreign funding. To me, that is fraud! And to the Chinese public, Fan Bingbing is a different fraud. Because apparently this movie shot in 2014 was set for release in 2015. It got delayed for normal reasons (lamenting its badness, finishing special effects). It got extra delayed because they recut the whole thing and hired Julie Andrews to tack on narration. Then this got mega-delayed by the biggest scandal in Chinese entertainment history. Because the producers were going to cash in on this movie, and pay for Julie Andrews’s diamond-encrusted Blue Yeti or whatever, by doing a massive release in China in 2018. But in 2018, a talk show host accused Fan Bingbing of tax evasion. That snowballed into house arrest, government surveillance, an order to pay $131 million in back taxes, and new national laws capping the pay of all Chinese movie actors. And China is different from the United States. Its people do not celebrate tax evasion as life's greatest IQ test. The furor about this meant no one in China wanted to see a Fan Bingbing movie. The next best sales pitch of “mermaid period drama starring Pierce Brosnan?” did not work in any country. I’m pretty sure this only came out at all because COVID shut down the production of better movies for a while. Without that pipeline gap, I doubt we’d ever have seen this boring, confusing movie where a French lady does a cello jam session with a scam mermaid.
So there you have it. This movie stinks and its stinkiness achieved layers. And if there’s one thing I’m surer of than ever, it’s that my main man Pierce will entertain me, one way or another. Because this movie/story sure did. Entertainment! That’s the Brosnan Guarantee(™)! Use promo code “DDOGGZZONNEZ” for a 10% stronger Brosnantee when you pre-order tickets to Mamma Mia 3. I know I will!*
*I might not.
...
If these images are borked, you can read this article and every other one on the much better in every way 1900HOTDOG.COM.
Comments
the tagline is great too. The King's Daughter. A King. His Daughter. how long do you reckon they worked on that
SoylentRobot
2022-11-01 17:11:04 +0000 UTCAccording to Amazon reviews the book kind of makes sense. No one is anyone's daughter, and it's the naturalist priest and his sister who hunt down the mermaid. But if you're making a movie someone needs to bone somebody and the more wrong it is the better. But not Fan Bingbing in 2018 wrong. Please, there are limits.
Bonnybedlam
2022-08-09 23:19:03 +0000 UTCCan we start an argument about who was the best Bond? Or can we just accept that it was Timothy Dalton and move on?
Matt Edwards
2022-08-03 21:22:01 +0000 UTCN64 Goldeneye was better than the movie because it didn't feature Pierce Brosnan.
Matt Edwards
2022-08-03 21:21:12 +0000 UTCI'm just glad I get to read this in Alex's voice, made this so much funnier.
Brian Sanford
2022-08-03 19:01:19 +0000 UTCThere are few things that cinematically piss me off more than a period piece - even a fantasy one - that gets the costuming all wrong. This is supposed to take place in the seventeenth century? Then why are the ladies dressed like the costume designer was trying to jam a bunch of quasi-Victorian gowns, even representing (if poorly) different fashions and decades of the Victorian era, into Louis XIV’s court? Did they just go with the “I mean, this looks like the kind of shit a Disney Princess would wear, right?” method of historical costume? I get it. It’s a movie about Louis XIV wanting a mermaid dead. It’s not exactly historically accurate. But it’s like watching a movie about Richard Nixon leaving the presidency so he can kill zombies, and he does it in Oxford bags and spats. Pfft.
Stephanie Reinheimer
2022-08-03 15:24:21 +0000 UTCOne fun fact about this movie is that some of the soundtrack was written by Grant Kirkhope! The Banjo-Kazooie guy! Who's also pretty well known for composing some of the music for the N64 GoldenEye, which also technically features Pierce Brosnan!
Rebecca Bieth
2022-08-03 05:45:46 +0000 UTCSo did he say "Nice" or "Neece?"
Brendan McGinley
2022-08-02 21:23:04 +0000 UTCMan I gotta check this movie out
Alex Schmidt
2022-08-02 20:04:26 +0000 UTCI’d forgotten I described it there and I love that this brings it full circle
Alex Schmidt
2022-08-02 20:04:07 +0000 UTCThink how long it took me to type it with friggin wings!!!
