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‘The Queen’
by
Burton S. Blumert
by Burton S. Blumert
DIGG THIS
The commute
over Devil’s Slide was uneventful but I still sighed with relief
as I pulled into the garage and shut down the engine. The fog was
rolling in, Pumpkin days were behind us, and it was good to be home.
But, it was
not to be.
"We
can just make the 4:20 showing of The
Queen in Palo Alto if we leave right now," my dear
wife said breathlessly. There was no negotiating. She’s all business
when she dons those Grand Prix driving gloves.
"Look,
isn’t this the movie about Queen Elizabeth I, who reigned in the
16th century?" I whined. "Wasn’t she beheaded, or locked
up in the tower? In any case, do we really want to see a period
piece movie, where they all talk funny?"
She rolled
her eyes once or twice, and I noted that we were already on Highway
280 heading south.
"The Queen,"
she sniffed, "is about Queen Elizabeth II, the present monarch,
stars the great actor Helen Mirren, and is directed by Stephen Frears,
whose 1985 film, My
Beautiful Launderette, is a cult classic."
My spirits
improved as we exited at Page Mill Road. I was now minutes away
from a large-sized popcorn with the hope that they used real butter
and, more importantly, I reflected that Helen Mirren is one of the
finest actors of our time. She was dazzling as Jane Tennison in
PBS’s Prime Suspect series, and remarkable as the brilliant
but difficult Russian émigré in The
Passion of Ayn Rand. Helen Mirren does not disappoint as
The Queen. She is at the top of her game.
The story line
of the film covers those shattering events in the UK during 1997.
Tony Blair, amazingly portrayed by Michael Sheen, has become the
first Labor Prime Minister in about 20 years. He is young – Blair
was born in 1953, the year Elizabeth ascended the throne – and handsome.
Although raised in privilege and properly educated, he is a socialist
"new man."
His first official
meeting with the Queen sets the tone for the entire film. Elizabeth,
reserved, formal, but armed with a rapier wit, duels with Blair.
She advises that he is her 14th Prime Minister. He is amused by
the monarch, but remains respectful throughout.
Blair’s wife,
Cherie, does not share this respect. She is in sympathy with the
25% of the British population who believe the monarchy is an expensive
anachronism and should be abolished.
To the tradition-bound Elizabeth, Blair might as well be a rock-star.
And then…the
dark event that turns our story from a gentle tale of a collision
of manners to a political crisis that could threaten the UK’s constitutional
monarchy:
Princess Diana
is tragically killed in a motor accident in Paris.
To Elizabeth,
this event is the final act of the dismal drama that Diana created
for the Royal family. The movie, The Queen, does not dwell
on the "sordid" events that led to Diana’s divorce from
Prince Charles. The audience is reminded, however, that Diana has
been "excommunicated" from the royal family.
The only potential
problem Elizabeth sees is the need to protect the young princes,
Harry and William, from the evil media. In this she is supported
by her consort Prince Philip – well portrayed by American actor
James Cromwell. Her mother, "the Queen mum," is also quick to offer
her full support.
The royal family
never once considers that the young princes should be mourning the
dead mother they dearly loved. Shut off the TV sets, hide the newspapers,
this was the royal strategy. Prince Philip decides that fresh air
is the best remedy and takes the boys hunting on the 40,000 acres
that make up the Balmoral Castle grounds.
As
the days pass the outpouring of grief for the dead princess rages
like a forest fire. To the royal family this outpouring is incomprehensible.
The headlines
begin to turn ugly; why is the flag at Buckingham not flying at
half-mast? Why is Princess Diana not being afforded a royal funeral?
When will Queen Elizabeth break her silence and acknowledge the
tragedy of Diana’s death?
From this point,
The Queen becomes an elegant nail-biter. On the one hand,
we have the intractable Elizabeth and her royal entourage clinging
to traditions and views forged through 1,000 years.
On the other
– the average Brits who revere a different stripe of royalty: Elton
John, Madonna, Elizabeth Taylor, the Spice Girls, and even the likes
of Tony Blair.
To these subjects,
Diana was the real princess.
The Queen
relies heavily on archived tapes and films. It is a sticky matter
to successfully weave old images into a screenplay. Director Frears
does it artfully.
First, we
see old BBC tapes of an ocean of flowers placed by grieving Brits
around Buckingham and the other palaces. Then, seamlessly, Mirren's
Elizabeth walking amidst the bouquets. She reads some of the attached
messages and is stunned by the anger directed against the Royal
family. She is in agony, yet, never buckles, never loses the royal
demeanor that defined her life.
There is a
sadness as Mirren’s queen grudgingly accedes to the pressures put
upon her. She is powerless, yet, never loses her grace.
Finally,
Helen Mirren’s Elizabeth realizes what we knew all along. We live
in a "Pop Culture" and even tradition is fading fast.
This article
first appeared on HalfMoonBayMemories.com.
October
31, 2006
Burt
Blumert [send him mail]
is publisher of LewRockwell.com,
president of the Center
for Libertarian Studies,
and proprietor of Camino
Coin. See Burt's
Gold Page.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
Burton
S. Blumert Archives
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