The Queen Review
By Chris Cabin
It begins with the landslide election of Prime Minister Tony Blair (a shockingly good Michael Sheen) and moves to the car accident that led to Di's death. Frears then meditates on the decisions and the struggle between modernism and tradition that Queen Elizabeth (Helen Mirren) and her family must consider in the wake of not just a familial, but worldwide, day of mourning. For those who don't remember, after the death, there was major pressure for the family to mourn in public, to show their grief and prove that even though Di wasn't part of the family anymore, they were still in a state of solemnity.
1997 was a whole nine years ago but we were already seeing the death of the handle-yourself emotional vibe, the tradition of not sharing ones emotions in any public matter. The Royal Family embodies tradition, so the fact that the family and most certainly the Queen didn't come out of hiding for an entire week seemed perfectly okay with them. Only Prince Charles (a solid Alex Jennings, dealing with the film's most uneven character) shows his face to the public for his ex-wife and for the sake of his sons. The fight for a modern emotional reaction seems to be at the heart of The Queen, and screenwriter Peter Morgan expertly uses metaphors and a fascinating sense of humor to deal with his characters and their core issues.
Stephen Frears has always been a wildly versatile director, but The Queen might end up being his swan song. He blundered, hard, last year with the disastrous Mrs. Henderson Presents, but films like Dirty Pretty Things, My Beautiful Laundrette, and his ridiculously rewatchable rendering of Nick Hornby's High Fidelity show a fearless director who never binds himself to a genre or a particular style. Here, he uses archival footage of the events and the repercussions and blends it with Affonso Beaty's stunning camera work that recreates some television moments and lets others speak for themselves. Where many would have expected dry, straight drama, Frears boldly asks us to accept these people as humans: flawed and ill-advised but ultimately with good reasons.
Then there's Mirren. Oscar talk has already been touted from every mouth that saw the film and her win at the Venice Film Festival didn't exactly quell that clamor. Mirren, always the classiest one at the table, has the foresight to see Elizabeth as the hard nut she is. When her old car finally breaks down (metaphor!), she looks at the problem and simply shouts "bugger!" It's in these deliveries that Mirren has truly mastered her character and found the bigger-than-life persona, but has also worked hard to bring such a huge character down to the level of humanity. It's nothing but ecstasy to see her plain expression as her husband (priceless James Cromwell) calls her "cabbage" as they get ready for bed. Much like the film, she's a class act from beginning to end.
"No, we don't have Prince Albert in a can. Why do you ask?"
Facts and Figures
Year: 2006
Run time: 103 mins
In Theaters: Friday 17th November 2006
Box Office USA: $56.2M
Box Office Worldwide: $123.4M
Budget: $15M
Distributed by: Miramax Films
Production compaines: Miramax Films, BIM Distribuzione, Granada Film Productions, Scott Rudin Productions, Pathé Pictures, Canal+, Future Films, France 3 Cinema
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 4 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 97%
Fresh: 179 Rotten: 6
IMDB: 7.4 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Stephen Frears
Producer: Andy Harries, Christine Langan, Tracey Seaward
Screenwriter: Peter Morgan
Starring: Helen Mirren as HM Queen Elizabeth II, Michael Sheen as Tony Blair, James Cromwell as Prince Philip, Sylvia Syms as HM The Queen Mother, Helen McCrory as Cherie Blair, Paul Barrett as Trevor Rees-Jones, Alex Jennings as Prince Charles, Roger Allam as Sir Robin Janvrin, Tim McMullan as Stephen Lamport
Also starring: Christine Langan, Tracey Seaward, Peter Morgan