Diane Kruger is stepping in to replace Eva Green in Benoît Jacquot's adaptation of Chantal Thomas' novel, Farewell, My Queen, reports The Playlist.

Diane Kruger joins Léa Seydoux and Gérard Depardieu in the film, and will play Marie Antoinette with Léa Seydoux as a reader to her royal majesty during the final days of the French Revolution.

The book's synopsis:

As revolution rages outside the palace walls, inside the court of Versailles--the court of Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI--denial reigns before giving way to alarm, which in turn degenerates into panic and chaos. Thomas spins the familiar events of the 1789 French Revolution into a compelling novel, with the central character less the famously ill-fated queen than the insular and ritualized society of the palace. The story is told by a woman looking back 30 years, to when it was her job to read books aloud to Marie Antoinette. Her status as courtier makes her the best kind of narrator--at once an insider and an observer of the royals. She describes the final days before revolution engulfs the palace with insight and surprising slices of humor. Some passages read almost like satire, as the indulged inhabitants of Versailles cling to the privileges that have defined their now-threatened lives--royals are reluctant to leave the palace without proper traveling attire, courtiers try to flee while lugging heavy possessions. Thomas' formidable skills as a researcher give the book authenticity, and her keen eye for human behavior and talent for storytelling make it sing.

Production begins next spring.