The Prince & Me
R**.
Great movie!
I had never seen this before, and it was a treat!
V**W
The movie is very clear
I love this picture it is one of my favorite ones
S**R
Royalty romances always suck... but not this one.
If a movie's main theme is royalty and romance, throw your popcorn on the floor, and run away screaming. Such movies always suck.It is therefore quite surprising that this movie does not. The leads both do a very good job, and Julia Stiles is at her best. The script is good, but it would be easy to have churned out something terrible. Didn't happen. There is real chemistry between the leads (real or not), and the snarky royal watchdog is also great in his role.I only watched this movie because someone I trusted told me that despite the involvement of royalty, the movie works. Having watched it, I agree.So break out the popcorn, get comfortable in your pajamas, and enjoy a good romance with a royal spin. The main leads take us on quite a romantic journey.
K**Y
The Movie
Was great I had seen the other 3 movies before I gotten to see the first one
M**R
An Above Average Modern Fairy Tale
The Prince and Me falls into two related genres - Romantic Comedy and "Cinderella Story". As a romantic comedy it is just average and includes several cliches that drive me crazy in this genre.There are MANY romantic comedies where one character has a secret they hide from their love interest. In "Prince and Me" the secret is that "Eddie", the Danish student who shows up one day at the University of Wisconsin (played convincingly by Luke Mably) is actually the Prince and soon to be King of Denmark. (It is extremly convenient for us that all the Danes in the film including the royal family, prime minister, servants and paparazzi all speak English exclusively!) Our heroine, a farm-girl pre-med student, is played by Julia Stiles, and Ms. Stiles continues a budding acting career where she plays women of depth and character. Her Paige Morgan is accepted to Johns Hopkins Medical School around the same time she discovers Eddie is a Prince, and she aspires to work as a Doctor in an underserved country.Prince Edvard GOES to Wisconsin because he's one of those Euro-trashy princes in the beginning of the movie and he sees an ad for one of those videos where college girls pull their shirts up, and *these* girls happen to be from Wisconsin. Bent on meeting sleazy young girls at the U of W Edvard immediately becomes fixated on the least sleazy, most-principaled woman in sight.When the scene comes where Paige discovers Eddie is the Crown Prince she doesn't think "hey.... the hunky guy I was just kissing in the library is actually a PRINCE!" Instead she shrieks at him "you lied to me!" (which is only true for those who consider that a lie can include what you don't say - Eddie only tells Paige that he has to "go into the family business" when he returns to Denmark.)The King is ill at this exact moment and Edvard must jet back to Copenhagen, which leads to one of the better done Romantic Comedy cliche-moments, the one where one character flies off after the lovers have had a tiff, only to have the other character come flying after them on the next plane. (If you think I've given anything away here, you haven't seen many Romantic Comedies.)The third act begins here as Paige arrives in Denmark, is reunited with Edvard, and begins to contemplate a possible life as Queen of Denmark. During the breakfast where it first dawns on her that this is possible she suddenly looks uncertain. "Do you think the people will mind if I'm the Queen of Denmark and all I've seen is the airport?"The Cinderella tale gets a thoroughly modern and believable upgrade, and it must have been difficult for Martha Coolidge and the screenwriters to generate the required romantic conflict for the characters who seem to have everything. Paige is not only the girl getting to go to Johns Hopkins, but the Prince falls in love with her too? There's conflict here?Okay - it's not the best Romantic Comedy ever. But it's not the worst either.
R**B
I watch this movie at least twice a year
This is so wonderfully wholesome, fun, and wickedly delightful you can watch with multiple generations of family. Don’t miss it. I show it whenever I have company, too.
C**U
Every Girls Dream?
Paige Morgan is a very dedicated medical student at the University at Wisconsin, who thinks that she does not have time to fall in love. Prince Edvard of Denmark is the classic playboy prince who only wants to go to Wisconsin so he can get a girl to take her top off for him.Paige and "Eddie" meet when he asks her to take her top off for him. The next day it turns out that they have to be lab partners for an organic chemistry class. At first Paige does not like Eddie because she thinks he is nothing but a spoiled rich boy. However there is clearly chemistry between the two, and Paige takes him home for Thanksgiving where things start to heat up.Shortly after break Paige and Eddie try to study for exams, but instead find themselves making out in the stakes at the library. However, a Danish journalist finds them and Paige gets mad at Eddie for not telling her he is really Prince Edvard.After this Edward has to go back to Denmark because his father is sick and he must take over as king. Paige realizes that she loves him and goes to Denmark to tell him. She finds Eddie in the middle of a parade and they spend some time together and eventually he proposes and she accepts.Paige, however is nervous at becoming the Queen of Denmark and having to give up her goal of being a Doctor. After several royal functions she decides that she can't be Queen of Denmark and leaves to pursue her education, while Edvard becomes the new King of Denmark.Several Years go by and Paige and her friends have graduated college. After the ceremony the friends go outside to get their pictures taken and Eddie is there. When Paige sees him she rushes into his arms.
N**1
Great film
Like- actor
G**N
Excellent
Just right
J**N
reçu
Colis reçu dans les temps , impeccable
W**S
Actors
Many good ideas. Charming
A**H
Movie
Entertainment
R**S
No foul language, no sex
Kind of a guilty pleasure. No foul language, no sex, no violence. Just a pleasant romantic modern-day fairy tale with a happy ending.worthy production values and good acting - the two leads just set the right tone
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