Kate & Leopold (2001)

 ●  English ● 2 hrs 3 mins

Where did you watch this movie?

Embedded with quirky comedy and soulful romance, this fantasy drama delves into the subject of time travel from a humorous perspective. Kate and her actor brother live in N.Y. in the 21st Century. Her ex-boyfriend, Stuart, lives above her apartment. Stuart finds a space near the Brooklyn Bridge where there is a gap in time. He goes back to the 19th Century and takes pictures of the place. Leopold -- a man living in the 1870s -- is puzzled by Stuart's tiny camera, follows him back through the gap, and they both ended up in the present day. Leopold is clueless about his new surroundings. He gets help and insight from Charlie who thinks that Leopold is an actor who is always in character. Leopold is a highly intelligent man and tries his best to learn and even improve the modern conveniences that he encounters. How will the relationship between Kate and Leopold unfold? Long-distance relationships have a way of getting complicated, but how will this relationship spanning time and space pan out?
See Storyline (May Contain Spoilers)

Cast: Hugh Jackman, Liev Schreiber, Meg Ryan

Crew: James Mangold (Director), Stuart Dryburgh (Director of Photography), Rolfe Kent (Music Director)

Rating: PG (Singapore), PG (Australia)

Genres: Comedy, Fantasy, Romance

Release Dates: 25 Dec 2001 (India)

Tagline: If they lived in the same century they'd be perfect for each other.

Movie Rating
Based on 0 rating
0 user 0 critic
Music Rating
Based on 0 rating
0 user 0 critic
Did you know? Hugh Jackman took etiquette lessons from 19-century etiquette expert Jane Gibson (who trained actors for such projects as Sense and Sensibility (1995)). He also studied ballroom dancing and trained to ride a horse for the film. Read More
No reviews available. Click here to add a review.
as Leopold
as Stuart Besser
as Kate McKay
Supporting Actor
as J.J. Camden
as Charlie McKay
Supporting Actress
Supporting Actor
Supporting Actor
Supporting Actress
Supporting Actor
as Darci
Supporting Actor
Supporting Actor
Supporting Actor
Supporting Actor
Supporting Actress
Supporting Actress

Direction

Director
First Assistant Director
Second Assistant Director

Production

Producer
Co-Producer
Production Company
Executive Producer

Distribution

Writers

Screenplay Writer
Story Writer

Camera and Electrical

Director of Photography
Still Photographer
Key Grip

Music

Music Director
Music Editor

Sound

Sound Effects Editor
Foley Artist
Sound Re-recording Mixer
Boom Operator

Art

Art Director
Production Designer
Prop Master
Set Decorator
Set Dresser

Casting

Casting Associate
Casting Assistant

Costume and Wardrobe

Costume Designer
Costume Supervisor

Editorial

Editor
First Assistant Editor

Makeup and Hair

Makeup Artist
Hair Stylist

Special Effects

Special Effects Coordinator
Special Effects Technician

Stunts

Stunt Director
Stunt Coordinator

Visual Effects

Visual Effects Producer
Visual Effects Supervisor
Digital Compositor
Film Type:
Feature
Language:
English
Spoken Languages:
French
Colour Info:
Color
Sound Mix:
Dolby Digital, DTS, Sony Dynamic Digital Sound
Camera:
Panavision Genesis, Panavision Panaflex
Frame Rate:
24 fps
Aspect Ratio:
1.85:1 (Flat), 2.35:1
Stereoscopy:
No
Taglines:
If they lived in the same century they'd be perfect for each other.
This Christmas, chivalry makes a comeback.
Goofs:
Errors in Geography
When Leopold first sees his house from the 1800's while walking with Kate in the present day, the cross street sign says "Pearl St." Pearl Street is in the south end of Manhattan. When Kate leaves her cab at Leopold's house, she asks the cab driver if it's 316 Madison Ave., which is in midtown, and stops at 23rd Street.

Factual Mistake
The gray silk dress Kate wears at Madison Ave house is plain during the business dinner, but when she goes back in time the dress neckline is decorated with ruffle chiffon.

Factual Mistake
In the extra features of the film, it was explained by the costume designer that the differences in Kate's dress between the dinner and her time travel were intentional differences.

Revealing Mistakes
When Charlie follows Kate to secretly give her the apology letter from Leopold, you can see Kate try to open her brief case a little so Charlie can slip the letter in.

Revealing Mistakes
In the final act, Darci walks up to an elevator, goes to push the button and misses it by about six inches. The elevator arrives anyway.

Miscellaneous
When Leopold wakes up in Stuart's apartment, he says Stuart "could be Jack the Ripper for all I know." Jack the Ripper's crime spree began in the late 1880s.

Miscellaneous
In Leopold's uncle's house, the portrait of a young Leo (age 5-10) and his parents shows costumes from 3 different periods. If Leo was 30 in 1876, he was born in 1846, and would be 5 in 1851. The mother's costume dates to about 1876; the boy's is from about 1780.

