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WHAT GOES ON BEHIND ROYALTY'S CLOSED DOORS.


Byline: Glenn Whipp Film Critic

Political comedies are almost impossible to pull off, mostly because either the absurdities of reality manage to outstrip out·strip  
tr.v. out·stripped, out·strip·ping, out·strips
1. To leave behind; outrun.

2. To exceed or surpass: "Material development outstripped human development" 
 the movie's satire or the film is just generally bereft of ideas.

Stephen Frears' marvelous ``The Queen'' gets it right because it puts aside satirical broadsides in favor of a psychologically precise look at the behavior of Britain's royal family in the week between Princess Diana's fatal car crash and her state funeral The perspective and/or examples in this article do not represent a world-wide view. Please [ edit] this page to improve its geographical balance. , an approach that manages to be both humane and hilarious.

Image over substance

Underneath its push-pull battle between Queen Elizabeth's out-of-time, stiff-upper-lip old guard attitude and Tony Blair's misty-eyed emotiveness, ``The Queen'' is a smart and tough-minded skewering of the House of Windsor Noun 1. House of Windsor - the British royal family since 1917
Windsor

dynasty - a sequence of powerful leaders in the same family

Duke of Windsor, Edward, Edward VIII - King of England and Ireland in 1936; his marriage to Wallis Warfield Simpson
 as well as an examination of the primacy of image over substance. There's plenty of buffoonery to be sure, but the film -- superbly written by Peter Morgan This article is about the British screenwriter. For other uses of the same name, see Peter Morgan (disambiguation).

Peter Morgan (born April 10, 1963 in London) is an English Academy Award nominated screenwriter and playwright.
, who co-wrote ``The Last King of Scotland'' -- has ambitions greater than being simply a fly-on-the-wall look at the supremely silly and spoiled.

``The Queen'' mixes fact with fiction and includes newsreel footage of Diana, whose presence can be felt in every frame of the movie. The film moves back and forth between Balmoral, Scotland, where the royals are blissfully cocooned for the summer, and 10 Downing St., with eager-to-please Prime Minister Blair (well-

played by look-alike Michael Sheen Michael Sheen (born 5 February 1969) is an award-winning Welsh actor perhaps best known for his portrayal of Tony Blair in the Stephen Frears directed-films The Deal and The Queen. ) grousing, ``They screwed up her life. I'm not going to let them screw up her death.''

Public vs. private matter

Queen Elizabeth Queen Elizabeth, or Elizabeth, may refer to: Living people
  • Elizabeth II, Queen regnant of the Commonwealth Realms
Deceased people
Bohemia
 (Helen Mirren) wants to treat Diana's death as a private matter. ``It's a family funeral, not a fairground attraction Fairground Attraction was a Scottish acoustic-pop group, best-known for its hit single "Perfect", and for helping to launch the career of its lead singer, Eddi Reader. Career ,'' she tells her prime minister. The family -- which includes blowhard Prince Philip (James Cromwell) and the perpetually tipsy Queen Mother (Sylvia Sims) -- can't reconcile the public's grief with the private Diana, whom they loathed. Only Charles (Alex Jennings) understands that the country's mood won't blow over, and he instinctively (though quite pathetically) seeks to side with Blair's ``people's princess'' pronouncements.

Elizabeth, too, must eventually come around to Blair's way of thinking. But it's going to be on her terms. As she tells Blair shortly after he's elected, ``You're my 10th prime minister. My first was Winston Churchill.'' If that puts him in his place, it's later up to Blair to save the monarchy from irrelevancy ir·rel·e·van·cy  
n. pl. ir·rel·e·van·cies
Irrelevance.

Noun 1. irrelevancy - the lack of a relation of something to the matter at hand
irrelevance
 or, worse (or better, depending on your viewpoint), obliteration A destruction; an eradication of written words.

Obliteration is a method of revoking a Will or a clause therein. Lines drawn through the signatures of witnesses to a will constitute an obliteration of the will even if the names are still decipherable.
.

Another Mirren triumph

Mirren's acting has been praised to the point where songs are probably, at this moment, being written in her honor. But the hosannas are on target. Mirren probably imbues the queen with more elegance and wit than she deserves. She certainly humanizes a woman genuinely confused by the sea change she never saw coming, but (eventually) willing to do her duty for her people and, of course, for herself. The queen should be ever so grateful for this casting.

Glenn Whipp, (818) 713-3672.

glenn.whipp(at)dailynews.com

THE QUEEN - Three and one half stars

(PG-13: brief strong language)

Starring: Helen Mirren, Michael Sheen.

Director: Stephen Frears.

Running time: 1 hr. 43 min.

Playing: ArcLight in Hollywood; Laemmle's Royal in West Los Angeles
  • West Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, a neighborhood of Los Angeles
  • West Los Angeles (region), a popularly identified region of Los Angeles, incorporating the neighborhood above
.

In a nutshell: Smart, tough-minded and very funny skewering of the royal family's behavior in the week between Princess Diana's car crash and her state funeral. Towering performance from Helen Mirren as Queen Elizabeth.

CAPTION(S):

photo

Photo:

While grieving Britons mourn the loss of Princess Diana with flowers and messages, Queen Elizabeth II (Helen Mirren) and Prince Philip (James Cromwell) don't share the sentiment in ``The Queen,'' which chronicles the week between Diana's death and her state funeral.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Oct 6, 2006
Words:594
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