Why is toulouse crying in moulin rouge




















Despite the story taking place in a cabaret club which could be considered a somewhat international place, all the characters speak English all the time, yet the movie is set In Paris, France. When Satine sings the line, "I hope you don't mind, I hope you don't mind When she jumps on the bed, he is bottle-less and she wears shoes. When Satine gets on top of Christian when they're in the elephant for the first time, his bowtie is sometimes on and sometimes off.

Before Satine sings the final "Come What May" there are tears streaming down her face and gook coming out of her nose. After the cut-away, her makeup is clean and her nose is beautiful. At the end of the movie when Christian is singing "Come what may" to Satine, he passes the orchestra conductor twice. As Christian sings "Come What May" to Satine during the rehearsals he wears a brown hat in the wide shots, but not visible in the close-ups.

During "Spectacular Spectacular" the doors can be seen closing behind Satine and Christian as Christian throws down the money. It can be seen closing again in the next shot when Christian has walked off stage and Harold comes to Satine.

During Spectacular Spectacular, as Toulouse is yelling "The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return" you see him start to grab the rope.

When he starts to fall after Christian sings "Come What May" we see him not holding the rope, then suddenly he has the rope in his hand when he's falling towards the stage.

During the performance of Spectacular Spectacular! A moment later when the shot cuts to a different angle, he can be seen walking down the stairs again. During the performance, when Christian walks back onstage, Satine puts her left cheek against Christian's.

In the next shot, it is her right cheek that touches Christian. When Harold signs over the deed to the Moulin Rouge to The Duke, you can see The Duke's hair style changes constantly back and forth during the entire scene. When Satie begins to play the piano in El Tango de Roxanne, Christian can be seen strolling along the sidelines of the ballroom.

He passes the same man and woman three times, twice in a far shot and once close. When Satine is putting on the red dress with Marie, Satine turns around with her right arm raised to ask Harold how she looks, then the scene cuts to him for just a second. When the scene cuts back to Satine, her left arm is raised.

When Christian is first explaining his thoughts on love in the beginning, the Argentinian's cross necklace goes from outside his shirt to tucked inside his shirt. When Satine is shoving the Duke out of the elephant at the end of one scene, he is fully out the door but in the next shot she is shoving him out of the door. When the champagne "disappears" from the Duke's hand it "reappears" back in the ice bucket during "the pitch". During the 'Spectacular Spectacular' dress rehearsal, contents of the theatre behind the Duke changes with every cut.

He eventually manages to do this with some help from Christian. Toulouse seems to make up for his very short stature by using long and educational words as well as having a long name. After The Unconcious Argentinian crashes through Christian's roof, the young writer is quickly given a role, but after hearing Christian sing Toulouse decides he wants the man to co-write with the current writer Audrey.

Audrey quickly dismisses this idea and leaves. Knowing that they have no chance at selling the play to Harold Zidler he comes up with the idea of dressing Christian up and telling Satine he is a famous writer hoping that once Satine hears his poetry she will want to put on the play. By staying for her final few days, she saves everyone that she loves, at the price of her own happiness and that of Christian, but at least she'll save his life.

It's hugely successful, too - it's full of patrons literally throwing money at the dancers. Why does Zidler want to stop all of this in favour of making it a theatre? And if he's dead set on this, why not do it using the revenue he's already got, instead of entering into a deal with a Duke who is jealous and possessive beyond belief with a personal assassin, no less and giving him the property's deeds? Answer: There is actually a deleted scene from the movie that explains this part.

Zidler has run the Moulin Rouge into heavy debt because of his obsession with electric lighting, and the club will fold if he can't come up with the money to cover that debt. That is why he's so desperate to have Satine come through and secure the Duke's patronage. They're all sunk without that investment. Question : What does Satine die of? Answer: "Consumption" was the name given to many illnesses.

She actually dies of TB. Answer: Nope! Consumption is TB. Symptoms of lead poisoning are Pain areas: in the abdomen or joints Gastrointestinal: constipation, nausea, or vomiting Developmental: learning disability or slow growth Whole body: fatigue or loss of appetite Behavioral: hyperactivity or irritability Also common: baby colic, headache, insomnia, or memory loss. Symptoms of TB Pain areas: in the chest Pain circumstances: can occur while breathing Cough: can be chronic or with blood Whole body: chills, fatigue, fever, loss of appetite, malaise, night sweats, or sweating Also common: loss of muscle, phlegm, severe unintentional weight loss, shortness of breath, or swollen lymph nodes Very different from each other.

Answer: Lead Poisoning due to lipsticks and makeup being made out of it and her regular and heavy use of it. Answer: Satine dies of Tuberculosis. It's really sad and heartbreaking. Harold keeps the fact Satine has it from her, until near the end of the movie, where he uses it to make her do as he says and that makes him the secondary villain in my opinion. If I am correct he was sitting on a balcony eating and drinking when singing the words "How wonderful life is, now you're in the world.

