Conflict In The King's Speech

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The King’s Speech The King’s Speech is a 2010 biographical drama directed by Tom Hooper. It tells the story about future king Albert and his personal struggle with his stammer and how he learned to cope with it. Throughout the movie, actor Colin Firth, who portrays the future king, shows the daily struggles of a stammer. Albert’s wife, played by Helene Bonham Carter, refuses to give up on him and finds speech therapist Lionel Logue (Geoffrey Rush). The movie starts in 1925, during King George V’s reign in Great Britain. The King’s Speech tells the story of the man who became King George VI. After his father dies and his older brother abdicates, George reluctantly takes the throne. Plagued by his stammer and deemed unfit for king, his wife …show more content…

Take for example the scene in which Albert and his wife struggles with the elevator in Lionel Logue’s building. Albert struggles to close the gate and this becomes a minor obstacle between his goals of controlling his stammer. The conflict is quite simple, yet it shows another side of Albert. Not only is he frustrated with needing directions from his wife; he also takes out his doubt on the new speech therapist they are about to meet. (Schilf, …show more content…

These are very important to how the viewer understand and interpret certain situations in the film. One of the most used techniques, is lead room. The characters are often placed far left or far right in the frame, to capture something significant in the background. This can be a hallway, a door or a corridor. By doing this, it adds another layer of complexity and depth to the shot. An example of this is in the scene where Albert’s wife, Elizabeth first meets Lionel. While conversing, the camera captures Elizabeth to the far right of the shot with an open door behind her. Similarly to the open door, Elizabeth is open and hopeful to the unconventional methods Lionel has to offer for her husband. The door symbolizes her open-mindedness and willingness. (Bellmore,

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