Alex Schmidt
2022-08-02 20:02:29 +0000 UTCOh wow I love how close-but-not the lighthouse is to reality
Alex Schmidt
2022-08-02 20:01:45 +0000 UTCEvery day when I get to read a new 1900HOTDOG article, it is like when I have ordered food from a restaurant, and am waiting for it to arise, savoring the anticipation... With this one, I just say "The King's Daughter", and I waited for a minute, trying to imagine what it could be. My guess was that it was a badly done CGI e-novel that tried to be romantic and pornographic at the same time, and failed at both, and that it was full of badly translated English. So, as is often the case, I was pleased (???) when the reality was even more wild than I could imagine. Instead of being some cheap flimsy thing put out in a corner, this was an amazingly high budget project, that somehow I had managed to never hear about? That was both a lush period drama and a ridiculous fantasy concept? This was more than I could imagine. I have been on here more than 2 years and I am still getting surprised.
Matthew Harris
2022-08-02 19:40:26 +0000 UTCIt took me longer than usual to finish the article because I was consistently imagining Schmitty as a duckling.
Flippant Sausage
2022-08-02 19:05:45 +0000 UTCI also read the book. Who doesn't see anything titled "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter" and think "Fuck yeah!"? The thing about "(Historical Figure X): Vampire Hunter" as a title formula is that most people aren't awesome enough to write a book that lives up to that title.
Flippant Sausage
2022-08-02 19:04:31 +0000 UTCIt's a lighthouse for magic or mad science. Regular lighthouses warn of rocks and the shore; this one warns you that you must have invented an amphibious ship or some kind of low-altitude aircraft to have made it that far inland. So I guess less of a lighthouse and more of a whoa-buddy-what-the-hell-did-you-do-house.
Skebotron
2022-08-02 16:47:53 +0000 UTCThis entire topic and article completely caught me off guard. I didn't know the movie existed, I didn't know it was cursed, I didn't expect Schmitty to have seen and and written an article on it. I'm just gobsmacked right now.
Vooster
2022-08-02 16:41:52 +0000 UTCYou can steal $5 from somewhere once a month and funnel that filthy, dirty money into this: https://www.patreon.com/sifpod
Skebotron
2022-08-02 16:41:31 +0000 UTCAnd don't tell anyone that I once spent 10 seconds looking at the poster for Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter and thought, "Maybe?".
Vooster
2022-08-02 16:40:32 +0000 UTCThat lighthouse really is at Versailles. Marie Antoinette had a model village built there so she could live like the common people or something like that. It’s not even overlooking a lake or something, it’s over a tiny section of man-made swamp. She had it built way after Louis XIV had died, though, so either this film didn’t care much for historical accuracy, or they didn’t have the budget to remove it. Probably both.
Robert Lee
2022-08-02 16:34:13 +0000 UTCIs there a Patreon tier that upgrades Alex from a monthly columnist? Or perhaps a crime of some kind that I can commit?
Joshua Graves
2022-08-02 15:51:07 +0000 UTCHey, woah, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter is a way better movie than this. It has a plot and characters and everything.
DB Wright
2022-08-02 14:37:46 +0000 UTCI saw the trailer before I heard you mention it on the podcast and immediately knew it was bad. I don't think there is anyone that saw that trailer and thought, "This looks great! Let's go see it right now!" So I know I am not special in that regard. But even though I knew it was bad, I was not prepared for this... whatever this was. This was bad in directions I never would have thought possible. Thank, Alex, for introducing us to this cinematic crime and explaining it so thoroughly.
Jeff Orasky
2022-08-02 13:40:50 +0000 UTCThis was, start to finish, one hell of a ride.
Chris “Ace” Hendrix
2022-08-02 13:10:29 +0000 UTCDon't worry, Schmitty. Your secret's safe. Please don't tell anyone I read the Abraham Lincoln book, either.
FancyShark
2022-08-02 12:57:19 +0000 UTCyes I am in agreement Mr bronsnan is a being of great power in fourth protocol he did a cruel awakening in me of the erotic potential of assembling a nucular bomb https://youtu.be/41H3jFYw2m8 roll-playing it with old tractor parts is just not the same even with a willing partner
sissyneck
2022-08-02 12:36:17 +0000 UTC