The serio-comic approach offers a confusing portrait of the Queen's public and private faces: part sober drama, part high camp, part soap opera, and part right royal romp.
The Queen (2006)
Runtime: 1 hr 43 mins
Genre: Dramas
Starring: Helen Mirren, Michael Sheen, James Cromwell, Sylvia Syms, Alex Jennings
Screenwriter: Peter Morgan
Producer: Andy Harries, Tracey Seaward, Christine Langan
Composer: Alexander Desplat
DVD Info
Release:
Dec 4, 2008
DVD Features:
- Region 1
- Keep Case
- Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85
Audio:
- Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround - Spanish
- Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround - English
- Subtitles - Spanish - Optional
Additional Release Material:
- Audio Commentary - 1. Robert Lacey - British Historian
- 2. Stephen Frears - Director; Peter Morgan - Writer
- Behind the Scenes - "The Making of THE QUEEN"
Reviews
It is intelligent, hilariously funny and, ultimately, rather moving.
Seven days that shook the Monarchy to its very core are explored in this fascinating insight into the Royal Family following the death of Diana.
Fascinating, funny, wicked and to the point, this is an excellent film about a week every Briton over the age of 15 will remember vividly.
Engaging drama with impressive performances, though it's slightly hampered by the fact that we already know how it ends.
This is, after all, a period movie that leaves you with a feeling of sadness at how little has changed.
Why is a British film as good as The Queen such a depressing rarity?
The tabloid appeal is obvious, but Morgan's script is tomorrow's chip paper.
Like the Queen, Mirren is saying: This is how you act, this is how you survive, this is how you reign.
I was to this film. It's slow and plodding throughout, yet the format Frears brings to the table is gripping in its balance.
...a compelling drama that effectively humanizes the title character...
An intelligent script that keeps in the spirit and tone of Britain's House of Mountbatten-Windsor, and yet slyly manages a wink at the audience every now and then.
To his credit, Frears doesn't try to solicit too much sympathy for his Queen, but the film goes down the navel-gazing rabbit hole just the same.
... beneath the simple and straightforward facade lies a hidden depth that does not announce itself with dramatic intensity ...
Un retrato íntimo e interesante en el que lo más sobresaliente es, por lejos, la sobria composición de Helen Mirren.
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