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  2. Farewell, My Queen (French: Les Adieux à la reine) is a 2012 French drama film directed by Benoît Jacquot and based on the novel of the same name by Chantal Thomas, who won the Prix Femina in 2002.

  3. Jul 12, 2012 · It’s a game that grows progressively more dangerous as the minutes race by in this efficiently plotted movie, which was written by Mr. Jacquot and Gilles Taurand and based on a novel by the...

    • Benoît Jacquot
  4. Farewell, My Queen: Directed by Benoît Jacquot. With Léa Seydoux, Diane Kruger, Virginie Ledoyen, Noémie Lvovsky. A look at the platonic relationship between Marie Antoinette and one of her female readers during the first days of the French Revolution.

    • (9.2K)
    • Drama, History, Romance
    • Benoît Jacquot
    • 2012-03-21
  5. Jul 6, 2012 · His new film, “Farewell, My Queen,” is adapted from a prizewinning 2002 book by the French writer Chantal Thomas. (Mr. (Mr. Jacquot wrote the screenplay with Gilles Taurand.)

    • Kristin Hohenadel
  6. In 2002, Thomas published Les adieux à la reine (Farewell, My Queen). The novel gave a fictional account of the final days of Marie Antoinette in power through the perspective of one of her servants. It won the Prix Femina in 2002, and was later adapted into the 2012 film Farewell, My Queen.

    • (965)
    • Paperback
  7. Essentially the story of Marie Antoinettes final days, Chantal Thomass literary historical novel Farewell, My Queen (2002) focuses on a book reader who reconstructs the notorious opulence of late 18th-century Versailles, a perfectly constructed court that falls apart at the seams.

  8. Farewell, My Queen. Written by Chantal Thomas. Review by Delmer Baer. This story of Marie-Antoinette takes place over three days at Versailles, starting with 14 July, 1789.

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