Is it a potential that he is in love with Christian or Satine. Another possibility is that he just happy seeing Christian in love, since Christian previously stated that he had never been in love before? Answer: The way I saw it, that was Toulouse in present day singing, after the death of Satine etc. He's a funny little man who is lonely himself. All he has is his bottle when everything is all said and done. He has nobody. Question : What makes the Argentinean pass out and fall backwards into the hole so Christian can take his place in the final scenes?

Did someone slip him a drug at some point? Question : Children could have been a good extra to the film. You could have had maybe Christian or Satine having a younger sister or brother and the Duke having a niece or nephew both about thirteen or twelve and instead of Tolouse finding out about the duke killing Christian, the Duke's niece could have talked to Christian or Satine's sister and the Duke found out that his niece or nephew had told and done something to her and then Satine or Christian's sibling could have gone to find them and had to rush to try to save Satine and Christian from going away from each other entirely.

Maybe they could have had a little love story too within Christian and Satine's. What do you think? Why couldn't children have been put in the film? Juno -- dressed as an angel. Liberty -- dressed in 'Napoleonic' garb. Nini Legs-In-The-Air -- costume decorated with windmills, as the character is said to have the best legs in the Moulin Rouge and is always showing them off.

Pearly Queen -- decorated in sophisticated clothing; pearls, furs, jewels. Petite Princess -- a dwarf woman in a princess costume. Polka Dot -- a spirit of winter with evergreen trees drawn on her dress. Schoolgirl -- self-explanatory strongly resembles Gigi or Madeline Spanish -- dressed in a flowing, veiled Spanish costume. Tarot -- costume is decorated with various imagery from tarot cards.

Tartan -- costume is a full traditional Scottish Garb, with the skirt designed to look like a kilt. Tattoo -- dancer is covered entirely from the neck down in tattoos.

Travesty -- cross-dresser, upper half is of an upper-class man; top hat, tuxedo, and bow tie. The stage for "Spectacular Spectacular" was especially reinforced to hold the weight of a galloping horse for a scene where the evil Maharaja rides across the stage. The scene was abandoned but the white horse still appears fleetingly in one shot. For much of the film, Satie Matthew Whittet is wearing a long, colorful scarf very reminiscent of the trademark scarf worn by Tom Baker on Doctor Who The scarf Baker wore was inspired by a long red scarf worn in the painting "Ambassadeurs: Aristide Bruant dans son cabaret" by famous bohemian Henri de Toulouse Lautrec , who is a character in this movie.

The legend of Orpheus says he was a musical genius, far surpassing anyone in his world; the filmmakers chose to replicate this by using songs from the mid-to-late 20th century, many decades after the film's setting.

In this way, Christian would appear to the other characters to be ahead-of-his-time as a musician and writer. It would often take 20 minutes to lace Nicole Kidman into her corset. John Leguizamo was originally considered for the role of The Argentinean. Before realizing that they had to narrow their scope to just the Moulin Rouge, Baz Luhrmann and Craig Pearce wrote scenes exploring more of Paris's Montmartre neighborhood.

Excised from the final draft was a scene in which Christian, Satine, and Toulouse-Lautrec go to the estate of the German aristocrat Count von Groovy and participate in an absinthe- and opium-fueled orgy with Isadora Duncan, Sarah Bernhardt, and Oscar Wilde. Spent 45 weeks in US theaters during its initial release. Courtney Love has gone on record calling losing the role of Satine to Nicole Kidman one of the biggest disappoints of her career and made no secret of her resentment against Kidman.

Director Baz Luhrmann characterized the difference between the two actresses in a Vanity Fair article by saying "Courtney is fire and Nicole is ice. The Paris landscape was digitally produced and the two longest visual effects shots to date that appear in this film. Zidler appears to be a stand-in for Charles Zidler, the first manager of the real Moulin Rouge who died in The movie was shot largely at Fox Studios in Sydney, Australia, with no location filming at all.

Elijah Wood auditioned by doing a song-and-dance number but he failed to land a part. A scene establishing the "Gothic Tower" as a bordello was cut. It is called "The Infernal Galop. The Rolling Stones declined permission to use one of their songs in the film. According to adult film performer Monica Mayhem , some of the wardrobes for this film were borrowed for a production she was on and the production team and performers had to make sure the clothing never got messy.

The first Broadway adaptation was announced in February Shot over a period of days. Traditionally, the underside of can-can skirts are white to simulate petticoats. In this film, the can-can skirts are brightly colored according to the dancer's character in order to keep the dance exciting for a modern audience.

The can-can dancers and courtesans at the Moulin Rouge are known as "Diamond Dogs.



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