<Tr> <Th> Budget </Th> <Td> $15 million </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Th> Box office </Th> <Td> $414.2 million </Td> </Tr> <P> The King's Speech is a 2010 British historical drama film directed by Tom Hooper and written by David Seidler . Colin Firth plays the future King George VI who, to cope with a stammer, sees Lionel Logue, an Australian speech and language therapist played by Geoffrey Rush . The men become friends as they work together, and after his brother abdicates the throne, the new king relies on Logue to help him make his first wartime radio broadcast on Britain's declaration of war on Germany in 1939 . </P> <P> Seidler read about George VI's life after overcoming a stuttering condition he endured during his own youth . He started writing about the relationship between the therapist and his royal patient as early as the 1980s, but at the request of the King's widow, Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, postponed work until her death in 2002 . He later rewrote his screenplay for the stage to focus on the essential relationship between the two protagonists . Nine weeks before filming began, Logue's notebooks were discovered and quotations from them were incorporated into the script . </P>

When does the king's speech take place