Genre:
Drama
Director: Stephen Frears
Starring: Helen Mirren, Michael Sheen, James
Cromwell, Sylvia Syms, Alex Jennings, Helen McCrory, Roger
Allam, Tim McMullan
RunTime: 1 hr 37 mins
Released By: GV & Festive Films
Rating: PG
Official website: http://www.thequeen-movie.com/
Opening Day: 4 January 2007
Soundtrack: READ
OUR REVIEW ON THE ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK
Synopsis:
When news of the death of Princess Diana, undoubtedly the
most famous woman in the world, breaks upon a shocked and
disbelieving British public, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
retreats behind the walls of Balmoral Castle with her family,
unable to comprehend the public response to the tragedy. For
Tony Blair, the popular and newly elected Prime Minister,
the people’s need for reassurance and support from their
leaders is palpable. As the unprecedented outpouring of emotion
grows ever stronger, Blair must find a way to reconnect the
Queen with the British public.
Movie
Review:
Stephen Frears’s “The Queen” harkens back
to the not so distant past when Britain’s politics were
in the midst of a paradigm shift as a new Prime Minister was
elected in a landslide victory, and back when Tony Blair was
still liked by the British people to the extent of preferring
him to the monarchy. But it primarily concerns itself with
events of August 31, 1997 when the world stood still in front
of news outlets with shock and disbelief as information poured
through with the details of Princess Diana’s passing.
There’s
an extremely humanistic centre in the film’s regal and
exact conduct that’s hard to ignore. This is especially
true when the simmering mannerisms in its enclosed scenes
threaten to create a void between the performers and audience.
Fortunately, as many critics and opinion-makers have voiced,
it is ultimately the cast that transcends the material and
propels it to heights of emotional depth and compelling storytelling.
Frears gently weaves in droll British cynicism with slices
of historical footages in retelling the hours before and the
weeks after Princess Diana’s death. It has too much
specious conjecture to be a docudrama but curiously enough,
has too much political gravitas not to be. There’s a
sense of a spell being cast on the audience when layers upon
layers of enchantingly guile verisimilitude are strewn across
the screen in its dialogue and conflicts, when personal conversations
in corridors offer supposed insights into closely guarded
relationships.
In
a film whose crowning character keeps her nose in the air
throughout with a dry wit and penetrating intelligence that
comes from decades of political machination and staunch devotion
to tradition, you begin to wonder what is going through Mirren’s
mind as she embodies the ruddy Queen’s heart and soul.
She lays the heavy crown on her head while the film itself
manages to show compassion towards the tough monarch, with
Mirren’s technical poise and confidence in her self-restraint
performance leading the way for an almost definite blitz on
every Lead Actress award she’s a possible candidate
for.
If
anything, Mirren’s Queen Elizabeth II is an anachronistic
casualty. So is the family who has her ear in the Queen Mother
(Sylvia Syms) and Prince Phillip (James Cromwell). They regard
‘revolution’ and ‘modernisation’ as
nothing but dirty words uttered by those that don’t
really know any better. Our sympathies lie with the reigning
Queen as she’s torn between her pride and exerting her
authority, exacerbating the widening disconnect between the
monarchy and the new Tony Blair (Michael Sheen) government
that unduly becomes a power struggle refereed by the press.
With precisely crafted characters and the insights that come
with it, the Queen is shown to be quietly disdainful of the
populist views and the vantage that democracy has. She corrals
herself in Balmoral Castle and the palace as she faces certain
disparagement from the electorate. Also spurred on by the
selfishly spurious and PR-savvy Prince Charles (Alex Jennings),
Tony Blair desperately asks in his office at 10 Downing Street,
“Will someone save these people from themselves?”
It
is cheeky in highlighting Blair’s formerly uphill status
as the man with the main line into the people’s hearts
and minds. In a telling and superlative scene, the film prophetically
makes known how little has changed in the political landscape
aside from its scapegoats.
Now,
when will we have a film about that delightful Prince Phillip?
Movie
Rating:
(Majestically performed with a touch of class, one
of the year’s best)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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