10 thoughts on “WCW: Emily Mortimer

  1. Love ‘Hugo’ and her in it. Don’t remember her in ‘Sharpe’, but my whole family love the series. So much that I bought my husband a 95th (Rifles) Regiment Captain’s uniform for our Duchess of Richmond’s Ball in 2015. I do love a man in uniform. Must rewatch the show now and look for Emily Mortimer.

  2. She worked as the Bolter. I didn’t hate Mary Poppins Returns? Jane is a ditzy union organizer (Funny, if you know Walt Disney’s history with unions!) mostly because her mother was a ditzy Suffragette! P.L. Travers disapproved of Mrs. Banks being a suffragette! So basically, she’s rolling in her grave over Mary Poppins Returns!

    1. I’ll never understand why Disney set “Mary Poppins” in the Edwardian era when the books were set in the 1930s.

  3. Her character does get knocked over by a lion in a dream sequence.
    The lions’ remains are on display at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.

  4. I liked her in The Bookshop, its a quaint little story.
    She has a great face for historical films.

  5. I’ve been a fan of hers since the early 00’s starting with her non Frock Flick roles in The Kid and Dear Frankie. She is a VERY good actress who deserves to be more well known. Whenever she’s in something I pay more attention! That said, I’ve seen six of the films listed here in full, and some of one–Love’s Labour’s Lost (I think I just wasn’t in the mood for it at the time). That said, my favorite film here overall is Bright Young Things, followed closely by Hugo. The Bookshop was s-l-o-w. I didn’t read the novel from which the movie was adapted, but I suspected that the screenwriter and/or filmmakers wanted to mimic the quiet introspection of the protagonist, but instead they ended up making a movie that was slow and just not cinematic. That was a shame b/c The Bookshop is loaded w/ talent–Mortimer, Bill Nigh, Patricia Clarkson… GREAT WCW choice!!

  6. I forgot to say that in Bright Young Things she was absolutely PITCH PERFECT in that role!!

  7. R.E. THE GHOST AND THE DARKNESS – Mr Michael Douglas is clearly having the time of his life, but otherwise the film is a solid old-school adventure with an outright-rousing Jerry Goldsmith score (Though this is very much NOT a Frock Flick; more like ‘JAWS with paws’).

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