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The Queen

The Queen
MSRP: $14.99
Your Price: $12.49
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Manufacturer: Miramax

Starring: Helen Mirren, Michael Sheen, James Cromwell, Sylvia Syms, Alex Jennings
Directed By: Stephen Frears
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The Queen Features

The Queen is an intimate behind the scenes glimpse at the interaction between HM Elizabeth II and Prime Minister Tony Blair during their struggle, following the death of Diana, to reach a compromise between what was a private tragedy for the Royal family and the public's demand for an overt display of mourning.DVD Features:The making of The Queen Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA Rating:&
 

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Additional The Queen Information

Winner of the Academy Award® for Best Actress, Dame Helen Mirren gives a spellbinding performance in THE QUEEN, the provocative story behind one of the most public tragedies of our time — the sudden death of Princess Diana. In the wake of Diana's death, the very private and tradition-bound Queen Elizabeth II (Mirren) finds herself in conflict with the new Prime Minister, the slickly modern and image-conscious Tony Blair. THE QUEEN, also starring Academy Award® Nominee James Cromwell (Best Supporting Actor, BABE, 1995), takes you inside the private chambers of the Royal Family and the British government for a captivating look at a vulnerable human being in her darkest hour, as a nation grieving for its People's Princess waits to see what its leaders will do. Suspenseful, heartfelt and riveting, it's a fascinating story you won’t soon forget.

 

What Customers Say About The Queen:

All of this, of course, involves guesswork and supposition by the screenwriter since few were privy to what went on in the royal establishment. "The Queen" (2006) is a wonderful, fascinating movie with a great script, superior cinematography, and great acting by Helen Mirren as Queen Elizabeth II and by Michael Sheen as a toothy Tony Blair. Looking back, the paroxysms of grief that were displayed by the public now seem excessive. The symbolism of the stag is not completely clear, whether it shows Elizabeth's reaction to her predicament, whether it's Diana, or whether it shows that she values animals above human beings.

It's an engrossing look at the royals. Elizabeth drives herself around the huge Balmoral estate, and she sees a beautiful stag. Finally Blair convinces the Queen that the media is after her head, and the public is turning against the monarchy.Through all of this Helen Mirren does a masterful job of making the Queen a flawed but real and human person.Newsreel footage is used with great skill. The movie shows the newly elected Blair benefiting from the furor and shows him imploring the Queen to show some consideration for her subjects who wanted her to be almost mourner-in-chief.

The Queen Mum (in a brilliant piece of casting played by Sylvia Syms) is cold-hearted. Callous Prince Philip took the boys (Prince William and Hall, not portrayed in the movie) out hunting for a stag during the mourning period.The Queen and royals remained in Balmoral while the public seethed. It's all about the death of Prince Diana, the royals' reaction and behavior after her death and the way the public in an outpouring of grief turned their wrath against the royal family believing them to be indifferent to her death. When Diana died, the royals were ensconced in Balmoral Castle in Scotland.

The Queen shows her disdain for him and has some nasty cracks to make about her playgirl sister Margaret. Viewing the movie now, I think viewers may be slightly more sympathetic toward the Queen.The movie portrays the royal family with Prince Philip, Elizabeth's husband (expertly played by actor James Cromwell) as a mean-spirited and nasty man who always has to put his oar in. Prince Charles is ineffectual, weak, and bungling.

You see Blair as a man trying to lead Britain into a new era, and sees things differently with the monarchy, but still holds the monarchy in high regard. Shortly before Diana's death, Tony Blair was elected to the position of Prime Minister, and while things looked somewhat smooth, no one could have expected the hardships he was about to go through in dealing with what became something of a national crisis. As Queen Elizabeth II, Helen Mirren shows you a woman who is strong and solid in her ways but also worries about her position in the history of the monarchy. It's no secret that Queen Elizabeth II and Princess Di did not get along, especially when considering the fact that Diana was not quiet about her former husband's, Prince Charles, infidelity among other things and was dating a Muslim.

With a script written by Peter Morgan (Frost/ Nixon, The Damned United, The Last King of Scotland, etc). On top of that, the eye for attention to detail is amazing. You see the difference between the settings where the monarch lives and the lower levels of the government reside, and the images of the country side at Balmoral Castle, and the views of the castle interior are breathtaking. Accomplishing this kind of movie in this day and age is a great achievement.If you're a fan of films dealing with history, or the inner workings of government, particularly the British government I highly recommend this film. Shortly after the election of Tony Blair (Michael Sheen) to the position of Prime Minister, Princess Diana was killed in a horrific car accident. As the British public clamors for an open memorial for the woman Prime Minister Blair called "The People's Princess", Queen Elizabeth II (Helen Mirren) chooses to keep everything private, taking her grandsons to Balmoral Castle to help them in their time of loss. which is actually the second in something of a series starring Michael Sheen as Tony Blair, The Queen is not only a look at the inner workings of the British government in a time of crisis, but is also a look at the differences between the branches of government and the way they think. Working off interviews from unnamed sources within the queen's employ and staffers who worked with Blair, Morgan crafts a script that catches the nuances of the inner workings of the government in this type of situation.To really bring this out, you really need great acting, and in Michael Sheen as Tony Blair and Helen Mirren as Queen Elizabeth II you completely see the struggles, differences, and even similarities between these two figures.