Miscellaneous
Leopold is from 1876, yet he is familiar with Puccini's "La Boheme" (first performed in 1896), Gilbert and Sullivan's "The Pirates of Penzance" (first performed in 1879), and Puccini's "Tosca" (1900). In the Italian (dubbed) version, Leopold mentions Verdi's "La Traviata", first performed in 1853.

Character Error
At the mental hospital, Stuart claims that dogs are colorblind and wouldn't be able to see a rainbow. While dogs are colorblind (they have deuteranopia) they would still be able to see a rainbow, just not all of the colors of the rainbow.

Character Error
When Kate, Leopold and others go walking outside, they wear jackets or coats; a sign that the movie is set in colder months. When Kate goes to the rooftop dinner, with Leopold she wears a sleeveless summer dress, without a coat. Considering the other scenes, it would probably be colder at night than the daytime, when she was wearing a coat.

Character Error
When Leopold is telling Hector about the Pirate King, he gets the plot of The Pirates of Penzance wrong. The Pirate King didn't fall in love with one of the Major General's daughters; rather, Frederick, the apprentice pirate, fell in love with her.

Character Error
When in 1876, Leopold is addressed both as "Your Highness" and "Your Grace." However, the former is only used to address Dukes who are also members of the Royal family, in which case the latter is never used and would be considered offensive. If Leopold is not a member of the Royal family, then he should only be addressed as "Your Grace," and using the style "Your Highness" would be incorrect and offensive to the royal family. However, because his dance partner, who is an American, would not realize the offense and uses Your Highness. Thus the forced smile from Leopold and the stoic expression from Otis. Leopold's surname is "Mountbatten" suggesting that he is of the House of Mountbatten (formerly the House of Battenberg until world war I) which was a morganatic branch of royalty that was not capable of inheriting titles such as a dukedom.

Character Error
Leopold gives Charlie a piece of paper saying the number on it will "ring" Patrice. While it's proper for a British person to use the word ring in relation to a phone call, Leopold would have never heard the term used that way, given the time he came from.

Continuity
At the beginning of the film, when Stuart and Kate are talking on the phone, the clock behind them jumps back five minutes.

Continuity
During the rooftop dinner, the strap of Kate's dress alternates between on her shoulder and off her shoulder between shots.

Continuity
When Kate gets up to bring dishes into the kitchen, her sleeves are at her elbows. When she returns to the table, her sleeves are at her wrist. In the next shot, they're back at her elbows.

Continuity
When Leopold tells a story to the boy in the apartment, the remote he put in his pants like a sword, flips from front to back after Charlie enters.

Continuity
After Kate and Leopold sit outside, watching the old man switch off the lights at midnight, Kate complains about the day being a Sunday, turns towards him, and puts her arm around Leopold. In the next shot, she turns to his side again.
Trivia:
Hugh Jackman and Liev Schreiber would later co-star as mortal enemies Wolverine and Sabretooth in X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009).

Hugh Jackman took etiquette lessons from 19-century etiquette expert Jane Gibson (who trained actors for such projects as Sense and Sensibility (1995)). He also studied ballroom dancing and trained to ride a horse for the film.

When Meg Ryan knew that Hugh Jackman was going to spend his wedding anniversary alone, she phoned his wife to invite her to dinner. Reportedly, Jackman had to spend the day working.

When Leopold is chasing Stuart down the stairs and out of his house, Stuart seems to jump a few metres in a second. In the Director's Cut version, the two guys actually bump into Kate there.

According to the DVD commentary, several of the film's actual crew members appear in the crew of the margarine commercial.

The violin piece being performed during Kate and Leopold's rooftop dinner is Jascha Heifetz's transcription of Leopold Godowsky's "Alt-Wien", or "Old Vienna". Godowsky subtitled his work, originally written for solo piano, "Whose yesterdays look backward with a smile through tears"

Sandra Bullock was originally in contention for the part of Kate.

This was the first of two films in which Hugh Jackman (Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany) plays a time traveller. The second is X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014).

When Leopold wakes up in Stuart's apartment for the first time, he accidentally turns on the TV and an episode of The Prisoner (1967) is on.

In the movie, Kate's boss tries to impress her with his knowledge about La Bohème, but Leopold corrects the boss' mistakes about the opera. For instance, Leopold informs Kate that the name of the male lead is Rodolfo, not Andrè, and that the opera is sung in Italian, not French, although it is set in Paris. The point is that Leopold's travel to the future occurs in 1876, while the world premiere performance of La Bohème was in Turin on 1 February 1896. Another point is that the Brooklyn bridge was inaugurated in 1883, not in 1876.

Albany, New York was named after the then Duke of Albany in 1664.

In Stuart's apartment we see a framed poster depicting the 1969 World Champion New York Mets.

In the film's original edit, Stuart was Leopold's descendant, which was Stuart's reason for specifically tracking him down. Criticism that this plot line also meant that Kate was Stuart's ancestor lead to those scenes being cut. In the Director's Cut version, however, this plot line is followed.

In an early version of the screenplay, Leopold is accidentally transported through time in an actual time machine developed by a group of scientists that includes Kate. They have a child (of whom Leopold is unaware) and eventually reunite during the Roaring '20s.