The Saddest Music in the World
| The Saddest Music in the World | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Guy Maddin |
| Screenplay by | Guy Maddin George Toles |
| Based on | The Saddest Music in the World by Kazuo Ishiguro |
| Produced by | Niv Fichman Daniel Iron Jody Shapiro |
| Starring | Mark McKinney Isabella Rossellini Maria de Medeiros David Fox Ross McMillan |
| Cinematography | Luc Montpellier |
| Edited by | David Wharnsby |
| Music by | Christopher Dedrick |
| Distributed by | IFC Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 99 minutes |
| Country | Canada |
| Language | English |
| Budget | CAD $3.8 million (estimated) |
The Saddest Music in the World is a 2003 Canadian film directed by Guy Maddin. Budgeted at $3.8-million and shot over 24 days, the film marks Maddin's first collaboration with actor Isabella Rossellini.
Maddin and co-screenwriter George Toles based the film on an original screenplay written by British novelist Kazuo Ishiguro, from which they kept "the title, the premise and the contest – to determine which country’s music was the saddest" but otherwise re-wrote. Like most of Guy Maddin's films, The Saddest Music in the World is filmed in a style that imitates late 1920s and early 1930s cinema, with grainy black-and-white photography, slightly out-of-sync sound and expressionist art design. A few scenes are filmed in colour, in a manner that imitates early two-strip Technicolor.