You see Blair trying his best to do what he can for a family that, from the outside, doesn't appear to want to do anything for itself. As the people start to turn on the monarchy you see him as a man who is, not trying to tell the monarchy what to do, but trying to help the monarchy through a crisis into a better position in the court of public opinion, and Sheen masterfully embodies this.Never does the movie take a position as to whether the monarchy is good or bad, outdated or what Britain needs at this time. With superb acting, directing, and writing this film shows what any film dealing in this nature of material should really be like.5/5 A masterful feat for the director, the movie really just examines the monarchy and the British government in this day and age through this crisis. Throughout the movie you see that the Queen and the royal family are very old school, choosing to hide emotion and mourn in private rather than display their feelings to the world. It doesn't examine Princess Diana's life, or who was at fault in her death.

Without any word from the royal family though, the British people become angered, and are soon close to calling for the dissolution of the crown.Princess Diana's death was a very tragic event that led to a sense of lost amongst people the world over. Mirren's performance is truly the tour de force of the film, but one also can't count out Michael Sheen's portrayal of Prime Minister Blair. Then you have Tony Blair who wants to move the government in a new direction, and can't believe the way the royal family is handling this: with a lack of warmth in their proceedings. Depicting a situation like this isn't an easy task for film, so how did Stephen Frears do with his movie The Queen.Amazingly. They also don't believe that Diana should be mourned on a public level since she no longer was a member of the royal family.

We are all whores and we will kill everything we love (pay attention to the scene with the deer: the greatest moment in contemporary cinema) to stay in the spotlight. The Queen has been raised to believe in absolute values. Probably there has been no film since the days of "Pygmalion" in which the British cinema has come so close to besting Shakespeare. This is the wittiest, most profound film of the 21st century. But she lives in a dark age of consumerist, media mediated shallowness. When her people desert her for the false image of a demented daughter-in-law, she must choose between what she has been taught is "true" and what the marketing people tell her she must "be."This film suggests that identity in the modern age is a hoax.

The death of an X princess who was popular. And we can see that Tony's wife does not think much of the queen. If you are a fan of English History, you MUST have this film. He seems to know 2 major things. (Her translation of the queen's words would probably not be allowed here). Very quickly, you really need to see this film with hindsight to appreciate it fully. Tony also reminds the 'wicked press' that Dianne: ".threw everything the queen offered back in her face, and for the past few years dedicated her life 24/7 to destroying everything the queen held dear." Keeping this final and climactic speech of Tony Blair in mind, makes watching this film a 2nd time all the more interesting. And to complicate things further, she tries to gain control of the situation the way she has in the past.

The major plot of this movie is that the royal family has an unprecedented circumstance here. This is another depressing, yet phenomenal film. (2) Even more important, unlike his mother, Charles is aware that the Dianne they knew is NOT the Dianne the majority of people knew. While the movie is called "The Queen," one could easily argue that the true star is Tony Blair. Prince Charles receives gentle treatment in this film.

(Remaining unaffected). Perhaps the most moving point in this film is when after doing this difficult action, Tony Blair faces down the hostile press and explains that Queen Elizabeth II never wanted this job, that she watched it kill her father King George VI, and that she did the job she never wanted with dignity and grace for almost 50 years. While his wife is anti monarchist, Tony knows that England has a need for the monarchy and they (for the most part) want the monarchy: "Spare me the 'off with their heads' routine." At one point, Tony has to (with some regret) 'strong arm' the Queen to take required action about Dianne. Add to that that Tony Blair is just settling in, and he knows that certain parties are wondering as to the usefulness of the monarchy. He's a competent young Prime Minister who agrees with progression, but he also has a respect for traditions as well as the monarchy. The film begins with Tony Blair's rise to power.

(1) For the monarch to survive, it must be willing to be flexible with the times. Without going on for too long, her majesty Queen Elizabeth II has legitimate reasons to dislike Dianne. From here, we see Dianne's fatal accident, and while the queen acknowledges the tragedy, Prince Charles is the only one who feels that Dianne has to be treated with royal respect even though she is an X princess). (So things are unstable).

Only other film of hers I had ever seen was I was 1st in the door opening day for "The Mosquito Coast".And, I believe the film. I am VERY DISAPPOINTED Helen did not do a commentary.

WHERE IS SHE.Of course, ruined by the I HATE THEM WHY WERE THEY MADE FLIP THE LITTLE FLAP OPEN DVD CASE. This is HER FILM & won the Oscar for it.

I did not think I was going to like the film. Arranged marriage & she ended up cheating in the marriage as well.Has normal extras on the DVD.

Had NO Interest in it when released.Being from the United States I have NO interest in the British Royal Family, Princess Diana, any of them.I watched the film 1 day & did enjoy it.Helen did deserve the Oscar for the role.

Yep, we knew they did NOT care about Diana.

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